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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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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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I was reading this post for information during lunch time and at 1:00pm it just happened around me! Dozens of people laid off around in different groups, people are sad.

Lucky enough, I am not one of them.

People do not know about it even yesterday.

Then we figured out some signs:
1. People are asked to do things that are usually owned by some one else, without a good reason to tell. The original owner is in trouble.
2. All hands (or team) meeting call with a short notice time, usually on the same day.
3. Busy secret meetings for management.

I still cannot believe this just happened: those guys are great guys.

Saddly, such decisions usually come from some financial reports where the instant income matters more than others.

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HR suddenly has ALL the conferance rooms booked for tomorrow...

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Just to give a few examples of what I've seen or been through:

If the company is about to run out of money and the economy is sucky, you may lose your job. I had this happen back in 2004 where the assets of where I work were purchased and apparently I wasn't one of the assets but the other employees were.

If the company has a meeting in the afternoon where they are handing out letters and explicitly telling them to, "Do not open the letter until you are home alone," which should be a warning sign. This happened in 2000 where I worked where some people were told to come back as a "get your stuff and get out" arrangement while the remaining third of us had another meeting to say, "We made some deep cuts to keep the company running and hope this is the only time we have to do this." Absolutely terrible way to handle things but that is what was done in those dot-com bust days.

If you get sent home by an angry manager that seems to think you were nuts for going to a Microsoft event, you might be getting fired soon. This happened to me in 2007 where I had had a few other warning signs as if I fixed bugs I had to undo the fixes and what I was working on wasn't given good guidance or deadlines or other useful things.

If you are management and there are some new head guys brought in, this should be a warning sign. For example, if you are a director or work directly under one and a new VP or CIO is hired, you may wonder how you fit into the new hierarchy as the new guy may have his own team that he'll bring in. I saw something like this in 2004 where I worked as a number of people from another company started working where I was and some of the former directors left the company without stating why but we could guess the projects not quite running smoothly could be part of it.

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  • the CTO flies in from across the continent for a one hour meeting with just your team
  • Someone off-handedly mentions the startup of a internally-competing project
  • The it guy comes and does inventory on your computers the day before
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You reach 10k rep on stack overflow.

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who lays off a programmer????

unless the company is going down. if the company is worth something, the devs wont ever become surplus. if the dev is worth something, they wont ever become surplus

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I once worked for a company who called our department into a meeting on a friday afternoon and spent an hour telling us what grand plans they had for us. Monday morning, we came in and the whole department had been sacked.

I once worked for a company who had an IPO and within six months was back in the same financial straits that it had been before. There were rumors about vendors not being paid and paychecks bouncing. I saw the writing on the wall and left, just in the nick of time. The department of Labor padlocked the doors a couple of months after I left. Lots of friends were ruined. I was lucky.

I once worked for a company who had a contract with a government agency. The angency loved the team, but corporate management decided to use that as ammo to raise the rates to the agency. All the bosses came out, told us what great jobs we were all doing and the next thing you know, the entire contracting staff was out on our ears. Got twelve weeks severance though so...

I've been programming professionally for 32 years now and have only been fired once, for demanding that I receive what was owed me (they gave me what they owed me on the way out haha). I have been laid of a few times. Usually you can tell when it's coming because the day to day activity deviates from the norm.

Your otherwise hectic schedule frees up. No new work comes your way, you are asked to document everything. You are asked to train someone. You are moved to an obscure place or just a less suitable place. You can't get a straight answer to simple questions. Your boss won't look you in the eye. You start to feel isolated. You get tasks that you know cannot be accomplished within the constraints given (ie six week task in two weeks) One of your boss's bosses pat's you on the back and tells you you're doing a great job.

Beware of mergers and reorganizations. Live well below your means. Stay current with programming technologies. Never fool yourself into thinking you aren't expendable. Trust me, you are.

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Once I was working as a contractor at a state government agency, and had been there three years. I got along well with everyone, including one of the most crotchety supervisors I've ever had (and we're still friends), and put in a lot of work. I was getting increasingly bored and tired of the work I was given, however. My direct manager, with whom I also got along well with, and who liked my work, noticed and decided I needed a change of pace. So she terminated my contract.

That seems like an odd way to give me a change of pace! But she gave me 6 weeks notice -- something absolutely unheard of in that department (all the other contractors who had been let go during the three years got canned with no notice and someone to stand over them while they packed up). This was a state government's department of corrections IT shop with highly sensitive and important data processing functions, and you would have thought they would have given me the bum's rush, too, just to be on the safe side. But no. On top of that, my manager also told me to feel free to put in as much overtime as I wanted to during the six weeks until I left. I took her advice and tore through a whole pile of work before leaving.

It was all to the good. After that gig I got into a position where I could learn Windows programming (getting out of the mainframe world, finally). If I hadn't got canned this would likely have never happened.

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You get an email from management which contains just this link:

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/443638/

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let you know... CNN - Microsoft to issue 5000 pink slips today

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One company I worked at would (still does?) rename your email account to "ZZ - [Lastname], [Firstname]".

I ever go back I'm writing a shell script and a cron job to notify me before it happens....

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you should have waited for them to terminate you. now you won't get severance pay.

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Considering that the last two companies I worked for went under and the one before them went through a couple layoff periods, I can say that there's one surefire way to tell. When your manager gives you the "we're not going out of business" speech, you have about 6 months before something big happens, tops. This is especially true if he/she gives it after a company meeting and there weren't really any rumors that you were going out of business to begin with.

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I was offered a $6000 "retention bonus" in March, provided I was still employed by the company the following October. In April, the company announced migration to a different platform, licensed from the company that bought us out. I was programming on the Unix billing servers, and the new platform was NT. My immediate reaction was, "they gave themselves a $6000 reason to let me go by October." In August, I was gone. In December, they were in receivership.

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You have a sinking suspicion you're about to get fired.

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If the head honchos from corp HQ show up at your satellite office unannounced, that's usually a bad sign too.

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While this isn't specific to your job, the following is a sign your COMPANY may be considering layoffs.

Their stock falls over 50% in 3 months. Usually, this means the company will engage in short term cost cutting measures to appease wall street, which will damage long term profits. IE, our local firm was bought early last year as a 'critical new income stream', and now they are letting us all go over the next 6 months ( including all the experts who wrote the system ) to cut costs.

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  1. You submit a vacation form, and nobody bothers to approve or reject it.

  2. The boss's boss's son moves off your team.

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If a layoff is about to occur one the earliest signs you'll notice is that "new methods for measuring performance" are introduced. This is basically a CYA move by the company so they don't get any lawsuits from people claiming they were unfairly terminated.

One place I worked as the tech wreck began decided that everyone in our group needed to write 10 memos that quarter or face serious consequences come quarterly review time. The silly thing about this was that the "memo system" at the company was all paper-based and memos got Fed-Exed to several company sites (this was in 2001 when things like email and even wikis had existed for several years). Some folks refused to participate in the 10-memo "show" because, well, it was just a silly exercise - and no doubt it was.

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I wish this post was available a few months ago. I would've know better.

The CEO and the number two of the company I worked for both got fired within days of each other. Not long after that there was an announcement that our company was 'merging' with another company, meaning being taken over. Then on a conference call my boss mentioned that the project I was on MIGHT be cancelled.

Well guess what? About a month later one of the guys from headquarters just shows up at the door and he had that sad look on his face. On the bright side, the severance package was pretty decent.

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True Story: A company I worked for lost their biggest contract. That meant lay-offs. 250 of them, to be exact. They waited until Friday after lunch to drop the bomb, but they blocked all network access so no one would sabotage.

Also, my last project with them was finished two weeks before the lay-off, but was not assigned another. Two weeks I spent reading and browsing the web, and getting paid for it.

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I've personally been part of only one layoff. It came as a total surprise to everyone involved.

Upper management called an "all engineering" meeting for the afternoon. Upon entering the room, nobody looked to be in good spirits. Then it was announced that our whole company division (1/3 of the total employees) was being cut, and our product which everyone had been working on for 4 years was being cut. It was a really emotional and depressing day for everyone.

So, if there's a sudden and unexpect "all engineering" meeting, there's a good chance you're getting laid off.

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I've been through this a few times. The very first sign that the company is in trouble is when they start charging for coffee.

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In a previous role, there was an 18 months time limit after which redundancy money was payable. I was informed that I would be at risk of redundancy one day before.

I'd just come back from a wedding the day before, and I wish I'd pulled a sickie.

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Contractors start disassembling empty cubes in your work area. GAC!

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Working as an contractor, I was extended an offer without any detail. I went to look for other jobs. PM kept on telling me I didn't have focus at work, even though it was due to VPN issues. PM keeps asking about job hunt. Told me that they would love to hire me, to keep my work pace up. Then they try to push past contract date.

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You arrive at work and press the shift key so that the monitor wakes up, but it doesn't. You press the "ON" button on the monitor, but nothing happens. You reach under the desk to turn on the computer and notice that there is no computer anymore.

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When you're a new hire at a small company, and your CEO forgot to pay $280,000 worth of taxes to California.

[/grumble]

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The last time I got laid off by surprise came as a result of being in heads-down "contractor mode", and not paying enough attention to company politics and rumors. Then my boss came to me on a Thursday and told me that the company wasn't going to be able to make payroll the next day. I resolved to always listen to the other employees wherever I worked from then on, even if I was there as a contractor.

I went back to being a contractor for a while, where layoffs are not generally a big deal (they are expected), and financial self-discipline is the key to survival. It helps to be married to a professional in a different line of business (my wife is a CPA).

After that, I worked for a large retailer, and I noticed a couple of things: One, they seemed to know even less about customer service than I did, and two, they went through 3 CFOs in as many months. When I asked for a more up-to-date and faster computer, they spent more time, energy, and money denying the request than they would have by just buying the computer. I bailed. They went under less than 6 months later, and liquidated. Another company bought the name and resumed service using only 3 of the existing locations, and that company seems to be doing much better than their predecessor. But the original software development staff (along with the code I contributed) is all gone.

Another indicator I had at another company (a large bank) was increasing demands for overtime, and expressed dissatisfaction at the number of hours I was putting in, along with complaints that I was "too slow". I view mandatory overtime that goes on for more than 3 weeks in a row to be prima facie evidence of managerial incompetence -- or a way to frustrate you into quitting.

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