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Workplace Wake-Up with Jen Shaw

Workplace Wake-Up with Jen Shaw

Hosted by Shaw Law Group, PC

BusinessInterviews guests

Episodes

235

Latest episode

Jun 2026

Language

EN

About the show

Join us every Wednesday as we discuss recent developments in Employment Law.

Listen to episodes

60 recent
June 10, 2026Episode 23416 min

When a Resignation Becomes a Lawsuit: Constructive Discharge in California

Not every resignation ends the story. In this episode, Jen explains how ignored complaints, retaliation concerns, intolerable working conditions, and poor documentation can turn a resignation into a constructive discharge claim — and what California employers can do to reduce risk before an employee walks out and sues.

June 3, 2026Episode 23330 min

Associational Discrimination: When an Employee’s Relationship Creates Employer Risk

Associational discrimination claims arise from an employee’s relationship with someone else — such as a family member, spouse, friend, or caregiver connection. In this episode, Jen and Joe Beachboard discuss where California employers commonly get into trouble and how to reduce risk when workplace decisions involve an employee’s association with another person.

May 27, 2026Episode 23217 min

Employment References: Handle with Care

In this episode, Jen tackles one of the most debated employer practices: providing references. She outlines the legal guardrails, the moments where well-intentioned disclosures create exposure, and the strategic choices employers make between saying nothing and saying too much. The focus is on building a consistent, disciplined approach that protects the organization while still meeting business needs.

May 20, 2026Episode 23137 min

When the Harasser Isn’t an Employee: Investigation Strategies for California Employers

When harassment allegations involve customers, vendors, contractors, patients, or other nonemployees, employers often face difficult questions: Do we have to investigate? What corrective action is enough? And how does California law differ from federal standards? In this episode, Jen and Joe Beachboard discuss third-party harassment claims, investigation challenges, employer obligations, and practical steps California employers should take to reduce risk when the alleged harasser does not work for the organization.

May 13, 2026Episode 23017 min

Cell Phone Reimbursement: The Compliance Trap You Can Fix

In this episode, Jen explains what California law requires when employees use personal cell phones for work and why employers still get it wrong, especially with remote and hybrid teams. She covers where compliance fails, how liability adds up, and the practical, defensible approaches that actually work, including stipends, reimbursements, and policy language that holds up.

May 6, 2026Episode 22915 min

Last Chance Agreements Done Right

Last chance agreements are one of the most effective tools employers have when used correctly. Done right, they create clarity, set expectations, and provide a defensible path forward. Done poorly, they create confusion and risk. In this episode, Jen breaks down when to use last chance agreements, what they should include, and how to structure them so they actually work.

April 29, 2026Episode 22828 min

Contreras v. Green Thumb: When Being Wrong Still Wins

In this episode, Jen and Joe Beachboard break down one of the most important California retaliation decisions in recent years, Contreras v. Green Thumb Produce. The court made clear in that case that even legally “incorrect” complaints can be protected—and changes the risk calculus for every employer.

April 22, 2026Episode 22715 min

Investigations Under Pressure: Getting It Right When It Matters Most

Workplace investigations often happen under pressure—tight timelines, high emotions, and real risk. In this episode, Jen focuses on how to structure investigations that are defensible, fair, and practical, even when the stakes are high.

April 15, 2026Episode 22615 min

AI-Drafted Complaints: A New Workplace Reality

AI is changing how employees raise concerns—and not always for the better. Complaints are getting longer, more legalistic, and sometimes less grounded in actual facts. In this episode, Jen discusses what this trend means for employers and how to respond without overreacting.

April 8, 2026Episode 22521 min

Bereavement Leave: It’s Not About Good Intentions

Bereavement leave feels human—but California law makes it highly technical. In this episode, Jen walks through what’s actually required, where employers unintentionally get it wrong, and why good intentions won’t protect you from liability.

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