According to the Workplace Bullying Institute, “workplace bullying is repeated, health-harming mistreatment of one or more persons (the targets) by one or more perpetrators. It is abusive conduct that is: threatening, humiliating, or intimidating, or work-interference, i.e. sabotage, which prevents work from getting done.”
Bullying can occur amongst employees (more common) and between employees and their supervisors. Below are the most common signs of workplace bullying.
The targets of bullying in the workplace are not the weakest people in the company, they’re usually the strongest. People often become targets because they have something the bullies don’t, like more skill, more respect from supervisors or more seniority.
Victims of bullying experience significant issues over time including high stress, reduced self-esteem, lack of sleep and even musculoskeletal problems.
When you recognize the signs of workplace bullying, you will notice that the bullies are often people who are good at manipulating situations. They will use bullying tactics to feel better about themselves. Workplace bullies work hard to create a false perception that they are superior by putting others down. Bosses often know the bullies are disliked but may think the organization can’t do without them and turn a blind eye.
Factors like major internal restructuring, lack of employee participation in decisions and lack of harassment policies about behavior can lead to bullying behavior. Individuals are less likely to engage in inappropriate conduct when it is understood the organization does not tolerate such conduct.
After recognizing the signs of workplace bullying, it’s important to take action. The steps that workplace leaders should take when this happens are identified below.
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