Overview:
This session explores workplace drama as a leadership and culture issue rather than just a "people problem." Participants examine typical drama patterns (triangulation, favoritism, exclusion, informal power centers) and learn practical communication and coaching tools to address them. The course integrates elements of emotional intelligence, boundary-setting, and narrative reframing so that participants can turn conflict-heavy situations into opportunities for influence and trust-building.
Why you should Attend:
This course helps you move from reacting to conflict to strategically working with it, so you can lead with clarity instead of getting pulled into office politics. It is valuable if you find yourself managing personality clashes, miscommunication, or gossip that quietly affects morale and performance. If you do not learn to recognize and redirect workplace drama, it can silently shape your reputation, weaken your authority, and push good people out of your team.
Areas Covered in the Session:
- Defining workplace drama: patterns, behaviors, and underlying emotional drivers
- How informal power, cliques, and reputational games emerge in teams
- The leader's role: shifting from "fixer" or "referee" to coach and culture shaper
- Practical scripts and communication frameworks to address gossip and tension
- Emotional self-management: handling triggers, defensiveness, and "personality clashes"
- Turning conflicts into learning moments: reflective debriefs and feedback conversations
- Building long-term norms that discourage drama and support psychological safety
Who Will Benefit:
- Team Leaders and Supervisors
- Mid-level Managers and Project Managers
- HR Business Partners and HR Generalists
- Learning and Development / Training Professionals
- Communication and People Operations Specialists
- Aspiring Leaders preparing for people-management roles