This training program will discuss whether women are more hostile to each other in the workplace. It will discuss sexism and stereotypes in our perceptions of women's and men's bullying, the nexus of bullying and harassment, and the impact of bullying on witnesses.
WHY SHOULD YOU ATTEND?
This webinar will discuss the phenomenon - or lack thereof- of women's hostility to other women, outline what one should do if bullied, and discuss management's role in the prevention and intervention of the behavior. Research suggests that men and women employ different tactics in bullying.
Because women's ways of bullying are generally more subtle, managers may not recognize it as bullying and ignore the behavior thereby giving tacit approval for it to continue. This leads to poor morale, lack of trust in management, poor performance, absenteeism, and turnover.
- Are women really each other's worse enemy or is it just a myth and a stereotype?
- What does research show about women's hostility to other women, sometimes called bullying in the workplace?
- Is female-to-female bullying an issue that deserves attention apart from general workplace bullying?
- Do we have different expectations of women's behavior at work than we do of men's behavior?
- Do we have a responsibility, as women, to support other women at work?
AREA COVERED
- To describe women's ways of bullying
- To discuss the theoretical causes and contributing factors of women's bullying
- To determine if bullying could be illegal harassment
- To explore the impact of women bullying their colleagues
- To identify management's role in the prevention and intervention of women's bullying
- To list the steps to take if targeted by a bully
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- Theories as to whether women are more hostile to each other than to men
- Sexism and stereotypes in our perceptions of women's and men's bullying
- The nexus of bullying and harassment
- Impact of Bullying on Witnesses
- Tort laws
- Tokenism
WHO WILL BENEFIT?
- Human Resources Generalists
- Managers
- Directors
- Women Owners
- HR Managers
- Controllers
- Supervisors
- Office Managers
- Accounts Managers
- Anyone in Management at all Levels
This webinar will discuss the phenomenon - or lack thereof- of women's hostility to other women, outline what one should do if bullied, and discuss management's role in the prevention and intervention of the behavior. Research suggests that men and women employ different tactics in bullying.
Because women's ways of bullying are generally more subtle, managers may not recognize it as bullying and ignore the behavior thereby giving tacit approval for it to continue. This leads to poor morale, lack of trust in management, poor performance, absenteeism, and turnover.
- Are women really each other's worse enemy or is it just a myth and a stereotype?
- What does research show about women's hostility to other women, sometimes called bullying in the workplace?
- Is female-to-female bullying an issue that deserves attention apart from general workplace bullying?
- Do we have different expectations of women's behavior at work than we do of men's behavior?
- Do we have a responsibility, as women, to support other women at work?
- To describe women's ways of bullying
- To discuss the theoretical causes and contributing factors of women's bullying
- To determine if bullying could be illegal harassment
- To explore the impact of women bullying their colleagues
- To identify management's role in the prevention and intervention of women's bullying
- To list the steps to take if targeted by a bully
- Theories as to whether women are more hostile to each other than to men
- Sexism and stereotypes in our perceptions of women's and men's bullying
- The nexus of bullying and harassment
- Impact of Bullying on Witnesses
- Tort laws
- Tokenism
- Human Resources Generalists
- Managers
- Directors
- Women Owners
- HR Managers
- Controllers
- Supervisors
- Office Managers
- Accounts Managers
- Anyone in Management at all Levels
Speaker Profile
Dr. Susan Strauss is a national and international speaker, trainer and consultant. Her specialty areas include management/leadership development, organization development, communication, and harassment and bullying. She is an expert witness for discrimination and harassment lawsuits. She trains and consults with business, education, healthcare, law, and government organizations from both the public and private sector. Dr. Strauss has authored over 30 book chapters, books, and articles in professional journals. She has been featured on 20/20, CBS Evening News, and other television and radio programs as well as interviewed for newspaper and journal articles. She has her doctorate in organizational leadership, is …
Upcoming Webinars
OSHA Requirements for Supervisors, Project Leaders & HR - W…
California Meal and Rest Breaks: What You Don't Know Can Co…
Treasury Risk Management, Funding, Liquidity, Interest Rate…
Future-Proof Your Workforce: Mastering Succession Planning …
FFIEC BSA/AML Examination Manual: What Compliance Officers …
HIPAA Bootcamp for Health Care Providers, Professionals, an…
Improving Employee Engagement & Retention Through Stay Inte…
Essential Job Functions According to the American with Disa…
Conquer Toxic People - Learn To Protect Yourself And Get Yo…
Dealing With Difficult People In Life & Work
Updated Metro 2®, e-OSCAR and the New Tougher FCRA/CFPB Com…
Introduction to Generative AI for Accountants
Surviving and Thriving Organizational Change and Loss: The …
How to Write Effective Audit Observations: The Principles f…
Impact Assessment and Risk Management for Change Control
3-Hour Virtual Seminar on Excel Deep Dive: Advanced Tips & …
Coming Soon - New Minimum Salary Levels for Exempt Employee…
Marijuana: Compliance and Safety in the Workplace
Stressed Out: How to Handle Conflict, Difficult People and …
FDA Regulation of Artificial Intelligence/ Machine Learning
Data Integrity: Compliance with 21 CFR Part 11, SaaS-Cloud,…
How to Handle Workplace Conversations Around Politics and R…
2025 Top Employment Regulations That Will Impact Employers!
How to Give Corrective Feedback: The CARE Model - Eliminati…
Why EBITDA Doesn't Spell Cash Flow and What Does
SOPs - How to Write Them to Satisfy those Inspectors
Documenting Misconduct that Will Stand Up in Court
Human Error Reduction Techniques for Floor Supervisors
With Mandatory Paid Leave Gaining Ground Is It Time To Do A…
Marketing to Medicare or Medicaid Beneficiaries - What You …
Trial Master File (TMF)/eTMF, & FDAs Draft Guidance for Ele…
Tattoos, hijabs, piercings, and pink hair: The challenges …
Project Management for Non-Project Managers - How to commun…
Unlock Employee Loyalty: Stay Interviews Will Keep Them Eng…
Sunshine Act Reporting - Clarification for Clinical Research
Female to Female Hostility @Workplace: All you Need to Know
Onboarding is NOT Orientation - How to Improve the New Empl…
Managing Toxic & Other Employees Who Have Attitude Issues
Building GMP Excellence: A Guide to Implementing Compliant …
Excel Power Skills: Master Functions, Formulas, and Macros …