“Quiet quitting” by staff putting in the bare minimum to keep their jobs has been in the spotlight recently, but new research suggests “quiet firing” is also becoming a common trend.
The less well-recognised phenomenon of quiet firing is essentially being mistreated or given the “cold shoulder” by your employer, according to Rolling Stone analyst Jacob Mathison. Whether staff are accused of “underperforming or being a bad cultural fit”, wrote Alex Christian for the BBC, employers are finding a variety of reasons to “nudge workers out the door”.
Yet a survey by law firm Irwin Mitchell of more than 2.400 people found that 90% were unaware of quiet firing and the warning signs. This lack of awareness “poses serious concerns”, said the company, which reported that quiet firing was “most noticeable amongst women”. And 25% of all respondents in Greater London said they have “experienced someone making their life uncomfortable, encouraging them to leave” at work.
The reasons why quiet firing happens can be “complex”, wrote Christian for the BBC, but employers “often don’t want to expose themselves to risk or conflict” by directly trying to sack someone and instead “follow the path of least resistance”.
Along with “withdrawing support” from an employee, other warning signs include:
Quiet firing “carries key risks for employers”, said legal firm Farrer Co. The employer may face a “potential constructive unfair dismissal claim”, or a claim for “harassment or other discrimination” if the behaviour relates to a “protected characteristic”. If the employee experiences mental health issues as a result of “a hostile environment” at work, they could also bring a personal injury claim.
However, workers who think they are being “quiet fired” may find it difficult to “meet the criteria for constructive dismissal”, wrote Eve Livingston, author of Make Bosses Pay: Why We Need Unions, for i-D. And that is something “bosses are all too aware of”.
Many “employers make a calculation that the likelihood of a successful claim is so low that breaking the law is still worth it”, according to Livingston.
Whether or not targeted staff take the legal route, keeping records of employer behaviour can be useful, said Metro’s lifestyle editor Ellen Scott. Keep a work diary or journal to make a “note of exactly what’s happening” and “point to these specific examples when you’re ready to talk to your manager”, Scott advised. If necessary, pushing for a one-to-one meeting, she added, because “you have a right to be able to communicate your concerns”.
“Ultimately”, wrote Christian for the BBC, “quiet firing is the avoidance of difficult emotions.” Tackling the issue “requires better-resourced managers, greater HR support and the acceptance that workplace confrontation is sometimes best”.
Article source: https://www.theweek.co.uk/business/employment/958530/what-is-quiet-firing