Helping To Find Solutions For Staff Facing Redundancy

Could Career Coaching help your staff to deal with the prospect of redundancy? London Career Coach Hannah McNamara thinks so.

Working in HR can be a very rewarding career, but it doesn’t get any tougher than having to deal with making other members of staff redundant.

It often falls to HR managers to deal with the fallout of such an event, as the people affected seek help to cope with their sometimes unexpected (and nearly always stressful and upsetting) situation.

The key to being able to help workers faced with redundancy is to be ready and available to offer solutions and advice when they need it the most. Career coaching isn’t something that all members of staff will be aware of or will have thought about, but if you can suggest it to anyone who comes to you for help it can do wonders for their motivation. It is a useful tool for helping them to see that there are other options on the table.

When people are told they face redundancy, they often assume that they are leaving the company altogether. This is not always true however. Before you meet with any employee in this situation, you should investigate the possibility of outplacement; it’s quite possible that their skills can be utilised elsewhere in the business without them having to leave altogether. This can be a good solution for both the employee and the employer when a role disappears.

HR managers can do a lot for employees facing redundancy, both in terms of providing information and providing support as well. An employee’s productivity will understandably be affected by the news, but if you can provide the right resources to help them negotiate the situation successfully there is every chance they will begin to see it as an opportunity to stretch their wings.

This does bring up an important point, since the first thought of many HR managers will naturally be to provide resources such as career coaching in order to help the employee through this period of transition. It is important however to remember that they are likely to be feeling emotional at this time, and may not be very accepting of help in the first instance. It may simply be enough to let them know where you are and how you can help, and to tell them that they can arrange a further meeting to discuss future options when they feel ready to do so.

Redundancy is not a pleasant situation from either side of the fence, but if it is handled carefully by those in an HR capacity then the workers affected will at least know the support they need is there for them.

© Copyright Hannah McNamara 2008


HRM Coaching in London helps professionals to excel at work and find the job they were born to do. They provide life coaching, career coaching and executive coaching at all levels. You can download their latest e-book ‘10 Ways to Sabotage Your Own Career - are you making these mistakes?’ free from www.hrmcoaching.com/download


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