You see a lot of advice these days on how to survive the recession. Financially, the first order of the day – as always – is cash flow and that means, first and foremost, keeping your job. Investments are for later; working is for now. We need to eat.
To that end, I humbly put forward, for your consideration, five suggestions for surviving the cut. Admittedly, I am not alone in providing free advice. The First section of the December 8, 2008, issue of Fortune magazine, for example, also offered up five tips, four for keeping your job (though only three are useful) and one in case you don’t.
My credentials: I have lived through – and, indeed, helped organize – large scale layoffs. It is a troubling process – even for the most human with the best of intentions. It damages the soul, leaving scars that – in my case, at least – will never heal.
That said, I have learned things going through the process that are worth sharing. I have learned, for example, that there is a jockeying for resources. The number of cuts are usually fixed (by someone in Finance!), but the nature of the cuts is often up for debate and the specificity of the cuts, in most cases, comes down to the individual. The good news is that there are generalities that can be observed, generalities about who gets cut first, who, unbeknownst to them, balance ever-so-delicately on the bubble, and who survives without question. Even when whole departments are shut down, there are those plucked from the anonymity of the group. It is worth understanding why.
1. Find a mentor. That is, find someone in a high place who likes you and who thinks what you do is valuable. Someone besides your boss. In the layoff planning sessions, lists of names will be bandied about. You want someone to say, “Woah! This name should not be on the list. If anything, I can find a place for him.” It will be costly. Names do not get removed from lists; they get substituted. So your benefactor will have to give up something to get something.
How do you find a benefactor?
2. Get noticed. Most people think that lying low is the best strategy for survival. Keep your head down, they say. Never be the first one over the hill. This is incorrect. In my opinion, it is exactly the wrong strategy. Working hard, in itself, is not enough. Toiling in obscurity is not nearly enough. Starting early – like today – get involved in a high-visibility project. You have to bring something to it, of course. A specialty. A skill. One of the people I know who was designated for termination was a brilliant analyst who was always the first choice of every project team leader. Her value was widely known. She was simply in the wrong place – a department being eliminated – at the wrong time. The Finance department had no idea she was even on a list. When it became known she was to become a ‘free agent’, they happily reached out for her.
On the other hand…
3. Avoid not-for-profit projects. Surprisingly, being a good citizen carries no weight. Working on the company’s United Way campaign, for example, pays zero dividends. Organizing the Christmas party…ditto. I have actually heard it said, to nodding faces, “Yes, she’s a fantastic person…always involved…but that has nothing to do with the business.” If you have to get involved in a project, make sure it is one that moves the business, not civilization, forward.
4. Be self-sufficient. Don’t count on your boss to hold your hand; he has problems of his own. If he has to give you work, you are almost certainly expendable. If he has to help you get your work done, you are vulnerable. Faced with a down-sized department, your supervisor will look for a self-sufficient, self-starter whose hand he doesn’t have to hold.
5. Do not be self-indulgent. Do not be a contrarian. These are tough times for everybody. They are about to get worse, so there will be plenty to complain about. The last thing your supervisor needs is a whiner. I had one employee who had too many principles for her own good. On several occasions, she considered suing the company for imagined wrongs. Everything down to the air she was breathing was subject to debate. Not surprisingly, so was the opportunity for advancement. When it came time to prepare ‘the list’, imagine whose name was near the top.
So there you have it: five things that will help save your job. Please note the word ‘help’. In a sweeping layoff that reaches triple and quadruple digits, even the best can be swept out to sea with the bathwater.
One more thing: these tips will be of service, cuts or no cuts. Right now, you have to think about your job but, remember, your career is just around the corner. So keep your head while looking ahead.
Good advice at any time.
