Mass redundancies across the UK are having a huge impact on the discretionary effort employees are willing to undertake on behalf of their employer, according to research from career transition firm Randstad Risesmart UK.  

Before redundancies have taken place, approximately a third (34 percent) of 2,000 workers in the UK confessed that they were ‘just going through the motions’.

However, after a round of redundancies, more than half of the survivors who had retained their jobs (54 percent) admitted they were ‘just going through the motions’.

Simon Lyle, UK managing director of Randstad Risesmart said,

The majority of people left in organisations after a round of layoffs – the survivors – are just treading water.  In December, the ONS said the number of employees on payrolls had fallen by 819,000 since the start of the pandemic – this means the UK is now blighted by hordes of zombie employees.  Punchdrunk from being asked to pick up extra work previously handled by now departed colleagues, these staff are lingering in the twilight zone of employment – neither recovering their mojo for work nor dropping out to seek jobs elsewhere.  The sad fact is that Britain is full of zombie companies, employing vast numbers of zombie workers.  And while the banks may not have pulled the plug on companies unable to cover debt-servicing costs from long-run profits, you can’t expect demotivated zombie workers to turn them around either.”

Bosses Expect ‘Survivors’ To Do More, Post Lay-Offs 

Despite the fact that ‘surviving’ workers are less inclined to make discretionary effort on behalf of their employers than before redundancies are announced, 42 per cent of survivors report that their managers expect them to undertake more work.

However, there is some good news for employers seeking to do ‘less with more’ after a restructuring.  The Risesmart study found that the negative impact of redundancies on surviving employees can be mitigated through the use of outplacement.

After a round of lay-offs, roughly a third (34 per cent) of surviving employees describe themselves as “currently less engaged than I was before the redundancies”.  However, this falls to 6% in companies that treat departing employees well – by,  for instance, offering them outplacement assistance as they look for new jobs..

Similarly, only 18 percent of employees describe themselves as more engaged after a round of redundancies – while 54 percent of employees in firms employing outplacement services say “I am currently more engaged than I was before the redundancies”.

Simon Lyle said,

Outplacement, redeployment and career development services can make all the difference not only to those being made redundant and an organisation’s employer brand – but also to those workers who remain.  Taking care of the people that you have to let go demonstrates you’re a good employer while  just casting them adrift sends out its own clear message to your remaining workers – your money isn’t where your mouth is.  In the days of glassdoor, that sort of hypocrisy is not only going to ruin relationships with your remaining employees, it’s also going to wreck your employer brand with potential hires, too.  These results suggest outplacement limits the backlash when you have to make layoffs because the  remaining workforce – the “survivors” – know you stood by their ex-colleagues.  It says a lot about your business and your company culture that you take care of your employees, even when you have to let them go. Companies must also take responsibility for helping survivors to reset and re-engage with their career goals – that need and request for discretionary effort isn’t going away anytime soon, so better have it connected with well planned, on-demand career development support.”

The findings of the poll chimed with research from the USA which shows only 34% of businesses offering outplacement programs report lawsuits from former employees – whereas 42% of companies that did not offer outplacement services were sued.