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If you have ever been fired from a job, did you notice anything different about the behavior of your peers or upper management just before your termination? What are some common signs to look for among your coworkers and project manager(s) that would indicate your position is severely at risk?

EDIT: My instincts were right, and I opted to resign rather than face termination. I guess when you have that "gut feeling" that something is about to happen, it's a strong sign that you should be heading for the exit...

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Am I the only one who sees the irony that this question is not "Closed as non-programming-related." ? – dreftymac Jan 14 at 22:23
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81 Answers

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vote up 150 vote down check

I've never been laid off, but I've worked with people that were. The number one tell-tale sign seems to be that they don't have anything for you to do (either there isn't enough work to go around or they don't want you to start something that you won't be finishing).

A second sign would be that they want you to spend your time documenting stuff that you've already done. This will be so that somebody else can pick it up after you've gone.

Thirdly, the management keep having meetings but nobody knows what they are about and everybody seems stressed.

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vote up 76 vote down

You work at Yahoo.

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As someone who worked at Yahoo (and found this answer quite funny), I can say there wasn't any warning for anyone. Business as usual, then one day you have a meeting with your manager that you are told you can't miss. There weren't any telltale signs at all. It may differ at other places though. – Ryan Doherty Jan 14 '09 at 16:28
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FYI I wasn't laid off at Yahoo, but I did give my 2 weeks a week before layoffs, which causes all sorts of management headaches :) – Ryan Doherty Jan 15 at 17:20
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@TM, get a sense of humor your crotchety programmer! – Simucal Jan 16 at 19:24
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They bring on somebody who does the same thing as you. You're not included in meetings that you probably should be in. More management activity than usual is going on. Things haven't been going so well in the past or you don't get along well.

And of course the most obvious one: You think you might be fired.

I always say trust your instinct. I called my firing the afternoon before it happened. Although I thought it would be later in the week (on a Friday).

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vote up 4 vote down

You have to go to a meeting where they tell you that security will escort you back to your desk.

MSN

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vote up 90 vote down

It has never happened to me, but I've seen it happen.

  • Asked for a summary of all your projects and file locations
  • Sudden focus on documentation and no coding
  • Ask to train or hand off project to coworker
  • Your company was subject of a recent merger or acquisition
  • Lots of meetings between managers and key developers
  • Asked for a list of passwords to databases, and applications
  • Asked if any files are kept on your local drive
  • Layoffs of staff in other departments
  • People you normally chat with seem "busy" or preoccupied
  • It's a Friday before a holiday or it's just before your manager's vacation time
  • When asking about future work or upcoming issues, you're told "not to worry about that right now"
  • Your boss starts doing your job
  • Your company's stock price is taking a dive
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"It's a Friday before a holiday or it's just before your manager's vacation time" <-- Yup, happened to me right before this christmas :P – Ace Jan 19 at 13:45
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Just want to add to the answers here (all good for the most part). If you keep yourself current and ready for what the market is asking for, then it doesn't matter so much. If the company ends up firing you (a reasonably good resource) that probably means they are not going to be in business for very long anyway.

A good idea is also always to have 2-3 months salary deposited in a money market account.

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@Omar, if you can't save 2-3 months of salary because of a mortgage you are living above your means. – Ruggs Jan 14 '09 at 17:46
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vote up 14 vote down

The company has decided to call two meetings, on the same day, and doesn't announce it until that morning. The employees are divided between the two meetings.

This happened at a company I worked for (before I got there) and the people at the first meeting were laid off on the spot and the people in the second meeting were given various lengths of time before the same thing was to happen to them (i.e., these people have 30 days, these people have 60 days, etc.) The second meeting was designed to drag on as long as possible so that the people in the first meeting could be packed up and gone by the time the second meeting let out. It was pretty brutal.

On the upside, it's been my experience that "bad news" meetings are never called days in advance.

EDIT: Oh and I guess I should elaborate, the company got bought out by another company before anyone in the second meeting actually got laid off which is why it was still around to hire me a few years later.

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vote up 6 vote down

Here are a few that I've experienced:

  1. You work for a small firm that has let the office manager go, so there's no one to pick up the phone when it rings. (Developers in the office do it.) You pick up the phone and hear the voice of the man who leases the company car to the owner, saying that if he doesn't get a payment in right away they'll impound the car. You start to wonder if they'll make payroll next week.
  2. New work isn't coming in, and your last billable project is coming to an end.
  3. There are lots of meetings, whispering, and closed doors. You aren't invited.
  4. One of the partners spends a lot of time standing by the printer and waiting for documents coming out. They turn out to be termination letters that s/he didn't want anyone else to see.
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vote up 6 vote down

Everyone in your department is busy but you.

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A additional clues I haven't seen listed yet (from when a company I worked for was soon to close its doors):

  • HR asked everyone in our department how many outstanding vacation days we had (in our jurisdiction, the company is obligated to pay out remaining vacation time)
  • sudden push to finish a few billable projects whose deadlines where weeks again
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vote up 12 vote down

First there is always a recruitment freeze and that is when you can start worrying about the future.

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vote up 92 vote down

You have time at work to ask

As a programmer, what are some telltale signs that you’re about to get fired or laid off?

on Stack Overflow.

:)

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For firing, I have witnessed the following:

  1. Gets assigned very specific tasks with specific deadlines
  2. Other coworkers recruited to evaluate task outcome
  3. Many closed door meetings with those coworkers
  4. GOTO 1, but with tasks that are incrementally unapalatable

This goes on until the employee fails and can be fired for gross incompetence or the employee gets a clue and walks.

For layoffs post merger, look for the conference rooms to be freshly stocked with boxes of tissues.

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vote up 4 vote down

Follow the business indicators. If there are no sales, then there's not going to be anything to pay as salary, in the long term. When you see this potentially happening, then look at the other answers to find out if it's probably going to be you or someone else who has to go.

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If it's performance related then they should have spoken to you at least once and say that they are concerned about your performance, more than one of these meetings and you should worry.

I've seen it happen to a guy at my last job we came back from lunch and he went to a meeting with the CFO came back and started picking up stuff from his desk and said "Right thats me away"

I thought He was just leaving early, turned out he'd been sacked.

I was scared shitless as I was in the probation period of my first job out of university.

Turns out he'd had a few meetings previously and he'd fudged his resume to get a senior developer job when he didn't have the skills to be a senior developer.

Was still scary, but my boss came round to me and said that I was safe and that it was not normal for that to happen...

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While I was contracted to a company, the parent corp came up with a plan to:

"split" our "assets" into "logical tiers" and then "merge" the remaining "core business components"

Translation:
We're shutting down your office and taking the brand you created.

Around that time there was a hiring freeze, a lot of upper level management meetings and a large number of buzzwords flying around. There were also a lot of town hall meetings wherein the parent corp's management assured everyone that everything was OK.

It was painful for the people that didn't see the writing on the wall.

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vote up 51 vote down

When you're around some other people, that are invited in more meetings than you are, you should say something like "Oh boy, I think I might get fired!"

Then, if everyone is laughing - you're safe, but if you hear an awkward silence instead - you're in trouble!

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It's an opportunity for fun. Make an untitled list of ranomly selected people's names (say 25% of your department), leave it in the photocopier and then sit back and enjoy the paranoia-induced fall-out. – Dan Dyer Jan 14 '09 at 18:02
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As a survivor of a layoff at a small company, the sign I should've noticed was the managers moving (less expensive homes) and driving cheaper cars. At the time they passed them off as "my spouse didn't like the house" and "gas is expensive," but it was pretty clear the day of layoffs.

I know a company that recently did layoffs and their sign that mimicked my experience was stopping the 401k match. When a friend mentioned that, I told him to update his resume because it's going to get ugly and he didn't even have time for that -- he was laid off a week later.

The other sign you're in trouble is that a lot of new projects get cancelled with a WTF reason.

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A new employee is hired, much younger than you, and you're told to show him how your code works, to free you up for new projects.

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  • there's a new project but you're not invited to any of the meetings and nobody wants to discuss it with you.
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vote up 47 vote down

True story: You're stressed about your job so on a whim one weekend you do a scan on craigslist to see what else is out there, and you find your job listed as an open position.

(That was an ugly Monday.)

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Ouch :( That does suck. – Andy Webb Jan 14 '09 at 18:00
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When I was working for Hewlett Packard, I found out about our location closing in the newspaper before the company bothered to tell us. – Adam Lassek Jan 14 '09 at 19:12
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You'd be amazed how often this actually works. – Chuck Jan 14 '09 at 19:47
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You should have applied for it. – cgull Jan 15 at 1:23
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Yeah, I really should have. – Electrons_Ahoy Jan 15 at 20:35
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If you work for a big company, they are often very tidy and organized.

  • the layoffs will happen on the first day of a new financial quarter.

  • Check your email before going in. If it doesn't work, you may be laid off, or else they have disabled all email pending the layoff.

  • sometimes a new general manager or director is brought in. it seems there are some people who specialize in managing transition periods like this.

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What about an "expansion" of duties?

I've recently been placed into quasi-17 hour support mode as part of a 3 man rotation (6pm-11pm week nights, 6am to 11pm weekends, each dev takes a 3 person shift). We aren't likely to be needed - we're in tandem with someone from the hardware side and that person is the main point of contact. But it suddenly restricts my activities every third weekend.

I've never had to do anything like this before. There was an incident this last weekend where someone couldn't work remotely and they were preparing something important. I'm a little worried it indicates an attempt to squeeze out every dollar of value out of the Developers as they can, and that this is a precursor to a development position being cut (there is plenty of work, and no developers were harmed when the company laid off about 1/6th of the work force last fall).

It's not 24hour support, but it has a level of suckitude that can't be ignored.

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In my experience, having gone through a layoff, there are are warning signs.

  • The portion of the business you work in can be considered a cost (i.e your work does not directly generate revenue).
  • You have no projects
  • Your manager does not have any additional work for you nor do they have any answers as to what is going on (they are probably going to be laid off too)
  • You are not allowed to invent work or at least work of high priority
  • Requests for new equipment or resources are denied
  • One or more of your coworkers are in the same situation

You either want to start looking for a transfer to another department or get ready for a layoff :(

To the companies credit:

  • we were a cost center with revenue potential... but the company was unable to sell the service. They did what any company with responsible management would do.
  • our units director did our best to give us advanced warning (without telling us directly)
  • a good severance package was provided
  • the separation process was dignified and professional
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vote up 93 vote down

You notice comments in code such as:

/* TODO: Fire Dave */
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/* Dave's not here man */ – da5id May 21 at 4:22
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This happened to some folks in my company who were shown the door this past monday:

  • The new organizational chart doesn't contain their names.
  • VPN and CVS access terminated over the weekend, along with email.
  • Bugs assigned to them were spread out over the weekend to other team members (WTF?!? 45 new bugs assigned to me?)
  • As others have said, team leads in frequent closed door meetings with folks from other departments (HR, accounting, legal).
  • The project release spreadsheet doesn't mention them or their assigned tasks.
  • Finally, get a phone call from HR.
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For an employee about to be terminated, the signs can be subtle. Typically you'll notice a certain aloofness from your boss and probably your coworkers (yes, they will often know before YOU do). You'll visit the coffee machine and everyone there will stop talking or laughing and quickly find an excuse to get back to work. They may offer a polite smile as usual, but will avoid holding eye contact with you if at all possible. You may notice that your boss and coworkers aren't taking as much interest in you as before, that they no longer seek your ideas and opinions as they once did, or that you are casually left out of normal office functions and meetings.

For a contractor about to be thrown out the door, it can be much more brutal. You may be given increasingly "impossible" tasks where the specs and timetables are imprecise, confusing, or altogether wrong. Several days later you'll then be called into the manager's office, questioned, and briskly told that your performance is not meeting expectations. Perhaps you've visited the desks of certain company employees to ask questions, or maybe you've gotten into the habit of visiting the water cooler, the vending machines, or even the restrooms once or twice per day. It never bothered anyone before, but now you'll get called in and told that you've been seen "walking the halls". Or that your actions are disrupting the work of others in the office. Essentially they can trump up anything at all as an excuse to send you packing.

As for layoffs, it's mostly a case of following the money. When the payroll begins to get slow, when the managers appear distracted and short-tempered, or when the normally upbeat sales staff seems perpetually glum and dismal -- it's probably time to fire up the job-hunting radar. And of course, always beware of mergers!

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vote up 52 vote down

alt text

When two new consultants show up to help make things more efficient.

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If someone asks you about the TPS reports, you're days are numbered. – B. Tyndall Jan 15 at 1:07
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Someone asks if you like Michael Bolton – madlep Jan 15 at 3:05
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Clearly you are a go-getter with upper management written all over you – 1800 INFORMATION Jan 16 at 4:41
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vote up 10 vote down

You get back to your desk from lunch and your password has been reset and there is an empty box sitting on your chair.

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Your manager is being nice to you and constantly asking about your family and your health.

Your CEO is constantly writing open letters to the employees.

You get a comforting feeling knowing that your spouse makes more money than you.

Company going bankrupt:

The "inspirational" posters that used to be on the walls are being taken down

The landscaping service has been cancelled.

There are no toilet paper rolls in the restrooms and when you ask the janitor ... he pauses....looks you in the eye and says "Are you sure you really need one?" and then hands you a roll and says "I was saving this for later"

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