Performance Improvement Plans for Conduct & Behavior Issues
A conduct PIP is not a performance PIP. Here is how to build one that actually changes behavior — and holds up if it doesn’t.
A Conduct PIP Is a Different Animal
Most managers know the performance improvement plan as a tool for output: hit these numbers, close these gaps, by this date. A conduct PIP is different in kind. The problem is not that the employee produces too little — often they produce plenty — it is how they behave: the outbursts, the disrespect, the boundary-crossing, the pattern that is poisoning a team. Applying a numbers-style PIP to a behavior problem is a common and costly mistake, because behavior expectations have to be defined and measured differently than sales targets.
Done right, a conduct PIP does two things at once: it gives a valued-but-difficult employee a genuine, structured chance to change, and it builds the documented record you will need if they do not.
When a Conduct PIP Is the Right Tool
A conduct PIP fits the large middle ground between ignoring a problem and terminating over it: a valued employee whose conduct is serious but correctable, typically a first or second incident, with no violence or illegality that would demand immediate separation. It is a poor fit for conduct that warrants termination on its own, and a worse fit as a pretextual paper trail with no real intention of allowing success — courts and juries see through that.
What a Strong Conduct PIP Includes
The elements that make a conduct PIP effective and defensible:
- Specific, observable behavior expectations — not “improve your attitude,” but concrete conduct: no raised voices or personal attacks, respectful communication, appropriate boundaries.
- A required corrective step — often a documented intervention such as anger management or a conduct program, with a defined timeline.
- A clear timeframe and defined check-in points.
- Support, not just a threat — a genuine opportunity and resources to succeed.
- Explicit consequences if expectations are not met, stated plainly.
- Documentation of each step — the plan, the check-ins, the outcome.
Common Mistakes
The conduct PIPs that fail — or backfire in litigation — tend to share a few flaws: vague expectations no one can objectively measure; no support or corrective resource, just a warning; inconsistency with how comparable conduct was handled for others; and using the PIP purely to manufacture a record for a termination that was already decided. Each of these undermines both the behavior change and the defensibility.
Where a Corrective Intervention Fits
The single most useful thing you can build into a conduct PIP is a real, documented corrective step. Our Workplace Conduct Intervention Program is designed to be exactly that: a confidential, one-on-one intervention with enrollment verification, weekly progress reporting, and a completion record — so the PIP has genuine substance, and so you have contemporaneous documentation of the employee’s engagement (or lack of it). It turns “improve your behavior” from a hope into a structured, provable process.
When a specific employee’s conduct becomes a problem, our Workplace Conduct Intervention Program combines anger management and harassment prevention in one confidential, documented intervention — built for a PIP, last-chance agreement, or post-complaint corrective action.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How is a conduct PIP different from a performance PIP?
A performance PIP targets output — metrics and results. A conduct PIP targets behavior — how the employee acts. Behavior expectations must be defined observably (specific conduct, not “attitude”) and usually paired with a corrective step, which makes a conduct PIP structurally different from a numbers-based plan.
When should we use a conduct PIP instead of terminating?
When the conduct is serious but correctable, the employee is valuable, and there is no violence or illegality demanding immediate separation — typically a first or second incident. It is the structured middle path between ignoring the problem and firing over it.
What makes a conduct PIP defensible?
Specific, observable expectations; a genuine corrective step and support; a clear timeframe and consequences; consistency with how comparable conduct was handled; and documentation of every stage. Using a PIP purely as a pretext for a predetermined firing undermines it.
Can we require anger management as part of a PIP?
Employers frequently require a documented corrective intervention as a PIP term. A program that provides enrollment verification, progress reporting, and a completion record gives the PIP real substance and gives you contemporaneous documentation. Structure the consent and reporting with counsel.
