How to tell someone they have been made redundant
Redundancy can be handled in a positive way
There is a theme that comes up every time redundancies are announced in the media. ‘The company aren’t telling us anything’ , ‘We don’t know what’s going on’ , ‘ I found out through a friend’. We know the media need a headline, and behind the scenes the company probably has done a bit of 'communication’. But often, it’s not about the company. It’s about how line managers have handled the situation.
Listening to endless uncomfortable stories about how people were briefed shows there is a real need for support. As someone who has been made redundant, and who has had to tell people their jobs have gone, I can empathise that the situation is challenging and pressured for all parties.
Line Managers need as much support as individuals affected. And if this support is in place, then the experience is better for everyone involved.
Here is a guide for managers to help brief their teams.
If you feel like you want more support, let me know how I can help you.
How to tell someone that they have been made redundant
It is a nervous time for you. You’ve probably been working on this restructure for a while, and now you have to go and brief the news. It might be just another ‘thing to do’ on your list, but you are about to change someone’s life. Put some time in to do your plan and prep, and think about how you would like to be treated if it was you. How you brief someone is a reflection on you and how you treat people. You might just be surviving yourself, you might feel scared for your own job, you might be worried about your future, you might not feel good enough or confident enough to do a good briefing. But today is not about you. It’s about the other person / people involved. Put yourself to one side and help someone else today. Everyone will feel better for it.
10 ways you can make briefing less painful (for everyone)
1. Create time for planning and prep
You are about to change someone’s life, put some time in to think about the sequence of your message, support that is needed and what you need to keep it simple & effective.
2. Don’t put a ‘fake’ meeting in the diary
When you plan in your briefing, be sensitive, don’t make up a reason, use a 121 or catch up. Where possible plan two meetings. A phone call to talk about broader changes happening in the business and how people are affected, and a face to face meeting to talk through it in detail.
3. Be clear on the sequencing, your part in the organisation announcement and how your team are affected
Think about everyone who is involved in the changes, those directly affected and those indirectly affected. You need to manage the message so it gets to people at the right time, in the right way.
Your aim is to brief everybody so that people affected feel like they understand and feel supported, and people who aren’t affected understand and can support.
Your other aim is to not fuel gossip and make sure John in facilities doesn’t tell everyone first because he saw it on the meeting room booking system.
4. Use company briefing packs to help you deliver the message, but don’t just read off a briefing sheet
You are briefing a human. You are a human. Be a human.
5. Get familiar with the message and keep it simple
Keep it very simple and concise (you can answer any other questions). Put a lot of work into making the briefing simple. It may be a complex situation but the more information you share, the more overwhelm you are creating.
Business rationale, organisation changes
How they are affected
What happens next
Any questions
6. Be kind
Being professional is not about being hard, cold and uncaring. You may also be feeling nervous but you need to find your compassion and empathy so you can support the individual. Kindness costs nothing but is worth everything.
7. Plan in time for questions, support & follow up
Whether you are briefing a team or individuals leave time for questions and listening. If you don’t know the answers say you’ll find out. Don’t feel like you need to talk or justify any further after the briefing. You just need to listen. People may be in shock and need time to process.
8. Don’t hide
Send a follow up message to your team. Offer an open door if anyone has questions. It’s ok if people are angry, upset, frustrated, confused. You can help by listening and creating support after you’ve briefed them.
9. Plan in support for you
If you are the direct line manager briefing your team think about a support network for you and think who you can ask for help if needed. HR should have this place but check before you start briefing so you know what to do if things don’t go to plan, or you need more support.
10. Make sure you have business / professional support in place before you brief
Your manager briefing pack (if you have one) should include support and further help for people. If not ask your HR team for more information, there might be outplacement support, in-house counselling / team support.
Redundancy has a lot of legal legislation around it and the business will have a formal way of people appealing, raising questions or questions around the redundancy contract. You need to direct all formal correspondence through the formal processes so that individual get clear, consistent advice.
If you want more support to help you handle change and redundancies in your business drop me a note on hello@anotherdoor.co.uk