Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Workers securing backup plan for inevitable layoffs

- By Ella Ceron

Even though the unemployme­nt rate in the U.S. is at a 53- year low, many workers are still preparing for layoffs as a matter of when, not if.

A growing number of employees are making sure they have a plan B — or C — to fall back on in the face of mounting job cuts and pessimisti­c outlooks across industries. That might look like trying to save a little extra money each month, taking on a side hustle that could become a full-time job or being more open to switching career paths if necessary.

“People are looking at futureproo­fing their career,” said Robert Boersma, vice president of operations, North America at the jobsearch platform Talent.com.

Mr. Boersma said growing access to the gig economy through app- based work is a key driver of these habits, as is high inflation and everyday expenses. “A really high number of people say, ‘Well, I see the headlines. I feel uncertain about that.‘ “

Tens of thousands of job cuts have been announced in industries ranging from tech to publishing to finance, and Google searches for layoffs have spiked in recent months. One in five employers said they expect their workforce to shrink in the next three months, a January survey by the National Associatio­n for Business Economics found.

The layoffs reinforce a common feeling: Some 70% of U.S. workers said they would be worried about job security during the next recession, according to a November survey from Insight Global. In separate research from Talent.com, 45% of respondent­s said they were likely to take on a side hustle during a time of economic uncertaint­y. Phoebe Gavin, a career and leadership coach in New York City, didn’t wait for uncertaint­y.

“I’ve been preparing to get laid off ever since I took this job,” she wrote in a Twitter thread when she was laid off from Vox Media in January. As a two-time veteran of job cuts in previous roles, Ms. Gavin had spent the better part of the past decade building her savings and launched a part-time career-coaching business in 2019. “It’s a three- legged stool,” Ms. Gavin said in an interview.

“It’s the financial piece, but it’s also your network and building out your skills.”

In the same thread, she announced that she would be focusing on her coaching business full time.

The aftershock­s of a layoff can linger for up to a decade, making workers less trusting that their next job will last and more likely to doomsday prep, said Denise Rousseau, a professor behavior of organizati­onal at Carnegie Mellon University. Before the pandemic, around four in 10 workers had experience­d

a layoff or other form of job loss at least once.

Yet building a financial cushion is easier for some workers than others. An estimated 64% of Americans were living paycheck to paycheck at the end of 2022, some 3 percentage points more than the year prior. Wages haven’t kept up with inflation, and higher costs for everything from rent to eggs have squeezed consumers’ budgets.

As a result, workers are exploring alternate pathways. The Talent.com survey found that 24% of workers said they would definitely switch industries if they needed to, and 39% said they would probably do so.

Jessica Hetterich, a front-desk manager for a salon in Nashville, Tenn., was tired of feeling anxious. She was first laid off six months after joining the workforce in 2010, and again two years later.

While she applied for tech roles in 2021, Ms. Hetterich ultimately opted out of office-based work altogether, a decision she’s more confident of with every headline she sees about job cuts.

 ?? Gene J. Puskar/Associated Press ?? Gig economy side hustles can be a way for workers to prepare themselves in case of the next layoff.
Gene J. Puskar/Associated Press Gig economy side hustles can be a way for workers to prepare themselves in case of the next layoff.

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