Anonymous wrote:When faced with budget cuts, you fight like hell to keep the best people.
Seniority doesn’t matter. You don’t keep someone just because they have worked there longer.
You keep the people who always show up, work hard, demonstrate productivity (to the point you would panic if you lost them), don’t bring drama, and won’t complain when they need to pick up the slack.
Salaries matter as well. The middle managers and highest paid admins who don’t pull their weight are always at risk.
Bottom line: it’s never “last one in, first one out.” Such an approach assumes loyalty rather than business decisions, and businesses base such decisions on business decisions.
PS - The layoffs at my company have been relatively easy since the people who barely worked were the ones cut loose.
This is only partially accurate. It’s definitely not LIFO, but if you’re the one overseeing the layoffs and people are advocating for specific employees, you may listen a little, but there are other factors that go into play. Your advocacy counts a little, but often not very much