Problem? Solution!
Know when you need support — and what kind
With more than 25 years of experience in workplace wars, Lynne Eisaguirre has learned to discern the special qualities of each client’s individual problems and customize programs to meet the needs of that particular situation.
Her company, Workplaces that Work, addresses all levels of the workforce with speeches, seminars, group activities, books, coaching, and consulting.
Lynne’s team of professionals combine programs and tailor interventions across a wide range of issues, including:
When you have a leader who is a high performer in some areas but not others, coaching can identify and tackle their strengths and weaknesses. We provide a variety of tools to solve your toughest coaching challenges.
If you have an outlier who is a good performer but needs training in how to behave according to your values, policies and the law, one-on-one sensitivity training will change their ways of interacting at work. We customize our coaching to meet your specific needs.
A conflict is just a negotiation you didn’t know you were having.The key to conflict is finding out how to navigate the workplaces stress that arises everywhere — and using it to achieve consensus.
Successful leaders are the ones who make it not only through the everyday joys and stresses of running a company but the brain-breaking labor of getting through the dark night of the business soul.If you carry the weight of an entire workforce, you know that one minute you may look great, and the next, you may take it on the chin because of an industry downturn.
You’re the boss and you lead, but you’ll walk off alone if no one’s following. And people won’t stay unless you’re meeting their needs.Employee turnover is expensive. It costs you productivity every time a new employee has to ramp up, and it’s disruptive — it can quickly fragment your company’s culture if not held in check.
Of all the changes that have transformed the business world in recent decades, none is more talked about than diversity training.Even when managers and leaders understand the connection between their organization‘s business goals and good diversity practices, it can be a challenge to recognize and eliminate biases from hiring, promotion, disciplining and other management decisions.
In today’s workplace, respect is not optional — it’s a bottom-line requirement.Yet, harassment remains one of the thorniest problems of the workplace, whether you’re the one lodging a complaint or you have to deal with that complaint.
It happens in the best of businesses—a conflict can suddenly grow into a legal complaint. The most typical of these are harassment, discrimination, and retaliation.Employers are required by law to do a full and fair investigation when an employee has made a plausible complaint concerning any legally protected activity.