On Careers

Why Poor Performers Don't Get Fired

By Alison Green

Posted: November 24, 2008

Almost everyone has had the experience of working alongside someone who is a chronically poor performer—and then puzzling over the question of why nothing is being done about it.

The answer is that nothing is being done about it because your manager isn't doing her job and is allowing her desire to be nice and avoid difficult conversations to trump her fundamental obligations as a manager—obligations like holding the bar high and expecting people to adhere to it, warning them when they're falling short, and taking action when warnings don't work.

No one likes to fire people. But firing, at its core, is about a fundamental commitment to having great people. If you believe that having good people makes all the difference in a manager's ability to get results—and it does—then a corollary has to be that some people will need to be removed. You can do everything else right—setting ambitious goals and clear expectations, delegating effectively, giving feedback, and so forth—but if you are unwilling to fire people who aren't performing at the level you need, you will never accomplish what you could.

Yet the vast majority of managers err on the side of not firing when they should, and their organizations suffer as a result. I've certainly been guilty of it myself and have realized many times after the fact that I should have acted much sooner, especially after eventual replacements demonstrated the opportunity cost of not having had stars in the jobs all along.

So, why don't managers fire when they should?

Ultimately, though, the above "reasons" are really all excuses. The most common reason managers wait too long in these situations is to avoid discomfort or hassle. And just as when dating someone who you secretly know isn't right for you, putting off the day of reckoning is unfair to the person who could be using this time to find something that is right.

Alison Green is chief of staff for a medium-sized nonprofit where she oversees day-to-day management of the staff as well as hiring, firing, and staff development. She is working with the Management Center to coauthor a book on nonprofit management. Her writings have been published in the Washington Post, the New York Times, Maxim, and dozens of other newspapers. She blogs at Ask a Manager.

Toxic workers

I had a coworker some years ago who was hands down the nastiest, most unreasonable, most combative person I've ever met. If I could have legally slugged her, I would have. At my exit interview I said straight up that she was a large part of the reason I was leaving. My manager was very empathetic, but he explained that it was a unionized company, she was long past the 30-day probationary period for new hires, and that was that.

Andy of WA @ Sep 09, 2009 01:51:40 AM

Squeaky wheel gets greased

I worked at a place, and there was this one person I had to work with...Not to pleasant and constantly complained and was terrible to work with. Just wasn't happy. I could never please anyone, but I always worked. Guess who got fired? Not the unhappy complainer.

Brian of WI @ Jul 23, 2009 11:31:05 AM

why poor performers do not get fired

this happens in civil service all the time. poor performers are rewarded and even promoted. i personally know of some e.g. a human rights specialist who was consistently written up yet became a supervisor in the harlem office. i know of another person who sexually harassed a female supervisor and did no work yet was retained. another one talked about sex all the time yet became a director of the executive office. yet i know of one diligent human rights specialist who has an advanced degree yet was cruelly treated from the time of her arrival to her termination. in the tax department, there were constant poor performers who did nothing and yet got away with it. i am going to write an expose on the civil service system in new york state and will name names.

gwilliams of NY @ Jul 06, 2009 09:50:24 AM

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