It's Okay to Say "I Don't Know"
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© Management Education Group, Inc.
It’s Okay to Say “I Don’t Know”
Prescott Area HR Association
June 2, 2009
Management Education Group, Inc.
www.managementeducationgroup.com
Tough HR Questions that Have No Answer
© Management Education Group, Inc.
Job Losses – February 2007 to March 2009
When Did Your County's Jobs Disappear?
Arizona7.7%(p) in Apr 2009
Unemployment Rates
5,024,780 jobs lost nationwide since March 2008
© Management Education Group, Inc.
What are the Tough Questions You Can’t Answer?
• We’ve already cut 20% of the workforce. Are we done?
• I heard the company was considering a furlough. Will we all be required to participate?
• I know we are in a hiring freeze. How is the company going to get all this work done? How will my job be impacted?
© Management Education Group, Inc.
Session Objectives
At the end of this session you will be able to:
• Acknowledge natural human reactions in the face of uncertainty
• Anticipate the questions you are likely to face
• Consider six tips for confidently answering the tough questions
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Facing the Emotions
• What are the typical reactions you are seeing from employees?
• What are the typical reactions you are seeing from organizational leaders?
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Reactions will Vary – Even in France
• 3M factory holds plant manager hostage
• Sony plant manager locked in his office
• Angry tire factory employees threw eggs
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Common Reactions
• Resistance, defensiveness, threatening• Pleading his/her case or bargaining• Wanting to speak to a “decision maker”• Asking “why me?”• Getting personally upset with management• Arguing about someone who is retained • Listing personal or organizational repercussions
that will cascade from the loss• Breaking down emotionally• Going into shock and denying the reality
© Management Education Group, Inc.
Common Questions
• Who made the decision?
• Who can I talk with to get this decision reversed?
• Are there any other jobs for me?
• Can I keep my job if I take a pay cut or reduce my time?
• Who else is being impacted?
© Management Education Group, Inc.
• Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (WARN)• Your company’s policies and process• How workload will be redistributed• Timeline for change • Options for recall• Resources to be offered to employees
(EAP, benefits, outplacement, etc.)
Keys for Answering the Tough Questions
Key #1: Know Your Stuff
© Management Education Group, Inc.
Keys for Answering theTough Questions
Key #2: Communicate Early and Often
• Respond to community and industry impacts as they happen
• Tell employees about change before the outside world knows
• Deliver news face to face when at all possible
• Weekly CEO webcasts
• Daily or weekly intranet updates under a heading designated for the change
• CEO town halls
• Training for supervisors on how to deliver tough messages
© Management Education Group, Inc.
Keys for Answering theTough Questions
Key #3: Deliver Individual Messages with Dignity
• Loss messages must be delivered in person, not electronically
• Delivered by someone the employee knows
• Delivered in private
• Delivered early in the day and not on a day prior to a day off or weekend
• Consider the day in relationship to significant dates for the employee (birthday, religious holiday, family event, etc.)
• Be prepared for the emotional response
© Management Education Group, Inc.
Keys for Answering theTough Questions
Key #4: Instruct front-line employees how to respond to questions from the public or
customers
• Prepare a list of customer questions you expect• Provide scripts or common responses for
employees to use
© Management Education Group, Inc.
Keys for Answering the Tough Questions
Key #5: Keep Your Ear to the Ground
• Watch and listen for rumors• Anticipate rumors and address them before they spread
• Address rumors promptly via established communication tools
•Webcasts•Newsletters•Twitter•Town Halls
© Management Education Group, Inc.
Keys for Answering the Tough Questions
Key #6: Get Back to Work•Refocus the conversation on things employees can do something about
•Maintaining customer relations•Improving morale•Maintaining or increasing productivity
•Restate the organization’s mission over and over
•Refocus your expectations for performance
•Ask employees for input before making decisions that impact their roles
•Respond to employee questions or requests promptly•Recognize employees who go the extra mile
© Management Education Group, Inc.
Self Check
What can you do to ease the fears and address the uncertainty in
your organization?
© Management Education Group, Inc.
Thank you for your time!
Marnie E. GreenManagement Education Group, Inc.
www.managementeducationgroup.com
480-705-9394
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