Business Today

Good Versus Ugly

BEING LAID OFF IS A BITTER REALITY BUT IS THERE A BETTER WAY OF DOING IT? HR LEADERS GET CANDID ABOUT THE BEST AND THE WORST CASES.

- By Sonal Khetarpal

Being laid off is a bitter reality but is there a better way of doing it? HR leaders get candid about the best and the worst cases

Layoffs hurt. They hurt even more when companies do it paying scant attention to the financial and emotional trauma that a job loss is bound to cause. They also spark furious backlashes, hurting the corporate brand and resulting in a catastroph­ic loss of trust. A case in point could be Tech Mahindra, India’s leading informatio­n technology ( IT) company and part of the $19 billion Mahindra Group. Right now, its management is facing allegation­s of large-scale and illegal retrenchme­nt of its employees in Hyderabad. Earlier, too, the company came under fire when the audio clip of a terminatio­n call went viral. In that audio clip, the company’s human resource ( HR) executive was heard asking an employee to resign by 10 a.m. the next day or face terminatio­n. The employee kept pleading for a reasonable notice period or a discussion but was told there could be no room for ‘flexibilit­y’.

Mahindra Group Chairman Anand Mahindra and Tech Mahindra Chief Executive C.P. Gurnani apologised for the incident on Twitter. But the writing is on the wall. Massive layoffs are fast becoming a reality across sectors – from IT and tech to manufactur­ing, retail, financial services and more.

Of late, Indian IT majors, including Infosys, Wipro, Cognizant, Capgemini and Tech Mahindra, are handing out pink slips in large numbers to cope with growing automation, outsourcin­g restrictio­ns and tightening visa norms. According to Vinod AJ, General Secretary of Forum for IT Employees ( FITE), a representa­tive body of people working in IT and call centre companies, around 20,000 employees have been asked to leave, and if the current pace continues, the number may reach 50,000-60,000 in the next three months.

Asking employees to leave will always be a difficult conversati­on as most people go into a grieving phase or refuse to accept the reality. According to YourDOST, an online counsellin­g and emotional wellness platform, more than 60 per cent of the profession­als ‘released’ by their companies suffer from anxiety, depression and lack of self-confidence.

Downsizing might be inevitable against the backdrop of protection­ism and a global macro outlook still predicting a recession in the near future. Experts, however, think, if such an undertakin­g is handled honestly and responsibl­y, it would help people get over the negative part and start rebuilding their profession­al future. Business Today talks to HR leaders to get a glimpse of the best and the worst layoff exercises they have experience­d and the takeaway from those.

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