In today’s working world, prolonged tensions, stress, and demeaning behavior are not rare anomalies — they are realities that cost both people and organizations. Recent data show that in Greece during 2024, reports of workplace violence and harassment rose by 39 %39 % compared to the previous year. Lawspot
Even more striking, over the period 2022–2024 the increase reaches 110 %rising from 151 to 318 recorded cases. Lawspot Among these reports:
Το 88 % concern violence (verbal, physical) or psychological harassment, and 12 % sexual harassment. Lawspot
In 2024, cases of sexual harassment more than tripled — from 12 in 2023 to 38. Lawspot
66 % of complainants were women; 34 % were men Lawspot
The sectors with the most reports were wholesale & retail trade (28 %) and hotel/restaurant businesses (26 %) Lawspot
These figures reveal that toxic workplace environments are not news — they are daily reality for many. And here the idea of digital empathy as a potential bridge of transformation
The Bridge of Empathy
When we refer to “digital empathy,” we mean the capacity to perceive and respond to others’ emotions and experiences via digital communication tools. When properly embedded, it can reduce harassment and strengthen organizational culture.
Studies and best practices indicate:
Organizations embedding empathy culture see as much as 50 % fewer conflicts and higher levels of employee engagement.
Anonymous reporting channels, training workshops, and ongoing staff empowerment reduce fear of retaliation and encourage open communication.
The European Agency for Safety and Health at Work (EU-OSHA) suggests that such practices may lead to productivity increases of up to 12 %.
Combined with the Greek data — where reports of violence and harassment in the workplace are sharply rising — digital empathy is not just an ideal, but a necessity.
