Anonymous wrote:I’m a senior manager who’s never had to fire an employee for cause until now. I have no doubt it’s the right thing to do but it feels rotten.
The employee is creative, committed, and hard working but struggles to meet deadlines, collaborate well with others, often shows poor judgement, does not apply feedback, and disrespects my role as her supervisor. Several managers have warned me not to trust her, and while I’ve tried to give her the benefit of the doubt, she has betrayed my trust on several occasions.
Although I have ample cause to fire her, I’m having a very hard time with this decision. She’s had a tough life and it’s about to get much tougher.
For those of you who’ve done this before, how do you separate your feelings from your duty? Does it get easier?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This won’t be a surprise. She’s received negative feedback for missing deadlines and not taking direction. She often notes ADHD as the cause, but she’s never requested accommodations or shared an official diagnosis. As the parent of a child with ADHD, I’ve done what I could to provide clear direction and support anyway, including regular check-ins, clear feedback, and written instructions. Our CEO has expressed frustration to me about her and fully backs this decision.
One additional cause: During a verbal discussion when I gave her feedback on several missed deadlines and misleading status reports, she walked out of our meeting mid-conversation and went to the CEO, my boss, to complain about my failure to manage her time better. My boss recommended firing her for cause and at that point, I was done making excuses for her.
Anonymous wrote:This won’t be a surprise. She’s received negative feedback for missing deadlines and not taking direction. She often notes ADHD as the cause, but she’s never requested accommodations or shared an official diagnosis. As the parent of a child with ADHD, I’ve done what I could to provide clear direction and support anyway, including regular check-ins, clear feedback, and written instructions. Our CEO has expressed frustration to me about her and fully backs this decision.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a senior manager who’s never had to fire an employee for cause until now. I have no doubt it’s the right thing to do but it feels rotten.
The employee is creative, committed, and hard working but struggles to meet deadlines, collaborate well with others, often shows poor judgement, does not apply feedback, and disrespects my role as her supervisor. Several managers have warned me not to trust her, and while I’ve tried to give her the benefit of the doubt, she has betrayed my trust on several occasions.
Although I have ample cause to fire her, I’m having a very hard time with this decision. She’s had a tough life and it’s about to get much tougher.
For those of you who’ve done this before, how do you separate your feelings from your duty? Does it get easier?
Anonymous wrote:Firing should never be a surprise to the employee. Absent something egregious like embezzlement, there should be clearly communicated events. "If you miss the next deadline / speak to your coworkers unprofessionally again, you will be fired." If you have done this, she'll know it's coming because you told her it would.
If this is just you drawing a line after building frustration but not communicating the stakes, yeah you should feel bad.