Many companies are quick to reduce headcount when economic headwinds appear, but they risk weakening their businesses. A case study by Sandra Sucher explores the hidden costs of layoffs
The pattern has become painfully predictable in recent years: As the economy shows signs of a slowdown, companies hand out layoff notices to stabilize profitability and calm investor fears.
That cycle seems to be in place in the post-pandemic business world, as historic spikes in inflation and corresponding increases in interest rates prompt fears of a recession. Indeed, a recent Harvard Business School case study details how four tech giants laid off almost 40,000 workers between November 2022 and March 2023. But an accompanying research note parsing the layoffs for lessons shows it doesn’t have to be this way.
Layoffs are an example of “hope triumphing over science,” says Sandra Sucher, the MBA Class of 1966 Professor of Management Practice at HBS, who wrote both pieces of research. She points to study after study that show that layoffs have hidden costs that make companies less profitable, innovative, and productive.
Senior leaders may be saying, “If companies I know and admire are doing this, it can’t be that bad, or else they wouldn’t do it,” Sucher says. “But there are lots of orthodoxies that can be challenged, and this is one.”
Sometimes layoffs are necessary, and the costs of not acting can be catastrophic, Sucher acknowledges. But, she says, there are right and wrong ways to approach workforce change. Done smart, responding to headwinds can strengthen the organization long term, says Sucher, who collaborated with research associate Marilyn Morgan Westner on the case study and with both Westner and research associate Christopher Diak on the background note.
This article was provided with permission from Harvard Business School Working Knowledge.