Recently, the CEO of the tech mortgage company Better.com, Vishal Garg, invited 900 of the company’s employees onto a Zoom webinar. During the webinar, which only lasted about three minutes, he told all of the people attending that their contracts had been terminated. The employees were watching the webinar of the CEO when he announced on screen that all 900 of them would be losing their jobs, which is about 15% of the total staff at the company.
Garg told the attendees that everyone who was invited to the call was part of the unlucky group of people that were being laid off, with the termination being effective immediately. All of the employees whose contracts were terminated would also receive a month’s worth of salary as well as three months of benefits, according to the CEO.
Among the unlucky group of employees was the entirety of the tech mortgage company’s diversity, equity, and inclusion recruiting team, according to CNN and the head of the division Ivori Johnson. In fact, according to Johnson, the employees that were affected by the termination had been logged out of their computers that were issued by the company itself even before they were notified of their termination.
The CEO said during the webinar that this had been the second time in his career that he’d found himself in such a situation , that he didn’t want to do such things, and that the last time he’d gone through the same thing, he’d ended up crying. While the CEO had been using very empathetic wording during the webinar with the terminated employees, his tone was very cold, making the entire webinar very short and emotionless.
After that webinar, the company’s CFO, Kevin Ryan, released a statement in an attempt to soften the message that 15% of the company’s staff was fired a couple of weeks before the holiday season. However, the story didn’t end there, as a news outlet confirmed that the CEO had been berating some of the terminated employees with anonymous messages on a professional network called Blind. According to the messages, the CEO claimed that about 250 people of those that were terminated had only been working for 2 hours a day while clocking in for an entire workday or more in the payroll system, which, according to him, meant that they were stealing from the consumers and the company.
To make matters worse, the company also went public through a SPAC back in May, and during the first week in December, when all of the employees were terminated, the company also took in a $750 million cash payment from the deal. Despite the CEO’s claims of the aforementioned issues with the terminated employees, the company is valued in the billions and its balance sheet looks strong.
In the aftermath of the situation, three of the company’s senior executives reportedly resigned, and then the CEO issued an apology for his conduct. However, this story serves as an example to other companies of the importance of internal communication, which is an integral element of Public Relations.
That means sometimes, companies and PR professionals have to figure out the best ways to communicate bad news inside a company, such as mass job terminations like with Better.com. The best, and really, the only way that companies can communicate bad news to their employees is with empathy, authenticity, and in a direct way. The person relaying the message should have an appreciation and understanding of how that news is going to impact everyone involved, otherwise, they’re not really prepared to share any sort of bad news.