Skip to main content

Preventing sexual harassment at work eLearning course

Employment law training

Graphic style - training

Employment law eLearning training

As of 26 October 2024, all employers are under a new proactive duty to take reasonable steps to prevent sexual harassment at work. The Employment Rights Bill is set to extend these duties to all reasonable steps.

 Tribunals have the power to apply an uplift of up to 25% to any compensation awarded in successful claims if an employer has failed to comply with the duty.

‘Tick box’ training will no longer cut the mustard. Our meaningful, engaging and practical eLearning course helps you stay compliant, avoid a potential 25% uplift in compensation. It demonstrate that you take seriously your obligation to prevent sexual harassment. Already trusted by SMEs and household names alike, the course builds awareness, strengthens culture and delivers real impact.

Watch the course demo
Orange circle showing used by over 100,000 learners

Sexual harassment in the workplace:
a widespread issue

Despite the introduction of the new legal duties, there is still a widespread issue with sexual harassment in UK workplaces. The stats paint a stark picture:

  • A Unite survey of 300,000 workers published earlier this year revealed that 30% of respondents have experienced sexual harassment
  • Only 26% felt their employer had done enough to promote a zero-tolerance culture toward workplace sexual harassment
  • HR Grapevine highlighted that over 60% of organisations have not invested in any sexual harassment training

Given these stats and the strong likelihood that the Employment Rights Bill will increase employers’ duties to prevent workplace sexual harassment, getting on top of your training requirements is essential.

Our course helps your organisation to:

  • Increase understanding of what constitutes sexual harassment at work, going beyond the minimum legal requirements
  • Give individuals clear guidance on how to speak up and raise any concerns
  • Reinforce learning through practical, real-world scenario exercises
  • Reduce risk of claims and limit exposure to a potential 25% increase in compensation for successful cases
  • Thorough reporting and an audit trail to provide evidence if required

Preventing sexual harassment at work –
what we cover

What is sexual harassment?

Responding to inappropriate behaviour

Progressing concerns and delivering outcomes

On-demand eLearning walkthrough

Watch our on-demand walkthrough of Preventing Sexual Harassment at Work. Rated 5 stars by attendees, the session shows how to meet the new legal duty to take reasonable steps and how our eLearning supports compliance and awareness across your workforce.

In just 40 minutes, Charlie McHugh and Rena Christou explain how the course helps build understanding of what amounts to sexual harassment, gives employees clear routes to speak up and uses practical, real-world scenarios to test learning.

They also cover how the training helps minimise liability, avoid a potential 25% uplift in compensation, and provide robust reporting should you ever need to evidence completion.

Preventing sexual harassment additional services

Our range of services gives your organisation the support you need to improve sexual harassment awareness and behaviours in the workplace. From assessments to policy support, we’re here to help.

Protect your organisation with a sexual harassment risk assessment

Practical steps to reduce exposure and demonstrate compliance

  • Identify hazards, who’s at risk, and where gaps exist in policies or training
  • Set clear action plans and responsibilities to mitigate risk
  • Keep the assessment live with regular reviews as your organisation changes
Why you need a risk assessment

Keep your workplace safe with up-to-date contracts and policies

Expertly drafted, legally robust and tailored to your organisation

  • Review, redraft, or reimagine your employment contracts and policies
  • Spot compliance gaps, protect business interests, and set a clear, inclusive tone
  • Turn recommendations into action yourself, or let us do the heavy lifting
Enquire about policy services

Better banter at work eLearning

Protect your business without compromising what makes the workplace great

  • Understand where humour ends and harassment begins
  • Learn the law, what’s protected, and how intent vs impact matters
  • Practical guidance on calling out concerns, supporting others, and handling inappropriate behaviour
View Better Banter course

Frequently asked questions

How will the Employment Rights Bill extend employer sexual harassment duties?

The Employment Rights Bill will extend employer sexual harassment duties in the following ways:

  • Higher Standard of Prevention: The duty for employers to prevent sexual harassment will be raised from taking “reasonable steps” to taking “all reasonable steps.” This duty will likely come into effect in October 2026 and will require employers to take a more comprehensive and proactive approach to prevention.
  • Third-Party Harassment Liability: Employers will be held liable for sexual harassment committed by third parties (e.g., clients, customers, suppliers) unless they can demonstrate they took “all reasonable steps” to prevent it. (Note: This liability for third-party harassment will apply to all types of harassment, not just sexual harassment.)
  • Strengthened Whistleblowing Protection: The Bill explicitly includes the disclosure of sexual harassment as a qualifying disclosure under whistleblowing legislation, protecting employees who report it from retaliation (such as dismissal or detriments).
  • Ban on Confidentiality Clauses: The Bill aims to void provisions in settlement or non-disclosure agreements that prevent workers from making allegations or disclosures about certain types of discrimination and harassment.

Is there a recommended risk assessment template for sexual harassment?

Yes, we have a risk assessment template for preventing sexual harassment in the workplace. If you’d like to discuss access to this template, feel free to get in touch with us.

How often should sexual harassment training be updated?

Training should be updated and delivered regularly to be considered current and effective.

  • Refresher Frequency: Updating training at least every 12 months (if not more frequently) is advised to raise awareness and help protect against employment tribunal claims.
  • The “Stale” Training Precedent: The case of Allay (UK) Ltd v Mr S Gehlen demonstrated that providing one-off or infrequent training is insufficient. The tribunal rejected the employer’s defence against a racial harassment claim because the anti-harassment training was deemed “stale” and ineffective, having “faded from people’s memories.”

To rely on the statutory defence of taking “all reasonable steps” to prevent harassment, employers must be able to show that their training and policies are current, effective, and regularly refreshed. Training should be treated as an ongoing process, not a one-off, “tick-box exercise.”

What we’ve been talking about recently…

Filter

Reasonable adjustments during a disciplinary process

A neurodiverse employee was discriminated against after their employer failed to make reasonable adjustments during…
Women with hand out in front of her face

One year on from the Worker Protection Act

It's a year on since the Worker Protection Act introduced the proactive duty for all…
Head jigsaw puzzle being held by multiple hands

Failure to train on neurodiversity

A recent Employment Tribunal ruling has made clear that mishandling neurodiversity training can amount to…
Low, medium, high risk gauge made out of wooden blocks with pointer on high risk

Risk assessment for sexual harassment – have you done yours?

Recent stats show that over 41% of employers are yet to carry out a sexual…
Driving car with arm resting on door

Sexual harassment ‘in the course of employment’

The Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) has provided a timely reminder that liability for sexual harassment…