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Guide

2026 Guide to Workplace Conduct

Explore the state of workplace conduct issue reports, learn what the data really says about culture, risk and trust, and determine how to best approach your speak-up program in 2026 and beyond.

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Turn reporting data into insight you can act on

Rethink what reporting volume really means

High reporting isn’t necessarily a risk signal – it can reflect trust, psychological safety and a culture where employees feel comfortable speaking up. Learn how to interpret reporting data in the right context.

Identify early warning signs before issues escalate

Patterns in workplace civility and HR-related reports can signal emerging risks before they become formal complaints. Use reporting data to surface trends early and take proactive action.

Avoid common misinterpretations that hide real risk

Low reporting volume doesn’t always mean fewer issues – and high reporting doesn’t mean failure. Understand how to avoid misleading conclusions and use data to strengthen culture and accountability.

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What is workplace conduct – and why does it dominate reporting?

Workplace conduct includes how employees treat one another and how they align with company standards, including behavior such as harassment and discrimination to everyday civility and respect. 

Across industries and regions, workplace conduct consistently accounts for the greatest share of internal reports – often more than 50%. This category includes discrimination, harassment, retaliation, and workplace civility. 

At first glance, high reporting volume can seem alarming. However, workplace conduct data is best understood as a signal of trust and psychological safety, reflecting employees’ willingness to speak up. 

When interpreted thoughtfully, workplace conduct metrics provide leaders with meaningful insight into expectations, management practices and emerging culture risks.

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Workplace conduct by the numbers

Our 2026 Whistleblowing & Incident Management Benchmark Report
highlights the most common workplace conduct risks shaping organizational culture.

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What you’ll learn in this guide

This guide provides practical insight into how workplace conduct data can be interpreted and applied. 

  • Interpret workplace conduct data in context 
  • Use speak-up reporting as a measure of trust 
  • Identify trends across key conduct risks 
  • Understand how employees frame concerns 
  • Apply benchmark data to improve decision-making
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Who should read this guide

This guide is designed for professionals responsible for understanding workplace behavior and strengthening organizational culture. 

  • Compliance and ethics leaders 
  • HR professionals 
  • Legal teams 
  • Risk and audit professionals 
  • Executive leaders 

Sound like you?

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Frequently asked questions about the guide

  • What is included in the 2026 Guide to Workplace Conduct?

    The guide provides global benchmark data, trend analysis across key risk types, and practical guidance for interpreting workplace conduct metrics and strengthening your culture.

  • Who is this for?

    This guide is built for leaders responsible for interpreting program data and driving action, including: 

    • Compliance and ethics leaders  
    • HR leaders  
    • Legal professionals  
    • Risk and governance leaders supporting executive and board reporting
  • Will I receive the report?

    This page provides access to the Workplace Conduct Benchmark Guide. You can also explore the full NAVEX Whistleblowing & Incident Management Benchmark Report for broader insights.

  • Where does the data come from?

    The data is drawn from NAVEX’s global dataset of whistleblowing and case management reports, representing 4,000+ organizations and 2.37 million reports analyzed across industries and regions. Get the complete 2026 Whistleblowing & Incident Management Benchmark Report here.

Turn workplace conduct insights into action

Workplace conduct data is more than a measure of risk – it is a window into culture. Use these insights to strengthen trust and accountability.