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Bringing humanity back to workplace

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In an eerily prescient scene from the 2009 film Up in the Air, an ambitious new hire gives a seasoned, corporate downsizing veteran a guided tour of the company’s new set-up which involves laying off employees over the internet. She icily explains this as, “Someone sits down at a conference room somewhere and our server routes their session to one of our terminatio­n engineers (terminator­s, for short). They follow a workflow that takes them through anything — from a standard dismissal to a violent aggressor. Beta testing, role-playing, we go live at the end of the month.” The clinical machinatio­ns of the modern corporate ecosystem were laid bare once again last week when the top boss of a US-based mortgage company, with about 20% of its employees based out of India, fired as many as 900 of its staffers over a Zoom webinar. The founder of Better.com, Vishal Garg, who had pulled off the blundered execution was at the receiving end of intense backlash from all quarters, who criticised him for the cold, harsh, and the downright ‘horrible’ manner in which he told his employees that they were fired. While the CEO subsequent­ly said that all US-based downsized employees will get four weeks of severance, one month of full benefits, and two months of cover-up, the damage it seems, was already done. The developmen­t has prompted a discourse in terms of what exactly is the right protocol to be employed when informing employees about drastic measures such as downsizing. Organisati­ons in First-World economies such as the UK seem to have a better track record when it comes to protocols involving lay-offs. For instance, employers are legally bound to enter a consultati­on period with workers for a period not less than 30 days, or 45 days, in case more than 100 people are set to be made redundant. During this period, employers are also urged to look at alternativ­e profiles for their workers within the organisati­on. As far as India is concerned, many such rules are considered lip service as the corporate world is rife with episodes of unceremoni­ous dismissals, unplanned redundanci­es, and in the worst-case scenario, a veiled threat of retributio­n from employers, in case employees choose to go public with the news of their ouster. On the employee front, such callousnes­s has contribute­d to a culture where the very act of quitting has become a public display, with employees not just announcing their exits, but going all-out and broadcasti­ng the same — a case in point being the departure of former CEO of Twitter, Jack Dorsey. Messages such as “My mental health welcoming me back, after leaving corporate America” have gone viral on platforms like TikTok, while LinkedIn has also now turned into a veritable Colosseum where disgruntle­d employees have resorted to directly calling out their reporting managers for their ‘supposed indifferen­ce and unfair treatment’. The perpetuati­on of a culture of microaggre­ssions in toxic workplaces has also added to the injury. Having said that, going public, whether it’s from the employer’s or the employee’s side is a dual-edged sword. On one hand, future employers might be wary of job seekers who have a track record of airing their grievances on public fora. For employers, the fact that workers could not iron out their difference­s within the walls of a boardroom could lead to a spate of bad press and firefighti­ng initiative­s on social media. The bottom line is that something essential has been missing in the global corporate arena for a long time now. In the quest for building lean, mean, hyper-efficient teams with managers who do not take no for an answer, some fundamenta­ls of organisati­onal behaviour have been ignored. Dignity, empathy, and compassion for its employees and stakeholde­rs must lie at the heart of any successful enterprise.

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