Layoffs Done Right
Doing a layoff well is possible. Lots of companies mess it up, to be sure. But you can do a layoff that treats people well and accomplishes the main goal: to make the company stronger.
It’s a lot of hard work, but this video shows how you can do a layoff, treat people with dignity, retain your humanity, and build a stronger company.
REFERENCES:
I have two short videos on layoffs referenced in the video, they are:
Why the Layoffs: • Why the Layoffs
Layoff Blame Game: • Layoff Blame Game
CHAPTERS:
00:00 Introduction
00:43 Who am I
00:59 Why Layoffs are hard
01:43 Goal of a Layoff
02:57 Planning
03:07 Who
08:51 When
10:56 How
13:17 Preparation
13:29 Secure the Stars
14:42 Build a Package
16:00 Rude FAQ
16:41 Plan the Future
18:29 Execution
18:48 Those Leaving
20:33 Those Staying
22:43 Outside and Press
23:31 Follow Through
25:42 Summary
MORE INFORMATION:
Check out my website clwill.com for more information on individual consulting, speaking, and other engagements. Or email info@clwill.com
FOLLOW ME:
LinkedIn: / theclwill
TikTok: / theclwill
Other social media: search “theCLWill”
DISCLAIMER:
The opinions, information, and advice in this video are mine alone. It may not be applicable to you or your situation. It might not even be legal where you are. Please check your local HR, Legal, or other resources before implementing any of it.
Пікірлер: 28
Your channel is so underated, well thought out, great high quality content! It's nice to see your longer form content come to youtube, found you on tt. Please keep making these, your breakdowns are awesome!
@CLWill
Жыл бұрын
Thank you so very much. Much more content like this coming. I'm focusing on this sort of longer form content here. Please pass the word :)
Thank you so much for all your videos and content, Chris. I am so happy that I found you on TikTok and here. You help me a lot. Kind regards from Germany.
@CLWill
Жыл бұрын
Happy to help!
Cl Will, you are very direct and clear in your message. I can watch you speak all day long. Coming from a person who coached teachers, great job!
@CLWill
2 ай бұрын
Wow, thank you. That is so appreciated.
Wish organizations saw this..rather than dragging out the numbers for over 'the next 2 years'. Leaves people so distraught. Also troubling in large townhall to hear, when asked about if our large segment of the company would be impacted, to say 'we'll be taking advantage of the attrition, to minimize this'. I mean, it's not wrong, but sheesh.. you are hoping for more to leave? That feels horrible. And shows they didn't define their actions appropriately. Lastly,, the post RIF actions are key. Scary when these are still 'being worked out' -- just means confusion, lack of purpose, and engagement wanes even more. Thanks for the great points! Just subscribed!
@CLWill
Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much. Your points are so right as well.
So glad I finally got the chance to watch this
@CLWill
Жыл бұрын
Thank you! Hope it was helpful.
@Zamo_Nx
Жыл бұрын
@@CLWill Oh it definitely was helpful. As a first time tech startup founder it's big decisions like these that give me anxiety. I know start ups pivot a lot and thinking about how leaving some projects means we have to lose people is just stressful. Having an idea of how to methodically navigate those parts of business life is a bit relieving
Thank you for sharing, Chris! I agree with your points. While I work every day in such a way that I never have to layoff anyone in my department, if and when this happens, I know I will look up this video.
@CLWill
Жыл бұрын
That's what I'm hoping for. People will pull this out when they need it. Thanks for watching.
Wonderful presentation! Thank you!
@CLWill
2 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful.
Yes because the people who already may be feeling betrayed or abandoned by the company and maybe doesn’t trust them is gonna wanna trust them or just trust someone else with their personal belongings…if I’m not coming back I’m not leaving them and if they’re mine then the company nor anyone at the company should be touching what’s personally mine…that to me is a violation…most people don’t like strangers or coworkers touching their personal belongings as far as I know
Great video!
@CLWill
Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
Incredible thoughts
@CLWill
Жыл бұрын
Thank you
Just like a hoover vacuum cleaner
It's like my company used the don'ts like a checklist for their December layoffs...
@CLWill
Жыл бұрын
So sorry. That's been my experience as well -- from both sides. Which is why I made this video.
Thank you for the information, the company I work for recently did a round of layoffs and I find they followed a playbook very similar to what you outlined in this video. Something that I'm curious about and I find that this outline misses is the clear dependence on management/leadership for this to all work out (as best as possible), doesn't this exclude them (leadership) from the layoffs? If I were a CEO how would I go about properly laying off a C-suit level employee, if I were a C-suit how would I go about properly laying off my direct upper-level managers, and similarly if I were an upper-level manager how would I go about properly letting go of my line managers. I wouldn't be able to let them go early, as the rumors and stench of them leaving would worry the rest of the employees, but I also need their full and committed involvement for this to all properly work out... The immediate thought I am having is by cutting off the entire branch... but that is hardly ever the most ideal situation, any thoughts or advice on how you would handle this instead?
@CLWill
Жыл бұрын
If you need to remove an entire branch of the org tree, you do the planning up to the manager above the effected area. Then treat that whole branch as effected employees, talking to them one-on-one and so on. Including the leader who is being laid off. If what you're trying to do is get rid of just a single senior level person, but not the entire org they manage, then that's not a layoff. That's a performance issue and should be dealt with as an individual performance issue. Not masked in the guise of a layoff. That's another video (coming up) where I discuss managing performance issues. But that's a one-on-one issue for that person. The higher up they are, the more planning needed, but that's not a layoff. That's a run-of-the-mill performance problem. Does this address your question?
@JoLeung
Жыл бұрын
@@CLWill that makes sense, thanks! I'm still curious on if management was part of the layoff (and it wasn't a performance issue). Here's a small-scale example to try better describing the situation I have in mind: CEO A