How to Handle an Employee’s Resignation An IAM Group Limited Singapore AdviceA Story by DulceA story on how to handle your staff's resignationYou have to think of long term, your
business, and your employees. Think of yourself as the business owner, no
one in your company should not be replaceable at any time, including yourself.
With that in mind, you should have everything every employee, manager, officer
does written down and reviewed quarterly to add or make changes. It is so you
don't need those two weeks to find out what that person does or try to figure out
what they did after they are gone. And beyond that what happens if someone gets
sick or just disappear or just cannot go to work due to personal reasons? Cutting their two weeks short might breed
bad employee departure notice, it might not. Employees leave for two reasons,
one they have to or two they want to. The want to ones most of the time are
moving on to something better or just want out. They are dead weight. The have
to ones usually don't want to leave but need to and most of the time the faster
they get out of the company the better, but not always, they might want to
stick around and work. There is always an exception to everything. When people leave it is something you will
need to address with your employees. They don't need to know the exact details,
but enough. "Scott will be leaving soon and will no longer be working with
us. Until we find someone new Scott's job will be divided up. The respective
employees will be notified of extra duties. Contact Bob, he will be managing
Scott's duties, while Scott is still here and after he leaves. We are sorry to
see Scott go and we thank him for all the time he has spent with us." If
you have done your diligence and created a healthy work culture, the other
employees will understand it’s time to move on " Scott is leaving. If they
don't then there is work to do on your culture. In a bad work culture, this is
the least of your worries. It is a high time to deal with your work culture
first. Don't rely on the person leaving to train
the new employee, that isn't their job and why would you want them to? Plus you
have everything written down to train them. You don't want bad habits from the
previous employee instilled in the new one. What about the employee finishing up
projects or work? It is nice that the employee wants to help and finish things
up and gets things in order for the next person. Maybe that is someone who
stays on for the two weeks. But that again isn't their job or responsibility,
it is the manager or boss to delegate what needs to get done and what the new
employee comes in to. What about "maybe the employee needs
those last two weeks of pay"? They should have thought of that before
putting in their two weeks. If they need those two weeks of money, then they
should have waited two weeks or saved more. It is not the business's
responsibility to make sure each employee is all good financially before they
leave. Handling a sub-ordinate’s resignation is
tough. It stems from personal feelings and emotional investment in a person. It
can kill a company and ruin morale if not dealt with properly and understood.
That doesn't mean being a rude either. It just means you should understand the
bigger picture and your emotions and your employee's emotions and dealing with
them in a smart thought out manor. IAM Group Limited Singapore helps out
managers with a set of processes and guidelines to properly handle an
employee’s resignation. People coming from far places like Yokohama Japan,
Beijing China, Saigon, Vietnam and the likes are often strict about policies in
their workplace. It is the main part of their life. Members from different
parts of the world pitched in their opinions on matters how to make someone who
is resigning felt welcome after they handed their letter. The group has been a
great help so far and it is very helpful to read some of their newsletters if
you are in middle management. © 2014 Dulce |
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Added on December 26, 2014 Last Updated on December 26, 2014 Tags: iam group limited, iam grp ltd, iam group, iam group ltd japan, iam group ltd yokohama, iam group japan AuthorDulceSydney, AustraliaAboutI love writing, helping to others, travelling and communicating to other people. more..Writing
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