The
following is an excerpt from our article that was published by HR.BLR.com on October 12, 2015.. The full article
can be found at: http://hr.blr.com/HR-news/Health-Safety/Violence-in-Workplace/Workplace-bullying-bottom-line-issue#
What is Workplace
Bullying?
Workplace
bullying is defined as the repeated infliction of international, malicious, and
abusive behavior that interferes with a person’s ability to do his/her work and
is substantial enough to cause physical and/or psychological harm that a
reasonable person would find hostile or offensive.
Workplace
bullying can take many forms including:
·
Shouting or screaming
at a co-worker
·
Singling out a
co-worker for unjustified criticism or blame
·
Excluding a co-worker
from work activities or social events
·
Ignoring work
contributions
·
Using language that
embarrasses or humiliates a co-worker
·
Making jokes that
repeatedly target the same person
The bad
news is that bullies can be anyone in the organization—including managers and leaders. So, organizations must realize that, if
anyone can be a bully and anyone can be bullied, having a policy against
bullying is their first defense.
Policies can be helpful but to really have an impact, the policy has to
be enforced and the subject of bullying discussed so that everyone knows the
organization has zero tolerance for bullies.
Elements of a Workplace Bullying Policy
A
workplace bullying policy should include:
·
Purpose or objective of
the policy
·
Who it covers (all
employees, managers, executives,)
·
Definition of workplace
bullying*
·
Examples of behaviors
that will not be tolerated
·
How to report workplace
bullying
·
Investigation process
·
Consequences of
workplace bullying
Communication Process
Once you
have your policy developed, this is a great time for a communication blitz on
the topic of workplace bullying.
Train managers on how to spot bullying and how to report it and on how
your policy works. Hold meetings
with all employees to discuss the policy and the consequences of workplace
bullying.
Let
everyone know that each person has a responsibility to keep bullying out of
your organization. This is another place where “if you see it, say it” applies.
Bottom Line
Most of us
want to work for organizations where we feel productive and where our
contributions to be valued.
Workplace bullying can impact our organization’s productivity and
therefore, our bottom line.
Organizations today can’t afford to be silent on this issue—it’s too
important to be overlooked.
No comments:
Post a Comment