At any given time during a business day, throughout
the United States employers are calling wayward employees into their
office to give them
the ax, the heave hoe, the old pink slip. What leads up to employment
termination can vary from company to company and scenario to scenario.
As a business owner or human resource personnel, you must find your
threshold then decide a course of action for what some believe to
be the “hardest” part
of the job—firing the unwanted employee.
Finding the right time and method of breaking the news to the employee,
who may be underperforming, presents the most difficult obstacle. Many
business owners put off the inevitable by fantasizing the employee will
get better with time, or the reprimands and written notices will eventually
do their job and the message will get through. But how long is too long
to wait? Can you immediately replace an employee who constantly underperforms?
Would the new blood in the work environment help speed up production,
help uplift the morale of the entire business? Maybe so, and maybe not.
Employment Termination Missteps and Obstacles
Before bringing in the employee to your office, jot down a few notes
to think about why you should terminate the employee. By answering a
few questions, you can develop a decisive, short speech to give the employee,
which will help relieve any turmoil afterwards and give insight into
why you are terminating them.
* What problems has the employee caused?
* Are there specific policies the employee has broken?
* Have you warned the employee?
* Have you taken other measures to bring back the employee within good
standing?
* Are there legal considerations to keep in mind?
This last question brings to mind why it is crucial to have certain
actions thought out before bringing in the employee. Employers do not
want to leave any doubt about why they are firing an employee. Do not
let the imagination of the terminated employee run wild with discrimination
lawsuit ideas. Be concise and direct about the missteps of the employee
and the employment termination proceedings will be over within moments.
Most terminations do not end in long-drawn-out conversations, but guarded
goodbyes, but be prepared for pleas and some shameful comments.
Many different companies handle employment termination in various ways,
even by emails and text messages recently. We recommend face-to-face
encounters, where the employee can leave with the respect of the company
for having the nerve to tell him or her in person. If nothing else, it
will keep your company out of the headlines and where it should be headed,
towards success.
This
is how you get rid of a bad employee.