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The Business Case against Bullying

If your organisation’s recovery plan doesn’t include a strategy for stamping out bullying it will fail. Because when the going gets tough poor managers get rough, unable to inspire their staff and under pressure from above they resort to intimidation, humiliation and shouting. This doesn’t get the job done.
man sitting on bench holding phone

Bullying is in the news again. And yet again the message would appear to be that if your senior enough you can get away with it.

Let’s be brutally honest where there is a bulling problem there is also a lack of confidence in HR to tackle it. This is probably unfair on HR. They have developed the required policies on bullying and harassment, there is a clear grievance process in place and a confidential whistle blowing line.

HR are not to blame for the decline in union membership nor are they responsible for the confrontational tone set by senior management. However I believe it is the role of HR to moderate the excesses of management especially in the absence of a strong trad union. It’s called Human Resources for a reason, to humanise the work place. The HR role is police the personnel policies and ensure fair play.

There is a strong business case for this view of HR . Bullying is bad for business, any short term gains are more than out weighed by the negative impact on moral, reduced productivity, poor attendance and high staff turn over. Plus bulling and harassment unfair dismissal cases  are  expensive and damage an organisations reputation.

Bad management and bad managers have always existed. Are they more prevalent today or are we less willing to tolerate intimidation and harassment?  Could it be that increased reporting indicates staff feel more vulnerable? What ever the reason HR has  a key role to play and that means convincing staff that the organisations policy and procedures covering, bullying, harassment and intimidation are not just for show and that HR are not there to protect management but to protect and get restitution for the victims.

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