Learning and Development (L&D) teams are drowning in activity. Leadership academies, compliance refreshers, microlearning libraries, LMS migrations, another platform, another rollout, another “strategic priority.”
Motion is constant and it may be keeping your L&D function from being equipped to support a healthy workplace. Are you checking training boxes just to keep the machine running? Or are you giving your employees the tools they need to influence a positive work culture?
Because those two things are very different.
Culture is everyone’s responsibility. In practice, however, culture often gets quietly handed to HR and L&D with a hopeful shrug and a vague directive that sounds something like, “People aren’t really getting along. Can you train them to behave better?”
No authority, no systemic leverage, just courses. And the data tells how that’s going.
Gallup reports that only 21% of employees worldwide are engaged at work, meaning the majority are either checked out or actively disengaged. The American Psychological Association has found that 77% of workers report work-related stress, with many pointing to interpersonal conflict, incivility, and lack of psychological safety as major contributors. Meanwhile, research from SHRM estimates that incivility costs employers collectively roughly $2 billion a day.
Taken together, this data makes one thing clear. We do not have a motivation problem. We have a behavior problem. And behavior can and should be influenced by L&D.
The L&D Struggle Is Real
The challenge is that many L&D functions were built to develop technical and job-specific skills, not to shape day-to-day behavior. Training often focuses on what employees need to do their jobs well, while overlooking the habits and skills they need to work well with other humans.
At the heart of any effective L&D strategy should be employee well-being, because well-being is what sustains performance over time. However, healthy workplaces depend far less on polished slide decks and far more on how people actually show up in moments that matter.
That includes how employees speak up when something feels off, how they interrupt disrespectful behavior in real time, how they support colleagues without escalating everything to HR, and how leaders choose courage over avoidance.
Unfortunately, many L&D teams were never designed to build social courage, ethical action, or peer accountability. These skills are messy and emotional. They do not fit neatly into a one-hour eLearning module or a once-a-year workshop.
Why Traditional “Soft Skills” Training Falls Short
Organizations often default to one-off civility trainings, catchy slogans like “see something, say something,” and policies that quietly assume bad behavior will correct itself.
It does not.
Despite decades of leadership and communication training, over 171 million acts of workplace incivility per day are still witnessed or experienced by U.S. workers. Even more telling, most employees who witness harmful behavior do exactly what they have been conditioned to do: nothing. Not because they do not care, but because they do not feel equipped.
This is the gap L&D must close.
Healthy cultures are not built by perfect managers or flawless policies. They are built when everyday employees know how to act with civility and speak up when witnessing harmful behaviors.
A Practical Way to Build Upstander Skills
For nearly two decades, we’ve worked with organizations trying to reduce harm, strengthen accountability, and shift day-to-day behavior at work. Across industries, the pattern is consistent: people don’t stay silent because they don’t care. They stay silent because they don’t know how to act in the moment without risking backlash or escalation.
What helps isn’t more policy or catchy slogans. It’s giving people realistic options, shared language, and opportunities to practice responding to behavior as it actually shows up.
That understanding is what led us to create the Upstander Train-the-Trainer Toolkit.
Designed for L&D teams and internal leaders, the toolkit offers a practical way to begin building upstander capability, especially when bringing in an external facilitator isn’t feasible yet. The content comes directly from our most requested upstander training and reflects what we use in live engagement.
The toolkit is fully white-labeled, allowing you to adapt the content to fit your organization (if you’re internal) or your clients’ (if you’re external). You purchase it once, customize it as needed, and deliver it with significantly less time and cost than live facilitation.
For a limited time, the Upstander Train-the-Trainer Toolkit is available for $99 through the end of the month, increasing to $249 afterward. It’s a way to start building internal capability now rather than waiting for perfect conditions.
Inside, you’ll find everything needed to confidently lead a two-hour upstander training, including:
- A facilitator welcome packet
- Framing summary
- Facilitator notes
- Complete slide deck
- Participant notebook
- Trainer certificate of completion
The materials are ready to use upon download.
| You can purchase the toolkit here. |
Is Your L&D Department Equipped?
Can your team confidently facilitate conversations about harmful behavior? Do your programs teach employees how to intervene so you’re not being bombarded with problems? Are your trainers prepared to navigate resistance, defensiveness, and discomfort? Is work culture learning embedded into your learning strategy, or does it show up only in isolated moments?
If the answer is “not yet,” that is not a failure. It is feedback.
More importantly, it is an invitation.
The organizations that will thrive in the years to come are not the ones with the most learning content. They are the ones that equip their people to act with courage, consistency, and care, especially when it is uncomfortable.
The post Is Your L&D Equipped to Support a Healthy Workplace? appeared first on Civility Partners.