Friday, May 11, 2007

Resignation

I am writing after a long time and my experience below will tell you the reason why.

There is plenty and plenty of stuff written all-over on how you should resign from your current job, when you should resign, how you should communicate your resignation etc. etc. However what I have found challenging is how should you communicate to your team that their manager's manager has resigned? What are the implications of this to the division? What is our long-term strategy to fill this slot?

I went through this experience for the first time and had the "privilege" to communicate the news to the people who report into me that their executive was leaving the company. Was the experience good? Yes. Did I learn something out from this experience? Yes.

For the operators who man the help-line phones, for the business-analysts that work with the business users and gather requirements and build IT solutions, the executive is someone who is defining the strategy for their existence - for example to off-shore or not? To Layoff or not? and so on...and to tell them that their executive is leaving and I (their manager) will perform both the roles for the foreseeable future makes these guys nervous because they read between lines. Why did the director quit? Does the executive team know something that we do not?...it is natural for the team down the food-chain to get these thoughts. I did when I was down the food-chain.

So how do you make this transition at a senior-level seamless to the team down there in the trenches?

Announce the resignation to the whole team together. Announce who will take over. The person who is taking over needs to articulate his / her strategy from the get-go even if the strategy is identical to the one in place. Show that you are in control and there is no ambiguity for the rest of the foreseeable future. Communicate frequently with regular updates on the transition. Rapidly build new relations with other executives with whom you will now have to interact. Lastly and most importantly, go after the low-hanging fruit to show quick wins and demonstrate to all and sundry that you are dependable and believe in delivering results. Someone whom I admire for doing this is Mark Hurd of HP. As an executive he has done an outstanding job of taking control and turning things around. His is a classic case of a turn-around success story.

So, the next time around - you have to announce a resignation of an executive remember the team-player down the chain is looking to hear "There are no changes to your job roles and responsibilities". They does not really care what else you say. Or do they? Think about it !