Firing Employees
1. You should consider firing the employee only if
you have a) given the employee clear indication of what you originally expected from him or her (via a written job description previously provided to the him or her); b) have clearly written personnel policies which specify conditions and directions about firing employees and the employee initialized a copy of the policy handbook to verify that he or she had read the policies; c) warned the employee in successive and dated memos which clearly described degrading performance over a specified time despite your specific and recorded offers of assistance and any training (the number of memos depends on the nature of the problem, but should be no more than three or four); and d) you clearly observe the employee still having the performance problem. (Note that if the employee is being fired within a probationary period specified in your personnel policies, you may not have to meet all of the above conditions.)
2. Take a day or so to consider what you are about to do.
Consult with members of your board (in the case of corporations).
3. If you still decide to fire the employee, do so promptly
both for your credibility with other employees and so as not begin procrastinating about this rather painful, upcoming event.
4. Write a letter of termination to the employee
As with the previous letters of warning, be clear about the observed behaviors, when you saw them, earlier warnings and their consequences, what you did in response, and the consequence that must now be enacted according to your policies.
5. Tell the computer system administrator to change the employee's password
and assert that this action should be done promptly and in complete confidence.
6. Meet with the employee. Provide them the letter. Explain how the termination will occur, including when, what they must do, what you request from them and when. Ask for any keys. Give them a half hour or so to remove personal items (you may choose to monitor them during this removal, depending on the nature of the grounds for dismissal). Consider changing the door locks to the facilities. Change the passwords on phone systems, if applicable.
7. As with other meetings, make notes of what was said and exchanged
Keep them in your records.