Criticism & Discipline Skills for Managers and Supervisors

Practical strategies for employee discipline challenges

no. DE
5 out of 5 Customer Rating (1625)

1-Day Seminar

Credits - CEU: 0.6 CPE: 6 HRCI: 5.5 PDC: 6 PDU: 6

$149.00
$20 off seminars for groups of 3 or more
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In today’s competitive work environment, there is no room for behaviors that lower morale, reduce productivity or derail key initiatives. Our employee discipline training offers a proven framework for managing difficult employees effectively and professionally.

This seminar equips managers with practical tools for employee behavior management and handling workplace conflict with confidence and fairness.

Do These Challenges Sound Familiar?

  • The Negative Attitude: These employees undermine morale with constant complaints and lack of commitment. While they may meet performance standards, their poor outlook drains team energy.
  • The Unskilled: Some employees lack the necessary capabilities to keep up. Whether the role has evolved or skills were never fully developed, performance continues to suffer.
  • The Misdirected: Well-intentioned but off-course, these employees are eager to contribute but are unclear on expectations or have lost focus. With the right guidance, they can become reliable assets.

This Seminar Will Help You Handle Employees Who:

  • Display persistent negative attitudes
  • Frequently miss work or arrive late
  • Reject accountability or make excuses
  • Challenge authority or disrupt team cohesion
  • Struggle with personal distractions that affect job performance

Through this employee discipline training, you will learn to identify root causes, respond with empathy and take structured steps to improve behavior or transition employees when needed.

Build a Stronger, More Accountable Team

All managers encounter challenging employee situations. This course ensures your entire leadership team is aligned in their approach to managing difficult employees, building fair performance plans and using progressive discipline effectively.

By attending, you’ll gain shared language and strategies to strengthen team performance and create a culture of accountability.

Understanding the Problem

  • Recognizing the signs of a problem employee: Learn to identify the nine most common symptoms of poor performance and disengagement.
  • Exploring the root causes: Understand the emotional and psychological drivers behind underperformance.
  • Why waiting can backfire: Discover why you shouldn’t delay intervention, even before a clear pattern develops.
  • Assessing your own impact: Use a practical checklist to uncover whether your actions may be contributing to the issue.
  • Communication missteps: Identify how unclear or inconsistent communication can lead to performance problems.
  • Diagnosing the source: Gain strategies to accurately pinpoint what’s driving employee issues.

Taking Positive Action

  • Choosing the right corrective approach: Review six key factors when selecting how to address performance issues.
  • Training gaps and warning signs: Recognize the seven indicators that an employee may simply need additional training.
  • Preparing for the conversation: Learn how to approach a performance discussion with clarity and professionalism.
  • Delivering feedback effectively: Communicate issues without placing blame or triggering defensiveness.
  • Clarifying expectations: Set clear, realistic standards to reinforce desired behavior and reduce confusion.
  • When early steps fall short: Use progressive discipline strategies to respond when initial actions don’t lead to improvement.
  • Building a performance improvement plan: Structure a plan that sets clear goals and encourages accountability.

Handling Employees Who:

  • Display negative or resistant attitudes
  • Are habitually late
  • Frequently call in sick or miss shifts
  • Avoid responsibility or shift blame
  • Challenge your authority
  • Struggle with ongoing personal distractions

Preparing for Dismissals

  • Effective documentation practices: Know when to begin documenting and what details to include to protect your organization.
  • Consistency with policy: Ensure your actions align with company standards and employment agreements.
  • Using a witness when needed: Understand when a third party should be present and how to conduct the meeting professionally.
  • Asking the right questions: Engage employees constructively and maintain fairness throughout the process.

When Termination Becomes Necessary

Learn how to conduct respectful exit conversations that preserve dignity and reduce resentment.

Understand how to avoid grievances and respond appropriately if they arise.