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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 '09 at 22:23
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81 Answers

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If it's time for your annual review and its being delayed (more than usual), then this might be a bad sign.

Also impromptu meeting of the whole company or department is usually a sign, although that's usually only about 5 minutes notice.

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"We're getting some Indian developers in next week. Could you please show them the code and make sure they understand everything? Thanks"

I handed in my two weeks notice before the Indians left.

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  1. your key won't open the front door any more
  2. your login account has been disabled
  3. other programmers are in your cubicle stealing your chair and office supplies
  4. you get a subpoena from the SEC
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Your manager asks you and the rest of your team to bring in all the company laptops for an "inventory audit" at the end of the following week. The unlucky ones didn't get to take their laptops back home again.

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All of these have happened to me. I've been layed off once and worked for two companies that went under. I've never been fired though.

you may be getting laid off if...

  1. You walk by a meeting of your team that no one told you about
  2. when the boss is introducing someone around the office they skip you
  3. your boss distances himself with you
  4. All the developers move to a new office except you

you may be on the road to getting fired if...

  1. you get a formal warning for something trivial
  2. Your team leads alternative to paired programming is to tell you he's going to throw you out the window because of your code.

your company may be going under if...

  1. You notice people asking "have you got your paycheck yet?"
  2. The CEO moves the company to his mom's basement
  3. On failing to acquire a company after the due diligence
  4. The CEO sends around a survey that includes the question "what do you think of my hair cut"
  5. The sales guy is on gross commission
  6. The time estimate of the main project was taken from a developer that left the company before the project started and halfed
  7. People expect the companies product to fail.
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vote up 0 vote down

I saw two examples of this telltale sign :

In a software house that outsources programmers to other companies, two of my friends have taken to the head-quarters. Then in three weeks got fired.

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First thing I noticed? My paycheck bounced.

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The Bobs start asking, "What would you say you do here?"

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On my current project, we have over 50 developers, and team leads are in charge of feature sets. I can tell when a developer is not highly regarded, when team leads hesitate to accept him (or her) on their team. Conversely, when team leads fight for a developer's time or a developer has to give away work because he is in too much demand, that developer is highly regarded.

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Everybody looks at their shoes while talking to you ...

You boss is suddenly friendly ...

The next BIG scheduled release is no long that big ...

Your boss suggests that you "take the weekend off" ...

Everybody agrees that "the users won't mind, given the circumstances ..."

But the real giveaway:

You wake up one morning and realize that you've actually started to LIKE your job!

Paul.

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vote up 0 vote down

The city is going through the annual budget cycle and talking about layoffs.

Then a co-worker comes and tells you that there was a document out on the network, and he doesn't know why it's not protected from him reading it, but your name is on it to be laid off. (It was because he was in IT and had more privileges.)

You go to your boss and say that you suspect that you're on the layoff list, and ask for the courtesy of two weeks notice. He says that he can't do that. So you tell him that you'll consider that the notice, and that you'll be getting your projects wrapped up, documented, and ready for someone else to handle. He mumbles and won't look you in the eye. (It turned out to be a day longer than I expected, but still around 2 weeks.)

Oh, and the people higher up avoid you; the people who like you and who know their name isn't on the list are still friendly. (Management didn't know that we knew. I didn't keep it a secret from my co-workers who were friends.)

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At my last job, the sign that your job was in jeopardy was being transferred to the QA team. Going from say, the UI team to the Reports team was just the managers shuffling the deck out of boredom, but being moved to the QA team meant you had about three months to get your resume in order.

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vote up 0 vote down

When you first read about on TechCrunch.

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You're testing out the new reporting program that you just finished writing for an internet company during the 'dotbomb' era, and the numbers are showing that you're company's advertising revenue has dropped like 50% percent in the last 3 months.

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The company is being very emphatic about having no layoffs at the first of the next quarter, and you're low on the totem pole.

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I had a co-worker who was working on a basic checkbook app since he was just graduating from college.

He had some basic error in his app that involved a database, and instead of trying to figure it out, he went to our DBA and asked, "Did you turn the database off?".

Ironically, 3 minutes later he got a call from HR, the co-worker exclaimed, "Sure, I can be down there in 2 minutes!", and we never heard from him again.

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vote up 1 vote down

This happened today, maybe 3 hours ago:

We have a team meeting and afterwards both of the contractors on our team are asked to stay. One of the guys on my team that was not privy to any kind of staffing knowledge yells out on his way out the door, right after they are asked to stay, "Fired!". And then they were. I have been in meetings and haven't talked to him since, but I can't imagine he is feeling good about that choice.

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vote up 5 vote down

From the last time... company failed to make payroll the week after I left. (Just in time).

  • Company has started having company wide meetings to reinforce "Just how promising the sales pipeline is".
  • You have been waiting for a decent monitor or other small piece (< $200) of hardware or software that's "not in the budget"
  • A new product that will be key to the companies success is outsourced
  • They want to IPO, but never seem to get anywhere, or lose investment partners.
  • The company makes software products, but follows no standard coding practices, and the majority of your co-workers do not care.

From the first time, during the dot com bust.

  • A network admin accidentally reads an email (was legitimately fixing an exchange mailbox, not snooping) from the CEO that the company is shutting down.
  • There are 3 different exec teams in 3 years
  • You show up to work and the doors are locked. I was lucky enough to be privy to the info that the net admin had, and managed to get my stuff out the day before.
  • P. or S. Eckert from Buffalo have just bought the company, shut it down, and refused to honor their employment contracts. I ended up in a class action and got all of $400 because they owed the creditors so much.
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vote up 1 vote down

I survived a couple rounds of layoffs at one particular company - first warning was generally "everybody meet in 5 minutes back in the storage area" (only room in the building big enough to hold all of us...) where the meeting started with "If you are in this room, your job is safe..."

Ironically, I left the company the week after another round of layoffs. I knew it was coming, however, because when I gave notice they asked me to stay and explained that they were laying off several individuals and could use my services to catch up. Not sure if my leaving anyway saved anyone else, or not...

To answer the original question, we generally had pretty good ideas of:

  • How the company was doing financially, etc.
  • Who the most likely layoff candidates were.

Engineers are generally pretty good at making connections like these...

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For layoffs in general, it's all about financial stress, though some companies make a policy of doing it on a regular basis. A push to start billing for things that were not previously billable is a sign of financial stress that I haven't seen mentioned. Different places will have different tell-tales, but if they have enough layoffs for that to get noticeable then you should just get out anyway. At one place I worked it happened like clockwork that if the company got > 25 people there would be layoffs to knock it down to 20 or less.

Termination for cause is different and will usually be proceeded by talks, getting written up, etc. Of course, if you're in that kind of trouble you should know you're not doing well.

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You, and everyone you work with who you think is terrible, get pulled into the boardroom.

It's pretty much over after that...

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vote up 64 vote down

Live well beneath your means, have at least six months of living expenses stashed away with no debt and not worry whether or not you're going to be fired or laid off.

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I wish I could vote for this one twice. – Tim Post Jan 17 '09 at 18:47
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My other personality just tried, it seems that voting again might discard the previous vote made by my other self. – Tim Post Jan 17 '09 at 18:48
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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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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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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. – tyndall Jan 15 '09 at 1:07
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Someone asks if you like Michael Bolton – madlep Jan 15 '09 at 3:05
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Clearly you are a go-getter with upper management written all over you – 1800 INFORMATION Jan 16 '09 at 4:41
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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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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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vote up 94 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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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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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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