Washington, D.C. (PRWEB) December 16, 2008 -- If your company is undertaking a layoff, be forewarned: Your surviving employees are not going to work harder out of gratitude. According to a new study by Leadership IQ, 74% of employees who kept their job amidst a corporate layoff say their own productivity has declined since the layoff. And 69% say the quality of their company's product or service has declined since the layoffs.
Leadership IQ, a leadership research and training company, compiled these results after surveying 4,172 workers who remain employed following a corporate layoff. These subjects were drawn from 318 companies that have undertaken layoffs in the past 6 months. Employees were asked questions about productivity, product quality, workforce issues and management effectiveness.
Other key study findings about the state of the workplace following the layoffs include:
The study did identify a bright spot when workers were asked questions about their manager. Workers that gave their managers high scores for Visibility, Approachability and Candor were 72% less likely to report a decrease in their productivity and 65% less likely to report a decline in the quality of their company's product or service.
What can companies do to prevent these problems following a layoff? "Managers not only need to know how to conduct a layoff with candor and compassion, but it's also vital that they know how to manage their workforce following a layoff," notes Murphy. "Managers need to be highly visible to their staff, approachable even when they don't have anything new to say, and candid about the state of things in order to build their trust and credibility. If your company has to conduct a layoff, it is imperative that you train your managers how to both manage that process and deal with the highly debilitating aftermath. Layoffs won't deliver real cost savings if you mismanage the layoff process. Offering terminated employees severance packages and outplacement assistance is wonderful, but it completely misses the most important group of employees; the survivors. You have to keep the surviving employees engaged and productive, or your company won't ever recover."
About Leadership IQ
Leadership IQ, a leadership training company, directs one of the largest leadership studies ever conducted. Our research has appeared in Fortune, Forbes, Business Week, CBS News, ABC's 20/20, Fox Business News and many more. Our clients include Harvard Business School, Microsoft, IBM, MasterCard, AstraZeneca, MD Anderson Cancer Center, and thousands more. Leadership IQ has studied layoffs for years, and in 1997, Founder & CEO Mark Murphy won the Healthcare Financial Management Association's "Best Research Award" for discovering that hospitals that conduct across-the-board layoffs are 300% more likely to increase their patient mortality rates. Leadership IQ is headquartered in Washington, DC with offices in Atlanta and Cincinnati.