Better Banter
at Work
eLearning Course

Evolving law. Constant confidence

Real-world learning for a modern, compliant workplace.

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Essential workplace training
on banter vs. harassment

"It was just a bit of banter" - we’ve all heard this excuse used to justify inappropriate behaviour. While workplace humour can help teams gel and create a fun environment, it can easily get out of hand.

Unchecked workplace banter can quickly cross the line and expose your organisation to significant legal risk.

Our session helps to protect your business by clearly setting out where the line is drawn, when the law gets involved, what behaviour is protected and how to effectively raise concerns.

Why "it was just banter" is
no defence against claims

Recent tribunal decisions have made it clear that "banter" is no longer a valid legal excuse for inappropriate behaviour. High-profile cases have seen employees dismissed for misogynistic conduct and companies forced to pay compensation in pregnancy discrimination claims.

Even when no offence is intended, the legal focus remains entirely on the impact that the behaviour has on the recipient. Managers and employees need clear boundaries to distinguish between acceptable humour and actual harassment.

Our course helps your organisation to:

  • Equip teams to enjoy positive interactions without crossing the line.
  • Help individuals recognise when humour tips into harassment.
  • Provide clear approaches for speaking up and addressing concerns immediately.
  • Build confidence to support colleagues safely and appropriately.
  • Use real-world examples to handle issues both formally and informally.
  • Strengthen a respectful culture while protecting the organisation from risk..

What we cover

5

Humour or harassment

What's the problem – the negative impact of 'banter' left unchecked

Where is the line – recognising and understanding different tolerance levels

Legal definitions – what's defined as 'harassment' for employment law purposes and practical examples

Issue with intent – understanding that it's the effect of the behaviour on the recipient that matters

5

Dealing with inappropriate behaviour

Sanctions – the actions which may be taken against the perpetrator if allegations are upheld

Severity – making clear that harassment and discrimination is treated seriously and can amount to gross misconduct

5

Raising concerns

Real-time – calling out concerns 'in the moment' to help prevent future escalation

Being an ally – supporting others and raising issues that don't relate to you personally

Informal process – how to use and the outcomes that may arise

Formal process – when to use and the steps involved

5

What's protected

Protected characteristics – what harassment can relate to

Practical examples – bring to life real-world scenarios to show behaviour that will amount to harassment

Behaviour outside of work – explaining the crossover and how conduct can still be viewed as work-related

Additional Courses

Preventing sexual harassment

Protect your business and fulfilling legal duties as an employer

Understand what amounts to sexual harassment, the legal framework and why impact matters more than intent

Learn practical ways to respond in the moment and safely call out concerns

How to raise issues formally or informally and navigate escalation or sanctions

Book a demo

Ready to level up your organisational readiness?

FAQs

Is workplace banter a legal issue?

Yes. Even seemingly harmless banter can amount to harassment if it creates a hostile, intimidating, or offensive environment. Under the Equality Act 2010, harassment related to protected characteristics (e.g., sex, race, disability) is unlawful, regardless of intent.

Will this course prevent legal claims?

While no training can guarantee zero claims, Better Banter at Work reduces risk by helping employees recognise boundaries, respond appropriately, and create a respectful culture.

This can help demonstrate to an employment tribunal, especially under the Employment Rights Bill, that your organisation is taking all reasonable steps to prevent sexual harassment at work.

How often should anti-harassment, EDI, and banter training be delivered?

Regularly, annually at a minimum, to reinforce your policies, remind employees of expected standards, and provide evidence to a tribunal that you’ve taken reasonable steps to prevent harassment.

The case of Allay (UK) Ltd v Mr S Gehlen demonstrated that providing one-off or infrequent training is insufficient. In this instance, 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 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."