"How are people taking the idea?"
"Really, it's been pretty amazing," he replied. As these two departments merged, the leaders were approaching the whole effort in a totally open, transparent way--and staff members were totally engaged in the process of determining whether their positions should be among those cut.
How does an organization develop in such a way that when challenges come, people work in creative, collaborative ways to discover the best ways forward, even when it means scary and possibly painful change?
I asked a few more questions, and then visited with some other acquaintances who had been involved. Here's what I learned from them:
- Openness from leaders about the situation is critical. Team members know generally what's up, so hiding conversations about it doesn't help. Acknowledging the realities and inviting everyone to participate gives team members opportunities to grieve together as well as work to find solutions.
- Engaging everyone in discussions opens valuable opportunities. In this case, some staff members began to feel motivated to pursue other interests and organizations, resulting in positive career moves. Others were able to help define roles for those who would stay. All were able to help each other find the right solution for the organization and for individuals.
- Building relationships helps strengthen the organization moving forward. This department focused on building people throughout the merger process.
It's important to acknowledge that studies of organizational resilience would suggest that corporations do best when they focus on 1) positive human relationships, 2) financial reserves, and 3) layoff avoidance to build an organization that can withstand negative market forces. You can read more about one of my favorite studies here: Relationships, Layoffs, and Organizational Resilience
I'm with these researchers; however, sometimes layoffs are going to happen. When they do, how leaders care for the people they work with makes all the difference.
...it also helps if an organization offers a decent severance package which eases the stress of planning one's own demise!
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