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anger-management-vs-eap-for-employers

Common Questions

Anger Management vs. an EAP for Employers

Employers often reach for the EAP when an employee has a conduct problem — and it is usually the wrong tool. Here is the difference between an EAP and a mandated remedial referral, and when each fits.

A mandated referral only protects the company if it is real, monitored, and documented. We deliver formal, manager-referred training as a condition of continued employment — with the progress tracking and record that make the mandate defensible.

Different Tools for Different Jobs

An EAP is a voluntary, confidential, general-purpose benefit — the employee chooses whether to use it, and the employer, by design, gets no report and no proof of what happened. That confidentiality is a feature for wellness, but it is a fatal gap for a mandated corrective referral, where the whole point is documentation and compliance.

A mandated remedial referral is the opposite: employer-directed, targeted to specific conduct, monitored, and documented. It gives you the verification and record an EAP cannot.

When to Use Which

Point an employee to the EAP for voluntary, personal support. Use a mandated referral when the conduct is a job condition you need corrected and documented. They are complementary, not interchangeable.

Who This Is For

Employers and HR deciding between an EAP referral and a mandated remedial referral for a conduct problem.

Built Around Three Pillars

Because a mandated referral carries real legal weight, every engagement is built around the three things that protect the company.

Liability Protection

A formal, individualized remedial referral is concrete evidence of prompt, good-faith corrective action — the reasonable care that strengthens the employer’s position if the matter is ever challenged.

Progress & Compliance

Same-day enrollment verification, weekly progress reports, and immediate no-show and non-compliance alerts — so you always know whether the employee is meeting the condition you set.

Strict Documentation

Enrollment, participation, progress, a completion certificate, and a lawyer-signed completion letter — a clean, contemporaneous file from referral to completion.

How It Works

1

Scoping Call

A brief, confidential conversation about the employee and the situation.

2

Confirm Fit

Written confirmation and a flat per-program quote before anyone enrolls.

3

One-on-One Sessions

Private, customized sessions by secure telehealth, with weekly reporting.

4

Documented Completion

Certificate and lawyer-signed completion letter for the file.

Program Tiers:   Standard (8 sessions)  ·  Comprehensive (12 sessions)  ·  Executive / Intensive (16+ sessions)  —  flat per-program fee, quoted on the scoping call.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can’t we just send them to the EAP?

For voluntary support, yes. For a mandated, documented corrective referral, no — an EAP gives you no proof or compliance record.

Why doesn’t the EAP work for a mandate?

By design it is confidential and voluntary, so the employer gets no verification — the opposite of what a mandate needs.

Do the two conflict?

No — they are complementary tools for different jobs.

What do we get that an EAP doesn’t give?

Enrollment verification, progress, non-compliance alerts, and completion documentation.

Is it nationwide?

Yes.

Request a Confidential Call

Tell us a little about the situation and we’ll confirm fit and next steps — usually the same day.






Thank you — your request is in. We’ll be in touch shortly, usually the same day.

Speak With Us Directly

Confidential, no obligation.

(201) 205-3201

njangermgt@pm.me  ·  Serving employers and employees in all fifty states by secure telehealth

New Jersey Anger Management Group is attorney-founded but is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. This program is an individualized, education-based corrective intervention; it is not the company-wide statutory harassment-prevention training some jurisdictions require, and is not a substitute for that training. Any behavioral summary is an educational assessment, not a clinical diagnosis or fitness-for-duty evaluation. The program supports good-faith corrective action but does not guarantee any legal or employment outcome.