From the length of one’s hair, to the number and location of visible tattoos, to recognizing gender non-conformity style, to creating a summer dress code, employers are facing an increased need to determine their organization’s culture and policies, as well as following federal and state laws. How does an organization balance employees’ rights to express themselves with the organization’s rights to determine its legitimate business needs while maintaining an inclusive work environment? The pitfalls for employers are many. More businesses are likely to face these issues especially now that research is confirming these types of biases exist broadly across U. S. workplaces. The potential for organizational errors are plentiful. Organizations expect employees to use sound judgment in their dress and grooming, however, what if the employee’s sense of dress and grooming varies from the organizations? After all, types of self-expression have become more commonplace with society demonstrating more acceptances in people’s choices of self-expression—shouldn’t the workplace reflect this change in social rules too?
Date: 04/24/2026
Time: 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm (EST)
Reg. deadline: 04/23/2026
Venue: Live Webinar

Pivot Tables are one of Excel’s most powerful and misunderstood tools but once you know how to use them, they can transform how you analyse and report on data. In just a few clicks, you can summarise thousands of rows into meaningful, dynamic reports - no formulas required. This session will show you how to quickly create and customise Pivot Tables to reveal trends, answer questions, and support better decision-making. You’ll also discover how to turn your Pivot Table into a visual dashboard using built-in charting tools, slicers, and layout options. If you've ever looked at a Pivot Table and thought, “I should really learn that”, this is your moment. Why you should attend Manually building summaries and reports from Excel data is time-consuming and error-prone. Pivot Tables eliminate the guesswork, automate the process, and give you instant insights. This session is perfect if you want to save time, reduce complexity, and finally get confident with one of Excel’s most powerful (but underused) features. Topics covered How to structure your source data for best results Creating Pivot Tables in just a few clicks Summarising data with totals, counts, and percentages Formatting your Pivot Table for clarity and impact Sorting and filtering with built-in tools and slicers Visualising data using Pivot Charts Understanding and using (or avoiding) GETPIVOTDATA Who should attend This session is for anyone who wants to level up their Excel skills and gain confidence with Pivot Tables. It’s ideal for professionals in admin, finance, HR, operations, or anyone who builds regular reports. You should be comfortable with basic Excel tasks like entering data, using copy/paste, and applying simple formatting. The training is delivered using Excel for Windows (Microsoft 365), but most techniques also apply to earlier versions and Excel for Mac.
Whether your employer is a clinic, a hospital, home health, or long term care; whether you are an MD, RN, an occupational therapist, a receptionist, or in the C-Suite, approximately 5% - 10% of your patients may be gay, lesbian, or bisexual. Additional patients may be transgender, intersex, or questioning their gender identity or sexual orientation. The healthcare needs of GLBT patients may appear to be the same as other patients’, but institutionalized heterosexism in healthcare is a real barrier to quality care. Healthcare providers acknowledge they are serving more GLBT patients, and that they want to provide quality GLBT care, but aren’t sure how to best create and implement the policies, procedures, and practices to ensure best patient outcomes. GLBT patients face a multitude of barriers to equitable care such as: refusals of care, delayed or substandard care, mistreatment, inequitable policies and practices, end-of-life issues, and limits on visitation. The challenges begin from the beginning of the health professionals’ relationship with their GLBT patient—starting from asking them to identify if they are male or female, married or single, on their intake form. Objectives To list relevant laws, regulations and standards required for health equity and patient-centered care of GLBT patients To identify key policy, procedure and practice issues related to GLBT patients and their families to incorporate into already existing policies, procedures and practices To discuss opportunities to collect GLBT – relevant data and information during the healthcare encounter To identify or revise strategic community outreach efforts to the GLBT population To name a variety of resources Who should Attend? HR Management Nurses Other Health Professionals
Everyone makes decisions, but of course some decisions are more important and complex than others. Whether it is a decision about what to wear to work to deciding on a merger, the decision making process is generally the same. Most decision making by management is convoluted with much fuzziness and backtracking. Research suggests that managers put little thought into the decision making process such as—analysis of the risk, what values are poignant, the alternatives evaluated, quantitative and qualitative data, identifying the stakeholders, bias, and the impact of the decision on the system, to name a few. Decision making is the basic foundation of the process of management. Yet most management training and development tactics ignore this essential skill. Learning Objectives To examine the “act of choice” To analyze roadblocks to effective decision making To discuss 10 decision making/problem solving tools To list the various models of decision making Analyze how managers make decisions Who should Attend? HR Management Any Employee
It is our nature to think—we all do it, obviously. However, a good share of our thinking is biased, distorted, or incomplete. Critical thinking is an essential skill for both managers and employees. Few of us are effective critical thinkers though research suggests that leaders believe they think quite well. Critical thinking ensures we pose the right questions, view others’ viewpoints with merit, and challenge assumptions in strategic thinking, decision making and problem solving. Non-critical thinkers shoot down ideas before they are understood, or take action based on faulty assumptions resulting in a business disaster. Teams, as well as individuals, must learn to think critically which requires a work atmosphere that is conducive to challenging others’ perspectives. Critical thinking enables teams to develop positive insights and ideas that lead to effective action. It focuses on reframing and rethinking issues so that the right problems are addressed, and requires challenging conventional wisdom. Using the process of critical thinking leads to reasoned conclusions, better decisions, fewer mistakes, and improves collaboration among team members. Learning Objectives Define critical thinking List characteristics of critical thinkers Examine the critical thinking process Explore the elements of reasoning Discuss critical thinking techniques Identify organizational, team, and individual critical thinking barriers Who should Attend? HR Management Any Employee