TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

How to Respond to Someone Quitting

6 pointsby alphadevxabout 6 years ago

1 comment

ethiclubabout 6 years ago
Coming from an emotional angle highlights the fact that teams are family style groups that spend most of their waking days together, which is nice in a way. Having said that - It feels that even after many of these conclusions in this article are made, a lot of the offboarding process is still tangled up with that emotion - Which isn&#x27;t beneficial for any party.<p>&gt; Never take them back<p>I have examples of team members returning once or even twice and adding great value each time (both permanent and contract). Some examples of people returning and spending 4+ (and counting) years in a new or the same position. &quot;You are welcome back any time&quot; is uttered many times to departing team members. They are welcomed back with open arms. (re)Onboarding is a breeze. If neither party burns bridges and has a graceful transition, then the relationship can be picked up again later.<p>&gt; should respond to this unwelcome news<p>Perhaps it doesn&#x27;t need to be viewed as &#x27;unwelcome news&#x27;, and instead viewed more pragmatically. It&#x27;s all part of the Personnel lifecycle. Personal Life &gt; Work Life... That employee shouldn&#x27;t view your organization as their highest priority. A business owner has a responsibility to help someone transition out of the firm. If they&#x27;re leaving, it&#x27;s for a reason. Good luck to them. Perhaps there is something that the business can do to facilitate. That person has provided value over their tenure - And if not, then that&#x27;s just data for the business to improve it&#x27;s employment processes (role design, forecasting, responsibility assignment, recruitment, interviewing, contract finance).<p>&gt; &quot;Do an exit interview...If your company has a dedicated HR team, they will have this baked into their process<p>I think this touches on the best takeaway - The process should be codified (not just the exit interview). An employee shouldn&#x27;t have to drive this, and it shouldn&#x27;t be made difficult for them. They shouldn&#x27;t have to ask for pay slips, final payments, references etc. - The business should ideally have done this all proactively. This is all part of employee welfare, and even if the employee is leaving they are still owed that welfare.<p>When a team member triggers a transition (inter or intra organization) by handing in their notice or request for transfer, a templated job should immediately be created in the business&#x27;s system with tasks for<p>- handovers<p>- exit interview<p>- contract end procedures<p>- recruitment &#x2F; forecasting triggers<p>- A prompt, nice, diplomatic email to the business (or business unit) that says &#x27;J Smith is leaving&#x27; (without giving away personal information), and &#x27;thanks for what they have done&#x27; (a genuine message of thanks).<p>It&#x27;s not taking the heart away from the team&#x2F;process by automating this, it&#x27;s just ensuring that a proactive checklist is generated for due diligence in offboarding and replacing the team member. And it&#x27;s about abstracting this away from emotion and ad hoc reaction, and doing right by people.<p>If the news catches you unaware, it may indicate that there is room for improving team communication (depending on the reason for leaving). In plenty of close-knit organizations, team members feel comfortable discussing their discontent with their line managers (whether it&#x27;s salary related or otherwise). And those line managers then help the employee to resolve them (often by changing role in the team&#x2F;org, or helping them adjust their employee roadmap&#x2F;development path), or help them transition away (with more notice in which to recruit). On occassion, businesses have actually lined up the employee&#x27;s next job for them.
评论 #19589543 未加载