In the "work wars," your greatest weapon isn't a clever comeback—it's your paper trail. Learn to document workplace abuse like a clinical professional.
Open Your Evidence LogWhen facing workplace harassment or a toxic environment, the difference between a "he-said, she-said" stalemate and a successful legal claim is the quality of your documentation. This guide breaks down how to write an incident report that holds up under legal scrutiny.
To make your documentation effective for HR or legal counsel, you must move away from emotional venting and toward factual reporting. Every entry should cover these five pillars:
Professional advocates look for three specific elements when reviewing a worker's evidence to determine the strength of a case:
Context: What was the setting? (e.g., "During the weekly performance review on Microsoft Teams...")
Content: What exactly happened? Use direct quotes where possible. (e.g., "The manager stated: 'If you can't handle the pressure, find a new job.'")
Consequence: How did it affect your work or health? (e.g., "I was unable to finish the report because my system access was revoked immediately after.")
While workplace abuse is deeply emotional, your report should remain clinical. This removes the ability for HR to dismiss you as "too sensitive."
Always cross-reference your written reports with "hard" evidence to create a bulletproof timeline.
Memory fades, witnesses disappear, and employer evidence gets erased. If you wait too long, your case can be legally dismissed — no matter how serious the abuse was.
Start documenting everything immediately. The strongest cases are built in real time, not after termination.
(EEOC claims. 2 years for unpaid wages)
(Varies by province)
(Employment Tribunal deadline)
(Depends on claim type)
*Deadlines vary. Always confirm with legal aid immediately.