Risk & Compliance Matters

Handling Controversial Conversations in the Workplace

Managers can’t stop controversial conversations from happening in the workplace, but they can be equipped to help employees handle those conversations fairly and respectfully.


It’s fair to say that the media is consistently dominated with controversial news stories that often force people to stand on one side of the political table or the other. This is evident in the recent debate over Indiana’s Freedom of Religion bill as well as the devastating video released of a white police officer shooting an unarmed African-American man in the back eight times in South Carolina.

So what happens when controversial topics come up in workplace conversations?

We’ve all been in that position. You’re chatting with fellow co-workers on a break and a contentious topic comes up. Before you know it, you’re involved in a discussion that is quickly veering off the road of “workplace appropriate.”

In a recent article written for Quartz titled “The Right Way to Talk about Things Like Ferguson at Work,” NAVEX Global’s Ingrid Fredeen explores the idea of handling conversations around newsworthy issues that often carry strong opinions on both sides of observers’ tables. This is especially true with regard to race as a topic of conversation at work.

There are several steps organizations can take to help employees handle these difficult situations with care, while recognizing the sensitivity of controversial conversations at work. Below is a compendium of links and resources that can help employees, managers and supervisors when these difficult conversations arise.

Discriminatory behavior in the workplace has a big impact on the bottom line, and it’s fairly easy to make a business case for offering diversity and inclusion training to employees. Online training is a key activity to preventing this type of negative behavior at work.

Sensational and controversial news stories aren’t going away. Inevitably, these conversations will continue to occur in the workplace. Preparation and quick action are the best defenses against these discussions escalating to out of control.

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