When a conflict requires a formal investigation, it can feel like a heavy administrative burden. If you are part of the “business sandwich generation,” you are often the bridge between rigid organizational policy and the human beings who carry out the work.
In this position, a fair and impartial investigation is more than a legal hoop to jump through. It is a vital opportunity to listen deeply, restore integrity, and ensure the long-term health of your workplace.
A truly fair investigation is built on mutuality, fairness, and integrity. It requires listening with your “third ear” for what isn’t being said and honoring the dignity of everyone involved. To help you navigate this sensitive process, here are three common pitfalls I frequently see when reviewing legal claims—missteps that often could have been resolved out of court.
1. Misaligned Timelines
A common error I see in my practice is a failure to align the timeline of events. For instance, I have seen investigations where witnesses are interviewed about an incident that occurred in a specific year, yet those individuals actually left the organization years prior. Because they weren’t present for the event, their inclusion raises immediate concerns about the investigation’s credibility.
The Fix: To ensure fairness, keep your efforts grounded in the reality of the event. Focus exclusively on individuals who were present to witness the alleged occurrences.
2. Prejudicial Opinions
It is easy for an investigator to slip into the role of a manager, offering personal opinions on how someone should have performed. When a report states, “Fatima should have managed her team differently,” it moves away from fact-finding and into subjective judgment.
The Fix: In a fair process, we let the evidence do the talking. Assertions about management or professional abilities must be supported by specific instances, witness accounts, and clear documentation—including dates and locations. This objective approach protects the integrity of the report and the dignity of the people named within it.
3. Reverse-Engineered Decisions
Perhaps the most damaging pitfall is reaching a conclusion prematurely and then searching for evidence to justify it. This “reverse engineering” compromises the very foundation of impartiality.
When an investigation confirms a bias rather than discovering the truth, it ceases to be a tool for resolution and becomes a source of further hurt. In my mediation practice, I find that these flawed investigations often lead to avoidable litigation because the parties can feel the lack of genuine fairness.
The Risk: If bias or unfairness involves protected categories (e.g., race, sex, religion, national origin, disability, age), the employer will soon face much larger problems than a difficult internal investigation.
The Opportunity for Healing
A workplace investigation is often a signal that there is a “hurt” in the organization that needs to be addressed. By avoiding these pitfalls and committing to a thorough, unbiased process, you are doing more than just complying with the law. You are contributing to a supportive, just, and sustainable work environment.
