Filed under: A Bit Of Inspiration, Attitude & Aptitude, Business, Corporate Evil, Corporate Gaslighting

On the Friday before Christmas, a friend of mine got made redundant.
After 17 years of service.
17 years of highly productive, highly respected service.
What makes it even more disgraceful is he was basically told ‘accept our offer, or we’ll make things difficult for you’.
Of course they didn’t say it like that, they hid behind the carefully constructed ambiguity that is imbued in all redundancy narratives … but the message was clear: ‘don’t be a problem or we’ll be your problem’.
He has asked me not to name him or his company as he goes through the process, but what makes this all the more egregious is the company he worked for has a mission statement overflowing with the ‘transparency and integrity’ buzzwords and tropes that appear in nearly every corporate mission statement.
The ‘transparency and integrity’ buzzwords and tropes that are mentioned in every story sent to Corporate Gaslighting.
Why don’t all these companies just say what they actually believe: ‘to prioritise profit over people, in every opportunity, every time’ … we’d probably all respect that [and them] a hell of a lot more.
But no, instead it’s all ‘our staff are our greatest asset’, ‘we believe in doing the right thing’ and ‘we strive to always be a great place to work’.
So to companies who let people go over this period:
While I appreciate there is never a good time to do this sort of thing – and sometimes, there’s no other choice available but to do this sort of thing – there’s definitely a bad time to do this sort of thing and December 19th is one of those times … especially when you’ve announced you’ve made enormous profit over that year.
So while the industry my friend works in is different to the one I work in, I know there were many who went through a similar situation over the recent festive period … which is why I leave this post with 2 points:
1. If anyone who went through this needs someone to talk to – or just listen – I’m here. Just email and I’ll get back to you.
2. If companies want loyalty from their people, show some fucking loyalty to your people. It really isn’t that hard.
3. If you’re a shareholder who only cares about ever-increasing returns, don’t complain when this happens to you. Because it will.
It’s why nothing is more gaslighting than the justification that ‘it’s just business’, because it isn’t. It’s always – ALWAYS – personal.
That doesn’t mean a company can’t – or shouldn’t – act on commercial issues that need addressing. But it does mean they should consider why, how – and when – they do it.
