#Webinar

10 Vital Workplace Investigation Mistakes to Avoid | Case IQ


10 Critical Mistakes in Workplace Investigation Programs and How to Avoid Them


The road to employment lawsuits is littered with the carcasses of workplace investigations gone wrong. Failure to acknowledge issues or conduct timely, fair investigations puts companies at risk for lawsuits, fines, negative publicity and disgruntled employees.

Training and awareness are key to avoiding some of the major investigation mistakes that can damage your organization.

Join Kenneth McCarthy, President of Integrity by McCarthy Inc, as he discusses 10 critical mistakes companies and investigators make when conducting workplace investigations and how to avoid them.


The webinar will cover:

For employers

  • Getting your employees to report misconduct

For human resources leaders

  • The fine line between managers, investigators and parties to the investigation

For investigators

  • Obtaining and interpreting key evidence

For all three

  • Timely action
  • Communication with subjects and witnesses
  • Bias and conflicts of interest

Bonus

  • Critical mistakes by subjects and witnesses
  • When YOU are named as the subject of an investigation

Webinar Presenter
Kenneth McCarthy

Ken is a former executive from the Canada Border Services Agency, where during the final 10 years of his career, he led a workplace investigations program for a workforce of over 15,000 employees. He provided executive oversight in more than 500 workplace investigations and has designed and delivered investigation training sessions to over 500 front-line managers.
Ken has seen the devastating consequences of workplace harassment, violence, and fraud on individuals and organizations, from issues related to mental health, absenteeism, and presenteeism; to organizational reputation damage and financial losses. He set out to make a difference by founding Integrity By McCarthy Inc.
Ken is also a member of the investigation unit for the Office of the Sport Integrity Commissioner of Canada, under the Abuse Free Sport program, which aims to eliminate maltreatment in sport in all Canadian federally funded sports organizations, from grassroots to high performance levels.

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