Search Course Catalog (587 Courses Found)

Contains all of the available courses within the TrainingFlow™ LMS.

Results for Target Audience: General

TrainingBriefs® Now That’s a Masterpiece

TrainingBriefs® Now That’s a Masterpiece

5 Minutes Level: Foundational
What do you do when a co-worker (or employee) takes compromising pictures of fellow worker and decides to post them on social media? Are you prepared for the fallout? Understanding how this behavior could be the basis of disciplinary action and even a hostile environment sexual harassment lawsuit.
Topics: Sexual Harassment, Harassment, Respect
Industry Settings: Healthcare, Industrial & Manufacturing, Office & General, Retail
Target Audience: General
TrainingBriefs® Course
TrainingBriefs® Just Asking

TrainingBriefs® Just Asking

5 Minutes Level: Foundational
Do your employees know the difference between unprofessional and illegal behavior and sexual harassment? Could they recognize how an unwelcome pursuit can become harassing behavior? What if it was a manager pursuing an employee? Inappropriate or illegal?
Topics: Sexual Harassment, Compliance, Professionalism, Abusive Conduct
Industry Settings: Healthcare, Industrial & Manufacturing, Office & General, Retail
Target Audience: General
TrainingBriefs® Course
TrainingBriefs® The Best Side

TrainingBriefs® The Best Side

5 Minutes Level: Foundational
Do your employees know the difference between unprofessional and illegal behavior and sexual harassment? Do they know how to handle borderline situations involving themselves or their coworkers, even third party vendors/non-employees? This powerful vignette drives discussion, builds awareness and helps prevent incidents of sexual harassment.
Topics: Harassment, Compliance, Professionalism, Sexual Harassment
Industry Settings: Healthcare, Industrial & Manufacturing, Office & General, Retail
Target Audience: General
TrainingBriefs® Course
TrainingBriefs® The Honeymooner

TrainingBriefs® The Honeymooner

5 Minutes Level: Foundational
Do your employees know the difference between unprofessional and illegal behavior and sexual harassment? Do they know how to handle borderline situations involving themselves or their coworkers? This video situation is a powerful tool to drive discussion, build awareness and prevent incidents of harassment in your organization.
Topics: Harassment, Compliance, Professionalism, Respect, Sexual Harassment
Industry Settings: Healthcare, Industrial & Manufacturing, Office & General, Retail
Target Audience: General
TrainingBriefs® Course
TrainingBriefs® The Spy

TrainingBriefs® The Spy

5 Minutes Level: Foundational
Do your employees, staff and even management team understand that sexual harassment can take many forms? It can be verbal, as with jokes, comments, or propositions. It can be visual, as in written notes, cartoons, or objects. It can be electronic, as in e-mails, social media posts, and texts. And it can be physical, as with touching, gesturing, or leering and staring.
Topics: Harassment, Compliance, Professionalism, Sexual Harassment
Industry Settings: Healthcare, Industrial & Manufacturing, Office & General, Retail
Target Audience: General
TrainingBriefs® Course
TrainingBriefs® They Posted What?!?

TrainingBriefs® They Posted What?!?

5 Minutes Level: Foundational
Social media is a powerful communication tool. Employees can (and do) post things that are best left unseen in the workplace. But what if co-workers begin viewing and discussing another employee's posts in the workplace? Inappropriate, unprofessional or illegal?
Topics: Harassment, Communication, Professionalism, Respect
Industry Settings: Healthcare, Industrial & Manufacturing, Office & General, Retail
Target Audience: General
TrainingBriefs® Course
TrainingBriefs® Way to Go Team!

TrainingBriefs® Way to Go Team!

5 Minutes Level: Foundational
Slapping any employee on the butt is inappropriate workplace behavior and should not happen with any employee! Unwanted touching, swatting, rubbing or any other physical action of this type spells trouble in the workplace. It’s best to keep physical contact to a minimum and always on a professional level.
Topics: Sexual Harassment, Harassment, Abusive Conduct
Industry Settings: Healthcare, Industrial & Manufacturing, Office & General, Retail
Target Audience: General
TrainingBriefs® Course
TrainingBriefs® I’m Not Biased

TrainingBriefs® I’m Not Biased

10 Minutes Level: Foundational
Biases are the attitudes or stereotypes that affect our understanding, actions, perceptions and decisions. Going deeper, bias also refers to the persistent, harmful, and unequal treatment of someone based solely on some characteristic they possess or their apparent membership in or identification with a particular group. Stereotype is often defined as a generalized belief about a particular category of people. An example of a stereotype might be “All Asians are good at math.”
Topics: Diversity Dynamics, Professionalism, Inclusion & Equity, Respect, Unconscious Bias
Industry Settings: Healthcare, Industrial & Manufacturing, Office & General, Retail
Target Audience: General
TrainingBriefs® Course
TrainingBriefs® Scratch My Back

TrainingBriefs® Scratch My Back

5 Minutes Level: Foundational
Promising a promotion in return for sexual favors is illegal and may be grounds for a quid pro quo sexual harassment lawsuit. While managers and supervisors are held to a higher legal standard in sexual harassment cases, sexual harassment prevention is everyone’s responsibility. What it all comes down to is this - preventing sexual harassment is about recognizing what's going on around us and then making good decisions.
Topics: Sexual Harassment, Harassment, Respect, Abusive Conduct
Industry Settings: Healthcare, Industrial & Manufacturing, Office & General, Retail
Target Audience: General
TrainingBriefs® Course
TrainingBriefs® The Birthday Girl

TrainingBriefs® The Birthday Girl

5 Minutes Level: Foundational
It's not enough to understand the legal definition of sexual harassment… we must know what sexual harassment looks like in the real world… and its consequences on each other… and the organization. Because appropriate touching varies so much among different people, the best advice is to keep close personal touch to a minimum and always on a professional level.
Topics: Sexual Harassment, Harassment, Professionalism, Abusive Conduct
Industry Settings: Healthcare, Industrial & Manufacturing, Office & General, Retail
Target Audience: General
TrainingBriefs® Course