A work environment characterized by civility and respect is essential for the effective operation of increasingly diverse workplaces. Rude, disrespectful or otherwise objectionable conduct impacts the workplace:
It can drive a wedge between co-workers, drive down productivity, and drive your best employees out the door to other employers. Worse, it can result in a poisoned work environment that can cost you dearly in court costs, damages, and goodwill. Left undealt with, a poisoned work environment will result in a fragmented workforce, with employees choosing sides in a rancorous atmosphere where uncivil and disrespectful incidents occur. Employees are the face of your organization; if that face is marked by a scowl, a look of anguish, or muttered unhappiness, your customers and suppliers will take notice.
Respect and civility should become part of your corporate DNA and inform everything you do in the course of your business. However, you cannot create Respect and Civility in the Workplace by waving a magic wand. As an employer, you need to set clear and unambiguous standards of conduct, and follow-up with positive measures that cultivate and encourage a civil and respectful work environment. To be effective, this requires the active participation of employees. Employees need to be part of the process to establish standards of conduct that reflect the sensitivities of your particular workplace. They should have input into determining what is welcome and unwelcome behaviour. Without their input, they will not feel they have an ownership stake in the workplace environment. In other words, the process of developing a Respectful and Civil Workplace must itself be respectful and civil. A top-down approach – “be civil and respectful or else!” – is doomed to failure.
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It is important to get a sense of your workplace culture as it pertains to civility and respect. A workplace audit that canvasses employees on this issue can help to focus on areas of workplace culture that enhance or detract from civility, and to reinforce for employees the value that civility brings to the workplace. Such an audit will allow you to get a picture of what needs to be done to create a respectful workplace. As with any worthwhile workplace initiative, this cannot be a one-off affair. The values of Respect and Civility in the Workplace need to be restated, revisited, and reinforced as a normal part of ongoing employee training.
After the audit has been completed and the input from employees analyzed, draft and post throughout your workplace a statement setting out the commitment to a respectful and civil workplace. This should be separate from established discrimination or harassment policies, so as to emphasize a pro-active commitment to these values as fundamental to all your company’s other policies.
When workplaces undergo gender, demographic or other changes, certain conduct that may have been accepted in the past may turn out to be unwelcome in a more diverse work environment. (Think of once male-dominated work areas featuring pin-ups and male intramural humour, etc.) For this reason, the statement of values should set out concrete examples of welcome and unwelcome behaviour, ideally customized to your workplace and obtained as part of your workplace audit. (One possible example: “At ABC Co., employees are called by their names, not nicknames or terms of endearment, such as ‘my dear’.”) Illustrate the goal of making every interaction a positive one for both parties.
A complaint resolution process is essential to convincing employees that you take their issues seriously. If as an employer you already have such a process to address human rights, workplace safety or harassment concerns, you should allow for such a process to consider complaints about uncivil or disrespectful conduct, whether filed pursuant to an incident or with respect to the general workplace atmosphere. Employees should be reassured that there is a way to bring concerns to management’s attention and that complaints will be taken seriously and handled objectively, fairly, and in a timely manner.
It is likely that the workplace audit will identify issues that require follow-up. These could range from relatively minor irritants to serious concerns. By addressing these issues forthrightly, the employer can help reassure employees of its commitment to the core values set out in the Statement of Values. This may be achieved a number of ways–through regular training or through other communication such as a company newsletter.
Respect and civility apply to everyone, from the CEO on down. If employees feel there is one standard of conduct for management and another for everyone else, any attempt to implement a respectful and civil workplace will fail. Management by yelling, belittlement or derision, it should go without saying, is inconsistent with respect and civility.
Your work is not done once you have set out a Statement of Values; you should move to ensure that the introduction of such a Statement is accompanied by training for all employees. Training should address how it is possible for people to engage in disrespectful behaviour without intending to, and how such miscommunication can be resolved. And as with any training, it is important to reinforce values of civility and respect, by regular follow-up training.
Civility and respect should be part of regular employee performance reviews. Those employees who stand out in modeling civil and respectful behaviour should be rewarded for their efforts, whether through bonuses (if that is part of your corporate practice), or through other means, such as being recognized in company newsletters, etc.
Civility and respect are not fads. They are foundational values for any organization or company. Employees need to know that these values are an integral part of your company’s DNA, and that the company is committed to them over the long haul. The only way to demonstrate this effectively is over the long term.
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