Free Newsletters

   All InfoWorld Newsletters
Advice Line | Bob Lewis » When you hear you're going to be replaced

December 15, 2007 | Comments: (0)

When you hear you're going to be replaced



Dear Bob ...

Well, I just found out that my boss is interviewing people to replace me. I have no idea why. We don't have performance reviews and my boss has never had a bad word to say to me. So far as I knew everything was fine. Obviously not.

Is there any hope of salvaging my job here? Or should I just dust off the resume and start looking? I would really prefer to keep my job - I have sacrificed my career in order to stay here. I have not had the opportunity to learn new skills and technology because I have spent the last 13 years maintaining and enhancing what we have going here as that's what I thought my boss wanted, and up til now, I think I was correct.

I want to confront my boss and tell him off but good, but that would only serve to confirm his thoughts about replacing me. How can I approach him with a positive outlook and find out what the problem is (or problems are) and (hopefully) convince him that I can do the job (that's supposing I can get him to tell me what the job he wants done is)? I need this job (doesn't everybody?) and can't afford to walk away. There is no severance package and management here has been known to sent people packing with a "Here's your last check. Good-bye."

- On the edge

Dear Edgy ...

Before answering your question, I have to ask a question. Really, I want you to ask yourself a question. You said you sacrificed your career in order to stay with your current employer - a company that provides no severance packages and has been known to send people packing with nothing more than a last check and a good-bye.

Why would you sacrifice your career for a company that offers so little loyalty in return? We're living in a capitalist system, and that means everyone is supposed to look out for their own interests first. Before you take any action of any kind, reorient yourself: This is business. You're in business for yourself. Your "employer" is a customer. It gives you a paycheck in exchange for services you provide.

That's the nature of the relationship. Any emotional satisfaction you receive beyond this - praise for good work, social connection, a sense of achievement - is a bonus. I recommend companies provide them. That doesn't mean employees should expect them as part of their compensation package.

I'm recommending this as a first step because telling off your boss would provide emotional satisfaction and no other benefit. It's pointless and self-destructive. I know - I made this mistake very early in my career. It cost me two years of bad references.

Now I want to ask yourself a second question: How sure are you of what you "just found out." Did you hear a rumor, have reason to trust your source, or did a friend of yours let you know he or she is applying for the job? Is it possible your boss is hiring another employee rather than a replacement?

If you're certain, what you should do is, quietly and discreetly, start an intensive search for a new position at a different company. Don't confront your boss. Don't say a thing. Don't allow yourself to feel resentful - it will poison your ability to interview.

You're losing a client. Time to find another one.

If you aren't so sure, talk to your boss. Don't confront him angrily. Just ask, as casually as possible: "Hey, I heard a strange rumor - supposedly, you're trying to hire my replacement. Anything I should know about?"

Between the answer and the body language, you should get a pretty good idea. If your boss is evasive, don't push. There's no point to it. Remember, the only measure is your personal benefit, and you don't benefit from a confrontation.

Let's imagine it turns out to be something entirely innocent and your job isn't at risk. What now? The answer is, your job is at risk. You've said so yourself - you're in a dead-end situation.

Wait enough time that your boss won't connect the two situations and sit down for a career planning discussion. Make it clear, in a friendly, non-confrontational way, that you want a career, not just a job, and you're getting stale just doing what you've been doing. You'd prefer to keep working for the same company, and the same boss. You want to talk about ways you can provide more value to the company, earn yourself a promotion, or at least a lateral move to something newer and fresher.

You want something that's more of a stretch, so you don't end up coasting. If your boss is any good, he'll help you get there. If not, perhaps you'd be better off working for a better boss.

- Bob


Powered by ScribeFire.

Posted by Bob Lewis on December 15, 2007 09:57 AM


RATE THIS ARTICLE:





 

  •  
  • COMMENTS




Hello,
That is some great feedback and being in somewhat of the same situation as Mr. Edgy, without having to look over my shoulder at my replacement, how does one move forward with the job search. I have been on many meeting over the last year for various positions but none of them offer the perfect jumping point.
Ranging from CIO, VP-IT, Dir-IT but none of them appear to be a match from either side. Some cases I am to over qualified, some say I am not qualified. Some say I have managed to many projects, thus I have diluted my skills set, I have not managed enough projects. Some say I have not managed enough staff, while others say I have managed too much staff. How do I nail the interview and get the job.

Posted by: In need of at December 17, 2007 12:10 PM

When someone does not want to choose you, any excuse will do .......

Posted by: Dan J at December 19, 2007 10:51 AM

Hi Bob,

Your non-confrontational advice is sage as always.

However, I think you may have overlooked a clue in the original letter -- specifically, the statement:
" have sacrificed my career in order to stay here. I have not had the opportunity to learn new skills and technolog..."
would appear to be quite revealing. Frankly, I am amazed that any company can afford to retain someone who fails to keep up with the dynamics of our profession. With all the on-line courses, etc. there is NO excuse for failing to maintain your skills and such a failure is definitely career suicide.

Posted by: Carl Street at December 19, 2007 12:43 PM

Bob is absolutely right when he says that everyone is supposed to look out for their own interests first. One way you can do that is by diligently saving 10% of your gross income and by learning how to invest that money so that you earn on average at least 12% per year. This is not as hard as you may think and it has huge benefits.

The first reason for doing this is that because you have something to fall back on it will be easier to remain calm and think clearly if your job situation changes.

The second reason is that after about 40 years you will have enough assets that you will be able to live off your investments if you so choose. At that point, when you work you will be working because you choose to work not because you have to work.

And lastly saving 10% of your income and learning how to invest will help you become a more valuable employee. This will make it easier to for you to find and keep a job.

Posted by: Mark ODonnal at December 19, 2007 01:36 PM

There's a good point in all this - your work is your client. Never forget that fact.

As my father was fond of saying:

"I was looking for a job when I found this one, and I guess I'm still looking".

-S

Posted by: Sunnyboy at December 19, 2007 03:20 PM

Three books. Three ways to change the world, your life, or at least Bob Lewis' bank account.

Leading IT: The Toughest Job in the World distills the world of IT leadership into eight learnable skills and gives you concrete, practical techniques for each one of them.

Bare Bones Project Management: What you can't not do makes project management manageable, even for first-time project managers with no formal training in the discipline.

ManagementSpeak: What managers say/What they mean … well, it won't help your career, and won't make you a better manager. Mostly, it will make you chuckle, guffaw, and maybe even chortle. Make friends - it's the perfect gift for anyone who has ever suffered through one of those meetings.

Order your copies today!





Technology White Papers

 

InfoWorld Technology Marketplace

» Technology White Papers Library

Technology White Papers by Topic

Technology White Papers E-mail Alert

Find out when the latest white paper is available:
 
 
» BUY A LINK NOW

Sponsored Technology Links