Surviving a layoff… time to leave before second layoff happens.
My current employer had a relatively small layoffs round (about 3% of the workforce). More people resigned afterwards than during the layoffs.
If management is really good. And they have to do a layoff no matter what. They will cut deeper than they need to. And then explain to everybody the financial situation and why the layoff was both necessary, but sufficient to guarantee the survival of the company. They will demonstrate to the people they laid off that they’re being taken care of in the company still cares and that the survivors shouldn’t worry because the company took care of its people.
Unfortunately the reality is a lot of executives will go incommunicado for a layoff. It’ll stop relaying anything. So the worst case scenario plays out in people’s minds. Especially about finances. They get very shy about the real financial situation.
The best I’ve seen is post layoff all the survivors are given a incentive scheme to stick around. That you know increases over time. To prevent people from jumping ship immediately. Cuz no matter what you do post layoff you’re going to lose more organic people. And probably you’re more capable of people. Because they’re more able to find a job quickly. so you’re going to have a brain drain you need to fight and if you don’t you might be in a worse operational position then if you hadn’t had a lay off at all.
Especially smaller businesses cuz they suffer from key person vulnerabilities more than larger companies.
Rejecting my vacation request for stupid reasons and not giving me a raise for over two years. I had been there for 10 years.
I worked for a kind of IT outsourcing center for a company that otherwise had a very good reputation. We were their cheap, crappy branch. They still had decent severance packages as a vestige of when they used to be a decent company. When they had a round of layoffs at our site, after a few days of calling people into the office and seeing them come out crying, I started to do the math. I would be paid well enough for a few months if I got laid off. I would finally have the time and mental energy to job search and move on. At the end of the week, when they announced that all of the people had been laid off that would be affected, I found I was disapointed. That’s when I realized how truly toxic that place was, how much I hated it, and how badly I needed to move on.
That seems kind of shitty. Where did you end up going? I just started an IT job for a hospital in my city. Still learning the ropes for sure.
I ended up working for a bank next as a contractor. The grass was greener on the other side of the fence, but not by as much as I hoped. I used the skills I learned there and my increase in pay as a springboard for finding a better job with slightly higher pay as a regular employee elsewhere at a small healthcare company.
I got a promotion. There was no raise in salary just expectations of more responsibilities. I got a $100 visa gift card. I saw that as a big fuck you. I was out as soon as I could manage.
My manager got a promotion with a hefty salary increase, then the company announced a hiring and salary freeze, then gave me a promotion with more responsibilities (some of my manager’s as well) but with the same salary.
I quited a few months later as soon as I could secure something else
I’m dealing with that right now with my current company. They’ve had me working in a role 4 positions above the one my title would indicate for the last year. Being healthcare, they blamed not being able to change my job title because they can’t afford increasing my pay during “these unprecedented times.” Now, a year later, they’re “working on updating my job title,” but it’s going to be a lateral title change with no change in payscale.
You bet I’m on my way out
I was working at a hospital that had to do ethics training twice per year because of previous violations. I was sitting on the floor in a super crowded room and the video opened with, “Do your ethics match those of your employer?” and i went, “Oh shit! They do not! I have to get out of here!”
I am confused? The “previous violations” were your doing or the employers?
The hospital had violations and for the next 5 (i think) years, all staff had to do ethics training twice per year. Money and productivity were much more important to them than patient care. Shortly before i left they quit buying wet wipes. Staff was expected to clean patients (bathing, vomit, BM, blood) with washcloths that were put into laundry bins for wash and reuse.