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Get What's Coming To You:
Case Study: Beth
Short-Timer Gets
Outplacement
Beth had worked at Intelliger for less than two years, including working only two days a week for the past month. The company wanted her to leave, but stay on for another month to train a new person. Beth wanted two monthsę severance, the $60,000 bonus money that was due her, and outplacement help. Following the advice in this article, she ended up with a significant portion of the bonus money, four weeksę severance and outplacement with The Five OęClock Club.
Even short-timers have negotiated
severance.
Case Study:
Daniel
Help
Starting His Own Consulting
Business
Danielęs case is more typical.
Like most people who receive a termination notice, Daniel was stunned
when he received the news--and rightly so. Daniel had been given every
assurance that his career was on the rise and his job with the company
secure. A year earlier, when he received an offer from a competitor, his
supervisors begged him to stay on.
These professional assurances went beyond words, though. Danielęs compensation was made up of a base salary plus bonuses tied to performance. With his future looking so rosy, Daniel felt comfortable purchasing an expensive home.
A traditional outplacement firm cannot help you
negotiate severance with your employer
(it is a conflict of interest since your
employer is their client),
but The Five O'Clock Club can help you
(because you are our client).
The ink was scarcely dry on the new
deed when Daniel was struck with the news that he had been replaced. The
company offered him a severance package consisting of nine months of base
pay (which represented a small part of his prior yearęs compensation) and
only three months of traditional executive outplacement. (Companies
typically offer outplacement packages that end just when you need them the
most Ŕ at the three-month mark when you are about to get
offers.)
When he called me at the Five O'Clock Club, Daniel was still in a state of shock. He knew that his severance package was inadequate, but he did not feel he would be able to negotiate anything better. Should he just take what they offered and move on?
His only strength was to
prod company officials until they gave in. He knew they wanted to get him
out of their hair.
Daniel's case is not an unusual one. Here at The Five O'Clock Club, we counsel many professionals, managers and executives dissatisfied with their severance packages, but hesitant, for a variety of reasons, to say so.
Daniel wanted to leave with his dignity and
pride intact,
and with the ongoing help he would need to move
ahead.
The first thing I advised Daniel to
do was to return to his company and tell his supervisor that he would have
trouble accepting what was offered because he would have financial
difficulties. "I want to remain whole," was the phrase that Daniel used to
express his feelings to anyone he spoke with. The phrase helped Daniel to
focus on his goal while sending a message to company officials that he was
not just after money. He wanted to leave with his dignity and pride
intact, and with the ongoing help he would need to move ahead. After his
twelve years of service, the company owed him that.
Why would a company agree to any of
Daniel's demands? Because he wasn't going to stop pestering them until he
was satisfied. He would prod the company officials until they gave in.
They wanted to get him out of their lives. To do that, they soon realized,
meant they had to pay his price.
It doesn't mean that Daniel was
obnoxious. My advice to him was to be "pleasantly persistent." Of course,
Daniel had to make a commitment to go back to these people again and
again. He didn't have any trouble holding to that resolve. "Here's what I
want," he would say. Concentrating on his purpose spurred him
on.
Based on my counseling sessions
with Daniel and others, I can offer further guidance on how to negotiate
the severance package you deserve. Here are some things to
consider:
Deal with each compensation
issue separately. A severance package is made up of many items.
These may include an actual cash settlement, career counseling help,
benefits, office space, and other items, depending on the industry and
company. Like Daniel, who neglected to scrutinize the outplacement help he
was being offered, you need to look at each component individually. A
large cash settlement, for example, may quickly be eaten up if you end up
paying for outplacement help and benefits.
Decide what you want.
List what you think is fair and also what you think you are
likely to get. It helps if you have some idea of what others have
received. –Company policy” may have nothing to do with what people
actually get.
Push to continue your
benefits. It costs a company very little to carry employees on
its medical plan. But if you try to duplicate that coverage on your own,
it would cost a lot.
Develop a mantra.
Danielęs was, "I want to remain whole." Find one that succinctly
describes your feelings, such as –I just want to be treated fairly.” The
phrase will keep you focused and give your overall campaign consistency.
Then, no matter what they say, you can repeat your mantra.
In addition, it is not out of line
to talk about the stress you and your family are
suffering.
Ask for career counseling
services for one year. You should never underestimate the amount
of time it will take youăor the help you will needăto find another
comparable position. Depending on the complexity of your situation and
your own psychological makeup, your search may last a long timeăsome tough
searches have taken more than a year.
Youęll need a year because your
search may take that long. You may even decide in the middle of your
search to start your own consulting business, then realize that consulting
is not for you after all, and resume looking for an on-payroll job
instead.
If your company grants you only one to six monthsę outplacement assistance, you could find yourself cut off in the middle of your job search. Therefore, ask for The Five OęClock Club service. If your company has a contract with a traditional outplacement firm, ask your company to supplement less-than-full corporate outplacement help with attendance at The Five OęClock Club. If you find you do not like your new jobăor lose ităyou can return to The Five OęClock Club during that year and continue your search. (Traditional outplacement firms do not allow you to return once you have been –placed.”) Don't take money over
outplacement. A cash settlement of $25,000ăor even $5,000ăsounds
like a lot, but on your own you are unlikely to spend what you need for
career counseling services. Instead, you are likely to skimp and end up
unemployed or taking a lesser job than what you would have landed if you
had received all the help you need. Get whatever cash you can and ask for
the outplacement help as an added benefit.
Remember that, with traditional
outplacement firms, the –client” is your former employer. With The Five
OęClock Club, the client is you ! You
will probably be impressed with the plush space and other amenities
offered by the outplacement firms. But space does not help you get a job:
career counseling does
.
Many people in traditional
outplacement come to The Five OęClock Club for the career counseling help
Ŕ so they can get a job! Some negotiate with their prior
employers to pay for The Five OęClock Clubęs services in additional to
traditional outplacement (which they want for the space), and some pay for
The Five OęClock Club on their own so they can get a good
job
.
Itęs better to ask for Five OęClock Club help and get
space elsewhere. We can give you some ideas.
In addition, most packages at traditional outplacement
firms end at the three-month or six-month mark. Most outplacement packages
at The Five OęClock Club are for a full year. This extra time gives you
more –breathing room” to find the situation that is best for
you.
Use outplacement help to launch your own consulting business. Danielęs dream was to have his own business. He was tempted to take a cash settlement, believing that the money was the most important ingredient he needed to form his new company from scratch. I convinced him otherwise. A highly qualified Five OęClock Club career consultant can help you write a business plan, develop your target list, brochure and verbal –pitch,” and serve as a valued advisor until you are on your feet. Peter,
an unemployed actor in his mid-forties, came to The Five OęClock Club
because he was having trouble starting his own consulting business. He
wanted to coach senior executives in presentation techniques. After
working with The Five OęClock Club, he landed his first three clients who
were senior executives at major corporations. Then we advised him to
increase his rates and showed him how to get more business on an ongoing
basis. Peter was so successful that his wife quit her job, he ended up
buying a 30-acre estate, while keeping an apartment in the city
.
You can start Five OęClock
Club counseling even though you have not completely come to terms with
your employerăwe can help with that!
You can be looking for another job
at the same time you are pushing your company for a better settlement. A
traditional outplacement firm cannot help you negotiate with your employer
(it is a conflict of interest since your employer is their client), but The Five O'Clock Club can help you (because
you
are our client).
If your company only offers three monthsę traditional
outplacement and refuses to budge, you could take ităand ask if you could
come back and ask for a monthly extension if you are conducting a full and
active search and have not landed by that time. Then, right before the
three months are up, go in and push for an extra month at a
time.
However, if you negotiate for The Five OęClock Clubęs
services, it is unlikely that you will have to ask for more. At The Five
OęClock Club, you can receive a full year of outplacement helpăand
negotiate a space allowance as wellăfor what your company would pay for
three months at a traditional outplacement firm.
F
Daniel discovered that what
he was offered was not what he had to settle for. He almost made a
mistakeăone that would have been very expensive in the short term, as he
struggled to make ends meet, and
in the long term, because he never would have been able to afford to start
his own business in such style.
Make sure you don't settle for
less, either. Every situation is unique. Get help negotiating your
severance package. The amount you spend on a little bit of counseling can
reap enormous benefits. You will end up with what you deserve and need. It
may cost your company more, but as the saying goes, you're worth
it.
NOW, please look at the
following:
*
The Five OęClock Clubęs Services and Pricing
*
Submitting a Proposal to Your Employer
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