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Want To Lay Off Workers More Smoothly? There’s A Startup For That

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The tech industry is in turmoil. But there’s at least one startup that is thriving these days,

The tech industry is in turmoil. But there’s at least one startup that is thriving these days, and it’s one that’s helping other startups lay off workers. [View this email online]( [Planet Money]( The Layoff-Time Continuum --------------------------------------------------------------- by Greg Rosalsky You might have heard about the fintech company Klarna, whose CEO recently played a [prerecorded video]( at an all-staff meeting to tell his employees that many of them were about to be laid off. The company then made them wait for up to [two days]( in agonizing suspense, to find out whether they were the ones getting axed. Delivering the bad news with a boilerplate script as if they were robots, Klarna’s HR execs ended up sacking about 700 workers — ten percent of its workforce — via video calls. The calls lasted [2-3 minutes]( and no questions were allowed. Ouch. Or, how about Better.com, a tech mortgage company whose CEO laid off hundreds of employees in [a single Zoom call]( — and then decided to kick them when they were down, [accusing them]( of “stealing” from the company by not being productive enough. A few months later, in a second round of layoffs, the company [accidentally]( sent soon-to-be-terminated workers severance checks. The problem: they hadn’t yet been told they were laid off. Sacking stories like this seem to be everywhere these days, as the tech industry grapples with nosediving valuations, stingier venture capital, and an economic slowdown. Big names like [Tesla]( [Microsoft]( [Netflix]( [Coinbase]( [Lyft]( and [Twitter]( are cutting workers loose. Meta — aka Facebook — recently signaled its gearing up for layoffs. “If a direct report is coasting or is a low performer, they are not who we need; they are failing this company,” a company executive told managers in [a leaked memo](. Low performers at Facebook may soon find themselves coasting to the unemployment line. Smaller tech companies, which are struggling to raise money and woo investors, are getting hit even harder than the big dogs. According to [layoffs.fyi]( which tracks terminations, 387 startups have laid off over 56,000 employees in 2022. But there’s at least one startup that is thriving in the market turmoil. And it’s sort of the perfect metaphor for the current state of tech. The company is called Continuum, and it’s cashing in at layoffpalooza. Dane Mark/Getty Images “We were not thinking about creating a layoff product when we were founding the company,” says Nolan Church, Continuum’s CEO. But now, if you’re a startup that wants to lay off workers, this new startup can help you with that. And it just convinced a group of venture capital firms to fork over [$12 million]( in new funding, which is pretty impressive in the current market environment. The Layoff-Time Continuum Church describes Continuum as a “labor marketplace for fractional executives.” What are “fractional executives,” you ask? That’s techspeak for part-time consultants. The company, which Church co-founded in August 2020, aims to connect startups with seasoned executives who work a few hours here and there providing advice. His pitch: why spend millions recruiting and employing executives full time when you can spend only thousands employing them part time? Continuum is basically TaskRabbit, but for high-paid executives. Whereas with TaskRabbit, you can hire gig workers to assemble furniture or repair your home, with Continuum, you can hire gig executives to consult your business — including, now, how to more smoothly, strategically, and “humanely” lay off workers. “What ended up happening was in about March and April of this year, we had three or four customers that were already engaged with executives, leveraging those executives for layoff advice,” Church explains about his company’s recent shift to focusing on layoffs. “Then we started to see companies coming inbound, asking for more layoff advice.” Continuum charges [a flat fee]( for layoff consulting services, and the fee escalates with headcount. For companies with up to 100 employees, it costs $10,000. For those with between 100 and 250 employees, it costs $15,000. And for those with between 250 and 500 employees, it costs $20,000. If a company has more than 500 employees, Continuum’s layoff services can cost more. For this fee, Continuum offers ten hours of advising from “elite executive advisers,” a plan to communicate layoffs to employees and the broader world, and an analysis to help with diversity, equity, and inclusion goals. They launched their layoff product line earlier this month, and, Church says, they’ve already had twelve prospective customers, in addition to six existing ones. It can be in a company’s self-interest to handle layoffs with tact and compassion. “If the company is lucky enough to survive, people will remember how they were treated during this time,” Church says. “And if they were treated poorly, that will have an effect on your employer brand.” Seeing how they laid off or maltreated employees in the past, valuable workers might think twice about working for companies like Klarna or Better.com in the future. Moreover, the morale of a company’s remaining employees obviously matters. If some workers are treated like garbage, it can damage overall performance and loyalty. Church recommends that companies be kind to workers they let go and offer them at least four weeks severance pay. He advises companies cut once and cut deep to try and prevent a drip, drip, drip of agony at the company. And he says companies need to think strategically about their workers who remain, including “tucking in” their highest performers, with either cash or equity. “You want to make sure that they are there to help you get through this moment,” Church says. With the new launch of their layoff product line, a cynic might accuse Continuum of shameless opportunism, profiting from others’ misery. But Church sees tremendous value in the services his company provides. He responds to this potential criticism: “I would say have some empathy for the founders and early HR people who have never done this before and who want to do this the right way.” Of course, we should also have some empathy for the workers themselves. Economic research finds that those laid off have [higher mortality rates]( and potentially a lifetime of [lower earnings](. Church says one of its partners, a company called Dover, offers a website called “[One Soft Landing]( which tries to help laid off tech workers find new jobs. But, he admits, “there is a gap in the market to help these people, and, frankly, I wish there was more we could do.” Being laid off tends to be more harmful to workers than losing a job due to a business closure, [research finds]( because a layoff serves as an ominous signal to future employers. In a world of imperfect information, employers look for cues to assess the value of potential recruits, and a past layoff can brand workers as unproductive or lazy or untrustworthy. Call it the Scarlet Cover Letter. Not subscribed? [Subscribe to this newsletter.]( Want to send this to others? [Share the web-version of this newsletter on social media.]( Want more Planet Money? [Listen to our podcasts.]( Access Bonus Content --------------------------------------------------------------- Subscribe to Planet Money+ for bonus episodes with behind the scenes takes, extended interviews, and extra facts we couldn’t fit into the main show. Plus, it’s ad free. You’ll get The Indicator and Planet Money Summer School too - all while supporting our nerdy, ambitious journalism. Learn more at [Plus.npr.org/PlanetMoney](. [Sign Me Up]( --------------------------------------------------------------- Newsletter continues after sponsor message --------------------------------------------------------------- On Our Podcasts --------------------------------------------------------------- Planet Money Summer School 2: GDP & What Counts — What even is "the economy"? And how do you measure it? Our path out of the economic darkness and into the light has been guided in large part by one single statistic: GDP. This week: the origins, history, and problems with the economic indicator to rule them all. [Listen here]( Best by, sell by, use by — Wait, wait...don't throw that out! What if much of what you've been told about food expiration dates is... wrong? [Listen here]( The alchemy behind falling metal prices — When in doubt, count on the price of metals like copper and gold to predict the economy. But what magical forces are driving prices in the metal market down? The Indicator has the story. [Listen here]( Also on The Indicator: [LIVE From New York, the Beigie Awards!]( [The monetization of college sports]( [Here's why Black students are defaulting]( and [From Earth to the cosmos, indicators of the week]( --------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------- Stream your local NPR station. Visit NPR.org to find your local station stream. [Find a Station]( --------------------------------------------------------------- [Subscribe to Planet Money+](. Your support helps make our show possible and unlocks access to our bonus episodes. What do you think of today's email? We'd love to hear your thoughts, questions and feedback: [planetmoney@npr.org](mailto:planetmoney@npr.org?subject=Newsletter%20Feedback) Enjoying this newsletter? Forward to a friend! They can [sign up here](. Looking for more great content? [Check out all of our newsletter offerings]( — including Daily News, Politics, Health and more! You received this message because you're subscribed to Planet Money emails. This email was sent by National Public Radio, Inc., 1111 North Capitol Street NE, Washington, DC 20002 [Unsubscribe]( | [Privacy Policy]( [NPR logo]

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