Wednesday, April 15, 2020
How to Know if Youre About to Be Fired
How to Know if You're About to Be Fired Getting fired can be a real shock to the system. But there are usually signs that your termination is pending. Youâve just got to know where to look. Maybe your boss is out to get you. Maybe youâve been embroiled in some recent controversy at work. Or maybe your organization is undergoing a massive transition or merger. Either way, it helps to be prepared. Lynn Taylor, a national workplace expert and the author of âTame Your Terrible Office Tyrant: How to Manage Childish Boss Behavior and Thrive in Your Job,â tells Business Insider that the savviest professionals always keep an eye out for the classic signs that their job is in danger. This way, if and when they notice red flags popping up, they can attempt to turn the tides before itâs too late. Here are 23 signs you may be getting the boot: 1. You receive a bad performance review (or two, or three) Tap into these essential skills to get on your supervisorâs good side. A negative evaluation is not always synonymous with being fired, but, in conjunction with other bad feedback, it can mean trouble, says Taylor. âYour employer needs to create a paper trail, so along with warnings, your employer will use a performance review to document the problem areas.â More than one poor performance review in a row is an especially bad sign, adds Michael Kerr, an international business speaker and author of âThe Humor Advantage.â âDepending on how bad your first performance review was, you may be given a chance to make corrections and improve, but a series of critical performance reviews could be a major sign that your job is in jeopardy,â Kerr tells Business Insider. If itâs because of a lack of experience or lack of training in a certain area, then thereâs always a chance to fix it. But critical phrases to be mindful of during performance reviews include, âYouâre not a good fit for our culture,â âYouâre not a team player,â âYour personality or style doesnât seem to mesh with the team,â or âYou have a major attitude problem.â âIf you hear any of these types of criticisms then itâs time to break out your résumé, since itâs often assumed that attitudinal issues are deeply engrained and unfixable,â he says. 2. Youâre left out of the loop If itâs suddenly hard to access important data that would help you perform well in your job, or youâre not invited to important meetings or included on key emails, a pink slip may be coming your way, says Taylor. âThere could be other reasons for this happening, but certainly one may be that your leadership has lost the trust or confidence in your abilities, making you vulnerable when and if layoffs happen,â Kerr says. 3. Your job has become mission impossible âWhen you first assumed the role, you had your marching orders and could accomplish them. Now it seems that youâre tasked with projects akin to climbing Mount Everest blindfolded,â says Taylor. âYouâre being set up to fail,â Kerr explains. âSometimes this is due to lousy leadership, but occasionally it can be because a company wants to get rid of you, but they need solid evidence to do so, and setting you up for disaster is one way of getting the âproofâ you longer belong there.â 4. Your boss has âwarnedâ you (more than once) Formal warnings are never a good thing. âYou may have received a verbal warning, a written warning, and maybe even a second written warning,â says Taylor. If you have, know that more bad news may be coming your way. 5. Your relationship with your boss has deteriorated You used to be friends (or friendly, at least) â" but now thereâs tension whenever youâre in the same room. âOnce your relationship has deteriorated to the point of being toxic, then how your boss treats you â" from ignoring you to publicly berating you â" can be obvious signs that your job might be in peril,â says Kerr. 6. Youâre asked to provide detailed reports about time or expenses âIncreased scrutiny is a phenomenon that is rarely initiated by the accounting department,â Robert Dilenschneider, author of â50 Plus!: Critical Career Decisions for the Rest of Your Life,â tells Business Insider. âThe boss believes that you have wasted time or inflated expenses. Even if you are 100% innocent, it doesnât matter. Find out if you are the only person being scrutinized.â 7. Fewer projects are coming your way Hereâs a bad sign: You suddenly have a lot of time on your hands because not a lot of work is being assigned to you. âAs you try to secure normal work, it seems itâs hard to get cooperation from your boss and other managers,â Taylor says. âTheyâre suddenly making your work life difficult.â 8. Teamwork isnât your strong suit Itâs important to fit into the companyâs culture. That means taking one for the team sometimes, as HR consultant Laurie Ruettimann tells Readerâs Digest: âIf we ask you to travel for your job or attend a conference, itâs not really a question. Say no, and it can be career-ending.â 9. Youâve lost resources When you lose staff, budgets, and access to certain outside services and/or office space â" or any number of tools that would enhance your performance â" it could be because your employer is trying to push you out. 10. Your boss is on your case all the time Are you constantly being asked for progress reports? Do you find that your boss constantly monitors your work? If so, you may want to start looking for a new job, says Dilenschneider. 11. Youâre being micromanaged or ignored It seems that youâre working in extremes. Either your boss is watching your every step, or theyâre nowhere to be found. âEither way, it makes for a highly uncomfortable environment,â Taylor explains. âIf theyâre watching over you, you feel a lack of trust. If theyâre ignoring you, then you are in a seemingly endless state of inertia on your project status.â 12. You have fewer responsibilities Do you feel less important? Have your subordinates been transferred to other managers? Have projects been reassigned to your colleagues? If so, you could be getting the boot sometime soon. 13. Your perks start to evaporate âYour colleagues are all sent to a conference in Marrakesh, but you arenât invited. You are told to fly coach after years of flying business class. Suddenly, you lose your corner office and are relocated to the bullpen,â says Dilenschneider. âPerks are an important part of the job, and if you sense yours are being eroded, you have every right to worry.â 14. Youâre no longer praised for your work Even if you performed a miracle never before witnessed by a mortal being, it seems your boss wouldnât acknowledge it now. âTo do so would run contrary to the campaign underway to remove you from the company,â explains Taylor. 15. Youâve received a pay cut or been asked to take time off If youâve been asked to take a leave of absence, you probably have something to worry about. âThis is a major sign that things arenât well, even if itâs under the guise of being whatâs âbest for you,'â says Kerr. âItâs the equivalent of a dating couple âtaking a break for a whileâ â" and we all know how that usually ends.â 16. You notice more gossip and strange behavior from your coworkers When people seem to shy away from you, and you notice it most from people with whom you shared a friendship, it probably means somethingâs up. âOftentimes when coworkers hear rumors about someone being fired or even reprimanded, they stay away to avoid âguilt by association,'â Taylor says. 17. You report to new or more people Suddenly youâre reporting to more junior people or more managers in a matrix environment. âThereâs more red tape and bureaucracy whereas before you could get your work done in a streamlined way,â Taylor says. This isnât a great sign. 18. Youâve made a major mistake that causes your company external embarrassment or a lot of money âDepending on the context and how your leadership team treats failures and setbacks, especially in the realm of experimenting with innovative ideas, then you might be allowed to file a major mistake under the heading âlearning experience,'â Kerr says. âBut for some, this will mean an early exit out the door.â 19. Your boss goes directly to your subordinates This sign is similar to âbeing left out of the loopâ â" but even worse. âMost organizations have a chain of command, and when it is disrupted, it is a clear indication that you are no longer needed,â says Dilenschneider. 20. Your access to certain data is limited When a company is preparing to let someone go, they sometimes limit or revoke the employeeâs access to certain accounts a bit prematurely. Beware if your email password no longer works or youâve been locked out of your companyâs intranet, says Taylor. 21. Youâre no longer asked for input on key decisions Not being asked for input means your boss no longer values or cares about what you have to say, Kerr warns. âFreezing you out of the loop is often the first sign of a slow slide out the door.â 22. There was a recent merger, but little information After a merger, itâs not uncommon for a company to make layoffs â" sometimes even massive layoffs, Kerr says. âIf youâre feeling that your job was at risk already, then a merger could put the nail on the proverbial coffin,â adds Taylor. 23. Your instincts are telling you somethingâs wrong âIf you feel youâve done everything you can, but still have that âI might get firedâ feeling, youâre probably right, and itâs likely time to move on,â Andy Bailey of business coaching service Petra Coach tells Business Insider. âYou may be an âAâ player, but it might have to be somewhere else. Begin seeking out other positions that better reflect your personality and work ethic.â Ketti Salemme of TINYPulse, an employee survey product, also tells Business Insider that itâs important not to disregard your own instincts. âSometimes the sign can be nothing more than a gut feeling,â Salemme says. âWhether it be a shift in the company culture, your job duties, or your relationship with colleagues, this can be indicative enough that you may soon be let go.â This story originally appeared on Business Insider.
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