Home > Resources > HR compliance > Disciplinary action & investigations > How to conduct a legally sound workplace investigation
Brightmine-office meeting

How to conduct a legally sound workplace investigation

Understand how to run a proper workplace investigation, including planning, interviewing, and documentation, to confidently address misconduct and compliance issues.

Share this:

by Brightmine

Who conducts workplace investigations?

Organizations typically choose investigators based on the nature and severity of the concern, the individuals involved and the required level of expertise. Common options include: 

HR professionals – Most day-to-day investigations are handled by HR professionals because they understand company policy, employment law basics and protocols for interviewing employees. HR’s neutrality makes them well-positioned to gather unbiased information. 

Internal legal counsel – When the complaint involves discrimination, harassment, retaliation, wage and hour issues, whistleblower concerns or highly sensitive allegations, internal legal teams may oversee or support the investigation. 

External investigators – Companies often bring in third-party experts when allegations involve executives, when internal staff may have conflicts of interest or when the situation poses high legal risk. External investigators provide independence and may bring specialized expertise in interviewing and documentation. 

Supervisors or managers – For low-risk issues, such as minor attendance problems or simple policy violations, managers may conduct informal fact-finding before involving HR. 

Regardless of who leads the investigation, employers must ensure investigators are trained in interviewing, documentation, confidentiality requirements and how to avoid bias. Clear internal guidelines help ensure consistency across the organization. 

Structuring a legally sound workplace investigation

A well-structured investigation helps employers gather accurate facts while protecting employee rights. HR teams can strengthen defensibility by following best practices that promote fairness, consistency and compliance. 

Use objective, neutral fact-finding methods

Investigators should rely on open-ended questions, avoid assumptions and document statements verbatim when possible. Neutrality helps protect against claims of bias or predetermined outcomes. 

Maintain appropriate confidentiality

While complete confidentiality cannot be guaranteed, limiting information to those who need to know helps protect employees and reduces workplace disruption. 

Secure and organize all evidence

Emails, text messages, time records, video footage, policy documentation and witness statements should be collected promptly. Maintaining a clear timeline supports accuracy and demonstrates diligence. 

Evaluate credibility and corroboration

When accounts differ, investigators should assess consistency, supporting evidence and the plausibility of each statement. Clear reasoning in the final report helps ensure decisions are defensible. 

Prepare a complete investigation report

A well-written, factual report summarizes allegations, steps taken, findings and recommendations. Reports should focus on facts—not assumptions—and tie conclusions to documented evidence and company policy. 

When investigations follow these practices, employers reduce legal exposure and build internal trust in the fairness of their processes. 

The importance of transparency

Transparency is essential at every stage of the investigation and discipline process. While employers cannot disclose all details, especially those involving other employees, they must clearly communicate expectations, next steps and the reasoning behind decisions whenever possible. 

Transparency helps employees feel respected and informed, reducing the likelihood of misunderstanding and conflict. It also builds trust in HR processes and reinforces the idea that policies are applied consistently across the organization. 

Key elements of transparency include: 

  • Communicating the plan of action and timeline before an investigation begins 
  • Outlining what employees can expect during interviews 
  • Providing updates when appropriate 
  • Explaining disciplinary decisions clearly and respectfully 
  • Documenting all conversations and outcomes thoroughly 
  • Ensuring employees understand their rights and the resources available to them 

By pairing thorough investigations with transparent communication, employers create a workplace culture grounded in fairness, accountability and respect. 

Want to strengthen your investigation and discipline processes?

See how Brightmine supports fair, consistent workplace investigations and employee discipline.

Get ahead of HR compliance

Navigating today’s complex HR compliance landscape is challenging.

Get ahead with Brightmine. Access HR resources and automation tools managed by seasoned human HR experts.

Proudly partnered with LexisNexis®

You may also be interested in…

Blogs

Why it’s important to get investigations and discipline right

Enhance your HR compliance strategy with clear guidance on managing workplace investigations and discipline—from fact‑finding to fair outcomes.

Guides – How to

How to conduct a legally sound workplace investigation

Understand how to run a proper workplace investigation, including planning, interviewing, and documentation, to confidently address misconduct and …

HR law guides

Employee discipline laws in Michigan

Explore our guide to Michigan employee discipline laws, covering drug testing, recording consent, weapons policies, genetic and polygraph …

About the author

Sign up to receive expert HR insights from Brightmine

Join our community and stay updated with industry trends, expert insights, valuable resources, webinar invites… and much more.

Sign up now and receive regular updates straight to your inbox!

    *Brightmine is a tradename of LexisNexis Risk Solutions. By registering your details, you understand that your personal data will be handled according to our Privacy Policy.