Something at work feels off. Maybe it’s a schedule change that only lands on one person. Maybe it’s a review that came out of nowhere. People second guess these things a lot, and honestly, that’s fair. Not every awkward moment at work is a legal issue.
But some are. And when they are, the signs tend to show up early, if someone knows what to look at. Waiting until things get worse is how a lot of people end up scrambling for workplace legal help in Oakland months after the first weird thing happened. Not ideal. The earlier a pattern gets spotted, the more options are actually on the table.
Here are three worth paying attention to.
Suddenly, the Reviews Don’t Match Reality
An employee had solid reviews. Maybe even glowing ones. Then they spoke up about something, maybe a policy that didn’t feel right, or a comment a manager made, and the next review reads like it was written about a different person.
That timing matters. According to the EEOC’s guidance on retaliation, employers aren’t allowed to punish workers for raising concerns about discrimination or harassment, and that includes lowering evaluations or shifting them into less desirable roles. Doesn’t mean every bad review is retaliation. Sometimes people really do slip. But when the shift is sharp and it lines up with the day something was raised, that’s a pattern worth noting.
Keep copies. Emails, older reviews, the works. Boring advice, sure. It’s usually the boring stuff that ends up mattering.
The Rules Only Seem to Apply to One Person
This one’s less intuitive. Everyone else logs in late from time to time, but one person gets flagged. Someone took a longer lunch last week and no one blinked. Another employee did it once, and it’s a write up.
Could be a coincidence. Could be an insecure manager. Or, sometimes, it’s the quieter version of discrimination, where the rules technically apply to everyone but only get enforced against one person. Research from HBS has explored how difficult it can be to raise concerns inside a workplace culture that punishes speaking up, and part of what makes it so tough is that uneven enforcement rarely comes with a paper trail. So someone has to make one.
Side note: patterns like this are easier to see across weeks, not days. It’s worth stepping back once in a while.
Handbook Changes Nobody Mentioned
Handbook updates are usually dull. Sometimes they aren’t. If new arbitration clauses, non compete language, or vague “at will” reminders show up right after a complaint, or right before a round of layoffs, it’s worth reading closely.
Small firms in particular tend to update policies quickly when the regulatory picture shifts, which is a whole topic on its own. There’s decent coverage of workplace rule changes out there for anyone curious about how much of this happens in the background.
Nobody needs to memorize every clause. Just noticing when the ground moves is enough. Something to sit with, maybe.
