1: Fire Someone Today
John was not making it in sales. Not in frontline sales to customers and not in relationship-based sales to resellers. John was not a good fit for technical support or administration either.
John was a great guy, and I couldnāt bear the thought of firing him, so when a position opened up managing the shipping department, we put John there.
Costs began to rise in shipping. John needed more staff than the previous manager had. Personality conflicts emerged, and soon I was regularly leading long meetings where we worked on issuesācosts, quality, personalitiesāthat the department had never had problems with before.
Having already moved John through the whole company, there was only one more move to make. John had to go.
I dreaded firing him. I worried about what he would do, where he would find work in our small town, and how he would support his family. In my mind I took on all his responsibilities as my own. I put off the event for as long as I could until it was clear that the costs and conflicts were endangering the whole organization.
What a relief it was when I finally fired John. Shipping ran smoothly, and costs were reduced. All it cost me was a small burden of guilt and failure. I thought I could carry that weight until one evening when my mother told me she had run into Johnās wife at the grocery store. I cringed.
āJohnās wife told me how glad she was that you let John go,ā my mother told me. āIt forced him to think about what he really wanted to do, and he has decided to go back to school and prepare for ministry.ā
What a relief ! I had not ruined Johnās life. And what a waste, I later realized. In my foolish desire to take responsibility for John, I had helped keep him from his true calling for as much as a year after it was clear to me that he was in the wrong place.
Who Should I Fire Today?
If you have more than a handful of employees, then you probably have some who need to go. The reasons they need to go are varied; each employee is a unique individual and special in his or her own way. Fortunately, we have some big bins you can toss them into for easy sorting.
ā¢ Whiner. The whiner is happy only when he is unhappy. The whiner is not engaging in constructive criticism and is not taking initiative to address problems. The whiner is just relentlessly complaining. At best the whiner simply annoys everyone around him with his silly, petty complaints. More often he sucks joy out of the organization like a massive leech of discontent.
ā¢ Slacker. You will find slackers all over the office: standing at the coffee machine, sitting at other employeesā desks, and lounging with the newspaper in the lobby. Occasionally, you will even find slackers at their desksāsurfing the Internet.
ā¢ Incompetent. The incompetent are often well behaved, eager to please, and disciplined in their work. They just donāt do it very well.
ā¢ Troublemaker. The troublemaker stirs up discontent and actively works to create āus versus themā divisions throughout the organization: between you and your employees, between individual employees, between departments within the organization, and even between the organization and the customers. More dangerous than self-absorbed whiners, troublemakers set up conflict even when they are not a party to it.
ā¢ Misfit. The misfits are just in the wrong place. They may have a good attitude, good work habits, and even great skills. They just donāt get the indefinable it that is the key to success in your organization. Or worse, they do get it, but it is something they donāt really care about. They think they can care if they try hard enough, but it is hopeless. Their hearts are not in it.
ā¢ Redundant. The innocent of the group, the redundant is the number two person in a job that one person can do well. Ideally, redundant employees can be moved into other positions, but when that is not an option, it is important to see them for what they are: a wasted resource. The waste is not just of your resources either: if their work is superfluous, then they are wasting their time in a job with no growth or prospects.
How Do I Know When to Fire?
If you already have someone in mind, today is the day.
If you are thinking you need to fire someone, then you probably already have tried to address your concerns about his or her performance in other ways. In order to be certain that firing is the right step, it is good to review the ways in which you already have tried to address the problem. Did you
ā¢ explain the position and what is required of the employee?
ā¢ provide training on equipment and procedures?
ā¢ conduct informal reviews of performance and outline areas that need improvement?
ā¢ discuss conflicts and differences with coworkers and try to resolve them?
ā¢ ask the employee what he thinks of his performance and how he believes it could be improved?
ā¢ conduct a formal performance review and record the review in writing?
These are important steps in helping employees succeed, but they have usually been exhausted by the time you start thinking of firing them. You are thinking of firing them because you already know in your heart that it is time for them to go. Follow your instinct.
Why Are We Reluctant to Fire People?
There are lots of bad reasons that we are reluctant to fire people.
ā¢ We want to be kind. Firing people seems mean.
ā¢ We are concerned for the employees.We take on too much responsibility for the employees and think that we are protecting them from financial difficulty, emotional distress, embarrassment, etc.
ā¢ We donāt want to admit that we made a mistake in hiring. After investing so much time and money in advertising and interviewing to fill a position, it seems like a personal failure if the hire doesnāt work out. Especially if we āsoldā this hire to other managers or bragged about the new employeeās credentials. Or worse, if we sold the position to the candidate who is now the employee we need to fire.
ā¢ We have a large investment in training. We would rather throw good money after bad than write off the bad.
ā¢ We donāt know how we will fill the position. Somebody has to do this job, and if we fire this person today, who is going to do the job tomorrow? We donāt have anyone else to fill the position nor the time to find them.
These are not just bad reasons; these are selfish excuses. Compassion is caring about others, but retaining the employee who should be fired is all about caring for ourselvesāit is never about the employee. We want to protect our investment, our presumptuous feeling of parental responsibility, our time and energy, even our reputation for ābeing nice.ā
If employees quit, or were hit by the proverbial bus, we would find a way to address any real issues related to their sudden absenceāwe would have to, because their departure date would be out of our control.
The past is also out of our control; we canāt go back and not make the hire, not spend on the training, or not create a āmission criticalā job function. By firing we can at least make today the day we start investing in the future instead of continuing to waste resources and to delay the inevitable.
What Happens When We Donāt Fire
When we donāt fire employees who need to be fired, we are doing a great disservice to the employees, their coworkers, and ourselves.
We are sending the employees a message: āYouāre no good.ā Even when we donāt say those words, we are communicating the message in our silence. Because when we hold back on firing someone, we arenāt just holding back the negative āYouāre firedā message; we are holding back all the subtle positive messages that encourage and motivate people every day.
ā¢ We are not telling the employees that they are doing a good job.
ā¢ We are not giving them promotions or pay increases or bonuses.
ā¢ We are not letting them work on the most important projects or with the most important customers.
ā¢ We are not putting them in a position to be appreciated and respected by their peers.
We are sending the employeesā coworkers a message: āYou donāt need to do a good job. We donāt distinguish between good work and bad around here, so donāt take the trouble to do things right, or fast, or at all. There is no penalty for really bad performance and probably no reward for really great performance. Nobody is watching.ā
Our employees know, often better than we do, who is and is not pulling their weight and contributing to the organization. They are looking at us to see how we address poor performance or deal with people who are misplaced in the organization.
We are poisoning our own attitudes. Our own attitudes change as we develop a feeling of pride about our āmercyā in retaining the employees while, at the same time, resentment grows for what we perceive are their responsibilities and our wasted time and resources. This chilling of the heart will reveal itself in icy blasts at the employees and their coworkers.
In truth it is our responsibility as managers and bosses to act, not the employeesā. When we donāt fire appropriately, we are wasting everyoneās time. The employees are delayed in their pursuit of a better-suited job. The organization suffers from waiting for the right person for the job. And we damage our own authority and effectiveness by failing to perform our own job: properly managing our limited resources.
How to Go About Firing Someone Today
As important as it is to fire when necessary, you first want to make sure that it is necessary. As a last resort, you should think about retaining the employee in a different positionāeffectively firing the person from the current job but hiring her for another one. For an employee in the āmisfitā bin, this can be a way to retain your investment in finding, hiring, and training.
Donāt use a change in job description or an in-company transfer to avoid a necessary firing, but be sure to evaluate them as options. Firing someone should not be about the person, but it should be about the poor pairing of the person with the job. Donāt let the necessity of firing an employee from her present job prevent you from seeing possibilities for her success in a different position.
Ron seemed like someone who would be a great salesperson. He had energy, charisma, and a passion for the product. He just wasnāt doing a very good job in inbound telephone sales.
We moved Ron to outbound telephone sales to retailers, but his performance didnāt improve. The only bright spot was his success at building a relationship (and sales) with a group heād gone to visit in person.
We didnāt have any other sales positions and could not afford to keep Ron in a position where he was not succeeding. Before firing him, we talked about what we could do that used his skills since telephone sales was such a poor fit. We decided to build on his in-person success and created an experimental, new position. Within a short time, Ron created a new channelāin-person presentations at conferencesāwhere he consistently tripled the sales of the best telephone salesperson.
If you donāt have a job in which the employee could succeed, the next step is to talk to your attorney.
As expensive as it is to talk to your attorney, it is a lot more expensive to make a mistake in the process of firing someone. In the minimum billable portion of an hour, you can review the circumstances of and potential problems with the planned firing. It is a great investment, at least until you are completely familiar with the issues and have a formal process in place.
Even if you have become something of an expert on employment law and are widely known as āThe Axe,ā you will want to consult your attorney before firing anyone who might have grounds for a complaint or, just as important, who might be inclined to make a complaint, grounds or not.
Be Prepared
You need to be completely prepared before actually firing someone.
Consult your attorney or internal guidelines and make sure that you are not going to violate any employment or discrimination laws. Check any relevant employment contract for special notice or severance pay requirements.
Inform the various staff members or departments (payroll, security, network administration, etc.) who may need to know of the firing beforehand in order to cancel security cod...