Writing · Leasing & Conversion
Why Firing ‘Low Performers’ Often Backfires—And What CEOs Keep Getting Wrong
Tech CEOs like Musk and Zuckerberg think mass layoffs of “low performers” create stronger teams. But history—and data—say otherwise.
• Fear kills innovation: When employees worry about their jobs, they stop taking risks.
• Layoffs drive away top talent: Studies show a 1% layoff leads to a 31% spike in voluntary turnover—and it’s the best people who leave first.
• Microsoft’s painful lesson: Under stack ranking, employees spent more time sabotaging each other than innovating. The result? A 50% drop in market cap—until Satya Nadella scrapped it.
• Welch’s regret: Even the father of “rank and yank” admitted late in life that performance management should be demanding, not demeaning.
Cutting “low performers” sounds bold, but history proves it’s a shortcut to mediocrity. High expectations + great leadership beat fear every time.
Here is a link to the article.
https://lnkd.in/eyhk-gvi