NAIROBI, Kenya — As organisations increasingly rely on social media to amplify their reach and humanise their brands, a quieter but growing concern is emerging in parallel: the psychological and safety risks faced by employees who represent their employers in digital spaces.
While corporate attention has traditionally focused on reputational damage caused by employee conduct online, experts say an equally serious issue is often overlooked, the rising harassment, abuse and psychological pressure directed at employees who speak or act on behalf of their organisations.
From corporate messaging to “human brands”
Across industries, employees are no longer just internal workers but public-facing communicators. Many are now encouraged, and in some cases expected, to maintain active digital profiles, produce content, engage audiences and serve as informal ambassadors for their organisations.
In this environment, workers increasingly function as what marketing scholars describe as “human brands”: individuals whose visibility and credibility directly contribute to organisational reputation, trust and audience engagement.
But this shift has blurred the boundaries between professional responsibility and personal exposure, turning digital presence into an extension of work itself, with consequences that extend beyond branding and communication.
Growing exposure to harassment and online abuse
With increased visibility comes increased vulnerability. Employees who engage publicly on behalf of organisations are more frequently exposed to online hate, targeted harassment and coordinated abuse campaigns.
Experts warn that these risks are not incidental, but structurally linked to the demand for constant visibility in digital environments where anonymity and scale amplify hostility.
Cyberbullying and digital aggression, according to recent research cited in workplace mental health studies, are associated with long-term psychological impacts including anxiety, burnout, emotional distress and professional exhaustion.
Yet in many workplaces, such experiences are still treated as unavoidable side effects of public engagement rather than occupational risks requiring formal protection.
Workplace frameworks lag behind digital reality
Despite growing recognition of psychosocial risks at work, occupational health and safety systems remain largely designed around physical workplaces and traditional forms of harassment.
Specialists say this regulatory gap has left employees exposed to harms that are increasingly central to modern work life, particularly in communications, marketing, public relations and customer-facing roles where digital interaction is routine.
In practice, employees are expected not only to perform their core duties but also to manage personal branding, respond publicly to criticism, and maintain constant online engagement.
This creates what researchers describe as “invisible labour”: ongoing emotional and reputational work that is rarely accounted for in job descriptions or labour protections.
Psychological strain and identity pressure
Studies examining digital work environments suggest that constant visibility can produce identity strain, emotional fatigue and social isolation. Workers are required to continuously curate their public persona while navigating unpredictable audience reactions.
Over time, this sustained exposure can erode wellbeing and contribute to burnout, particularly where organisational support mechanisms are weak or absent.
Despite this, online harassment is still often normalised as an inevitable part of public-facing roles, rather than recognised as a workplace hazard.
Accountability gaps in digital environments
One of the central challenges in addressing this issue is the lack of clarity over responsibility. While employers increasingly encourage digital engagement, platform companies control moderation systems, and public authorities remain limited in enforcement capacity.
This fragmented governance structure means that employees often fall through the cracks of protection frameworks, relying on inconsistent reporting tools and opaque platform policies when abuse occurs.
Rethinking workplace safety for the digital era
Experts argue that the first step toward addressing this emerging risk is formal recognition: digital harassment linked to work activity should be classified as an occupational hazard where online visibility is part of job requirements.
Such recognition would allow organisations to integrate digital abuse into workplace mental health and safety strategies, in line with growing international labour discussions on psychosocial risk management.
At the organisational level, companies that require or encourage public-facing digital engagement may need to implement stronger safeguards, including reporting protocols, moderation support and structured psychological assistance for affected employees.
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However, responsibility cannot rest solely with employers. Digital platforms, which function as primary spaces for professional interaction, are increasingly being called upon to strengthen transparency in moderation, improve reporting systems and ensure more consistent protection standards.
A policy gap coming into focus
As digital visibility becomes embedded in more professions, experts say governments may need to revisit occupational health frameworks to reflect the realities of modern work.
The central argument emerging from research is clear: the risks associated with online exposure are no longer purely reputational or personal. They are becoming structural workplace issues with direct implications for employee health and safety.
In this evolving landscape, the boundary between work and digital life is dissolving, and with it, the traditional definitions of workplace protection are being pushed into urgent need of reform.







