From the Ask Tom mailbag:
Question:
I am trying to balance between when to fire someone and when to keep them on, because they know so much and it would take awhile to train someone new. It seems easier to keep them than to pray the new person will pick up what they need to know to do the position. Or if I know I am going to fire that person, how do I get them to impart the knowledge they have, into system write ups, without them thinking I am going to fire them? I hope this makes sense.
Response:
It makes perfect sense. The perfect sense is that you have a low trust environment and there are a lot of games going on.
First. When did you allow your methods and processes to be developed and not documented? Standard operating procedures are created for the reason you describe. Don’t wait until you have a problem. Start now. Involve your team in the process. You might see changes in behavior when you focus them on “best practices.”
Second. When did you decide that new team members should just “pick up” what they need to know? What happened to your orientation and training program?
This is not a question of balance. This is a question of appropriate managerial leadership practices. The good news is that you can start today, to make the necessary changes.
Next Monday is the Labor Day holiday in the US. See you all next Tuesday. -TF