Published 3/2026
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Language: English | Duration: 1h 31m | Size: 1.44 GB
What you'll learn
Define workplace gaslighting and separate it from normal conflict or feedback.
Identify key gaslighting tactics (denial, DARVO, blame-shifting, isolation).
Respond in real time with calm scripts, boundaries, and de-escalation tools.
Document incidents clearly and report/escalate through HR or ethics channels.
Support a colleague being targeted and strengthen team psychological safety.
Apply leadership and policy strategies to prevent gaslighting in culture.
Requirements
There are no prerequisites for this course
Description
Have you ever left a meeting feeling confused-certain something was said or agreed to-only to be told, "That never happened," or "You're being too sensitive"? When that pattern repeats, it can quietly erode confidence, create anxiety, and damage team trust.
Gaslighting at work isn't just "bad communication." It's a form of psychological manipulation that causes someone to doubt their memory, perception, or judgment-often through denial, blame-shifting, emotional invalidation, and narrative control. And because it frequently hides behind professionalism, power dynamics, and vague feedback, it can be difficult to name until the harm is already done.
This course is designed to help you recognize gaslighting clearly, respond safely, and take practical steps to protect yourself, your team, and your organization.
In this course, you'll learn how to
• Define workplace gaslighting and distinguish it from honest feedback, conflict, and simple miscommunication
• Identify common gaslighting tactics (denial, trivializing emotions, blame-shifting, isolation, and DARVO)
• Understand why gaslighting happens, including motivations like control, insecurity, and avoiding accountability
• Recognize the psychological impact on targets (self-doubt, hypervigilance, burnout, impostor syndrome)
• Respond in real time using calm, assertive communication and boundary-setting strategies
• Use tools like written follow-ups and the Grey Rock method to reduce manipulation and protect your credibility
• Document patterns effectively and report concerns through HR, ethics hotlines, and escalation pathways
• Support colleagues who may be targeted and rebuild your own resilience and self-trust
• - Implement leadership and organizational prevention strategies that strengthen psychological safety
You'll also review real-world examples-including a case study on Away Luggage-to see how toxic leadership and reality-distorting communication can spread through a culture, and what it takes to stop it.
By the end, you'll have the language, frameworks, and action steps to move from confusion to clarity-and to help create a workplace where respect, accountability, and psychological safety are the norm.
Who this course is for
Employees experiencing confusing, undermining, or reality-distorting interactions
Managers and team leads who want to build psychological safety and accountability
HR professionals handling complaints, investigations, and workplace conduct issues
People leaders in fast-paced or high-pressure environments (startups, sales, ops)
Bystanders/peers who want to intervene supportively and reduce harm
Coaches, mentors, and DEI practitioners supporting employee well-being
Code:
Bitte
Anmelden
oder
Registrieren
um Code Inhalt zu sehen!