10 Workplace Investigation Mistakes That Can Cost Your Organization $100K

By Vanessa G. Nelson, CLRL | Founder & President, Expert Human Resources LLC


Most workplace investigations don’t fail because of bad intent.

They fail because of missed steps.

And those missed steps are where organizations create serious legal and financial exposure—often exceeding $100,000 by the time attorneys, regulatory agencies, and settlement negotiations are involved.

After conducting more than 200 workplace investigations across industries—including healthcare, manufacturing, nonprofits, government, education, transportation, and professional services—I’ve seen the same patterns repeat.

Here are the ten mistakes that create the most risk.


Why Workplace Investigations Matter More Than Most CEOs Realize

When a complaint is raised—whether it involves harassment, discrimination, retaliation, workplace violence, or a counter-complaint—the investigation that follows is not just a procedural step.

It is the foundation of your legal defense.

A properly conducted investigation creates a documented record of facts, findings, and decisions that protects your organization if the issue escalates to the EEOC, a state agency, or a courtroom.

An incomplete—or nonexistent—investigation leaves your organization exposed, with no documentation, no findings, and no defensible position.

The difference between those outcomes often comes down to whether the following mistakes were made.


Mistake #1 — Deciding Not to Investigate at All

This is where most legal exposure begins.

When a complaint is raised and no investigation occurs, the issue does not disappear. Instead, it creates a documented moment of inaction that becomes very difficult to defend later.

The question is not whether to investigate—it is how quickly and how thoroughly.


Mistake #2 — Investigating Only One Side of the Story

An investigation that examines only one perspective produces incomplete findings.

Incomplete findings are difficult—if not impossible—to defend and often create additional exposure rather than resolving the issue.


Mistake #3 — Letting Leadership Control the Outcome

Investigations are designed to uncover facts—not confirm assumptions.

When leadership influences the outcome, objectivity is lost, and the integrity of the investigation is compromised.

An investigation controlled by leadership is not a safeguard—it is a liability.


Mistake #4 — Waiting Too Long to Start

Time matters.

Delays allow evidence to fade, memories to shift, and narratives to change. They also signal to employees and regulators that the organization may not take complaints seriously.

When a complaint is raised, the investigation clock starts immediately.


Mistake #5 — Failing to Document Properly

If it’s not documented, it didn’t happen—at least from a legal standpoint.

Proper documentation includes interview notes, witness statements, evidence reviewed, findings, and any corrective action taken.

Documentation is not a formality. It is your defense.


Mistake #6 — Not Interviewing All Relevant Witnesses

Every missing perspective creates a gap.

And those gaps are often where legal challenges begin.

Relevant witnesses include not only direct observers, but anyone with knowledge of the environment, behavior patterns, or prior concerns.


Mistake #7 — Asking Leading or Biased Questions

The integrity of an investigation depends on the quality of the information gathered.

Leading or biased questions can influence responses and undermine the credibility of the entire process.

A finding built on compromised information is not a finding—it is a vulnerability.


Mistake #8 — Treating Complaints as “Personality Conflicts”

What appears to be a simple interpersonal issue may involve harassment, discrimination, or retaliation.

Dismissing concerns too quickly can result in missed legal obligations and increased exposure.

The only way to know the difference is to investigate.


Mistake #9 — Failing to Address Counter-Complaints

When a counter-complaint arises, it must be addressed.

Ignoring it does not reduce risk—it creates new exposure and a documented pattern of selective investigation.

Counter-complaints do not replace the original issue. They expand the scope.


Mistake #10 — Closing the Investigation Without Clear Findings

An investigation without documented conclusions is not complete.

Clear findings should answer:

  • What happened
  • What policy or legal standard applies
  • What action is warranted

Without these, the organization cannot defend its decisions.


This Isn’t Theoretical—It’s Happening

Even well-known organizations are not immune.

Recent high-profile claims have shown that when workplace investigations are mishandled or incomplete, the result can be significant legal exposure—including multi-million-dollar allegations.

The takeaway is simple:

It’s not just whether you investigate.
It’s how you investigate.


Do You Need a Workplace Investigation Right Now?

If your organization is dealing with:

  • Employee complaints
  • Allegations of harassment, discrimination, or retaliation
  • Concerns about retaliation
  • Conflicts involving leadership decisions
  • Questions about fairness or consistency

You may already be in a situation that requires a formal investigation.

Waiting—or handling it informally—can significantly increase your risk.


Protect Your Organization Before It Becomes a Legal Issue

A properly conducted investigation doesn’t just resolve the issue in front of you.

It protects your organization, your leadership team, and every decision that follows.


Free Workplace Investigations Checklist

If you want a clear, step-by-step framework, I’ve created a free Workplace Investigations Checklist to help ensure your process is thorough, compliant, and defensible.

https://www.experthumanresources.com


Ready to Take the Next Step?

If you are managing a complaint or deciding whether to investigate, this is not a decision to guess on.

I conduct workplace investigations and HR risk assessments for organizations that want the full picture—before someone else defines it for them.

https://www.experthumanresources.com


About the Author

Vanessa G. Nelson, CLRL
Founder & President | Expert Human Resources LLC
Executive HR Risk Advisor


Final Thought

The cost of a thorough investigation is predictable.

The cost of skipping one—or getting it wrong—is not.

Because in HR, the most expensive mistakes are often the ones that felt reasonable at the time.

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