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The Right Way to Off-Board a Departing Employee

Rebecca Knight

January 15, 2016

When a valuable employee tells you she s leaving, worrying about losing her

institutional knowledge and experience is understandable. How can you oversee

the transition in a way that helps you retain that expertise? Who should be

involved? How far in advance of the employee s end date do you need to start?

And how do you motivate the departing colleague to cooperate?

What the Experts Say

In many organizations, the typical off-boarding process is a whirlwind of

project wrap-ups, paperwork, and exit interviews. The manager might ask the

person who s leaving to write a [report] to share his knowledge, but often

there s just not enough time for that, says John Sullivan, professor of

management at San Francisco State University, HR expert, and author of 1000

Ways to Recruit Top Talent. But failing to capture the departing employee s

organizational-specific knowhow is shortsighted especially if the person

leaving has deep smarts meaning business critical, experienced-based

knowledge, says Dorothy Leonard, professor emerita at Harvard Business School

and chief adviser of the consulting firm Leonard-Barton Group. These are the

people who have so much tribal knowledge and are so valuable that they become

almost irreplaceable, she says. Fortunately, a lot of this know-how can be

passed along if you make it a priority. You re not going to be able to clone

the employee, but you can identify her behaviors, thought patterns, and

processes that have made her such a valuable decision-maker. Here s how:

Make a plan

Your first step is to lay out how you will transfer the knowledge, who you will

transfer the knowledge to, and along what timeline. If you have a say in the

matter, ask the departing employee to give you a couple of months notice.

Doing so gives you time to identify and hire a qualified replacement whether

that person is an internal candidate or an external one. That may not be

possible, but buy as much time as you can. Then you and the employee must work

together to figure out the scope of information that needs to be transferred.

Ask, How much of this [expert s] knowledge has never been captured or

documented? suggests Leonard. This information will help you come up with

learning plans for your team and the individual s successor. Bear in mind that

the more unarticulated the knowledge, the more time you ll need to pass it

along.

Motivate the expert

The next step in the process is to encourage the person who s leaving to share

his knowledge. If the employee is really unhappy with the organization, this

could be a challenge, Leonard acknowledges. In fact, it may be well-nigh

impossible to convince him to cooperate. But if he s just somewhat reluctant,

you need to find out why. It could be that he s humble or unaware of his

expertise. He thinks, That s just the way I do things. Or perhaps he doesn

t know how to teach others what he knows. In these cases, it s your job to help

him transfer knowledge in a structured way, she says.

Create apprenticeships

If you have months for a transition, Leonard suggests creating a carefully

constructed action plan of learning, whereby the highly skilled, deep smarts

employee is paired with one or more replacements so they can observe her in

action, learn and practice new skills, and receive feedback on their

performance. Consider it an accelerated apprenticeship. The learner might sit

in on a conference call to hear how the expert pitches clients or attend a

meeting to observe her soliciting input from colleagues in another department.

After a period of shadowing, give successors a series of mini-experiences so

they can try doing the tasks on their own. We don t learn deeply by checklists

or lectures, Leonard says. We learn by doing.

Emphasize team learning

If you re really short on time and you don t have an identified successor,

Leonard recommends holding a meeting in which the departing employee shares

stories with colleagues about how he handled problems and crises that arose

during his tenure. This exploratory question and answer session should be

conducted by a skilled facilitator. The goal, she says, is to reveal insights

into the expert s thought process and help team members absorb information.

Questions such as Who did you consult before you made this decision? And what

alternatives did you consider? should be encouraged. You want to go through

these [scenarios] in a structured way and in enough detail so that a pattern

emerges. The most effective knowledge transfer involves conversation. Sullivan

recommends also asking the expert how he learned what he knows. Ask what he

reads, which websites he visits, and whom he talks to, he says. The goal is to

speed up the learning of the remaining team members. The world changes so

quickly, what matters is how you learn new stuff.

Document selectively

Sullivan is skeptical of off-boarding processes that require the departing

employee to compose a hefty here s-how-to-do-my-job manual. Too often, he

says, the person doesn t bother to write it up, and even when he does, no one

ever reads it. Selective recordkeeping can be helpful, however. Leonard

recommends that apprentices and team members trying to capture the expert s

knowledge keep learning logs of information that, in some cases, can later be

entered into a database.

Focus on the relationship

The best way to retain the expertise of a departing star employee is to

maintain a relationship with her. You might go to her with the occasional

question, engage her as a consultant or hire her back someday. So set the right

tone during the off-boarding process, says Sullivan. Even if you don t work

together again, she still serves as a brand ambassador who could refer business

or job candidates, he says. Don t accuse people of disloyalty for leaving, he

says. Let them know you love them and that you want to keep in touch. It s not

an exit, it s the beginning of the next phase, he says. Leonard concurs:

People who are leaving a company want to feel good about [the place they re

leaving].

Be prepared for the next time

The off-boarding process goes much more smoothly if you already have tools and

systems in place to ensure that knowledge is constantly being transferred from

experts to successors. That way, if the proverbial bus were to run over the

employee, you re not left in the lurch, says Leonard. For example, says

Sullivan, the kind of concentrated job shadowing discussed above doesn t need

to be reserved for off-boarding purposes. As the manager, you should always

create opportunities for less-seasoned colleagues to work side-by-side with

your resident experts, he says. The objective for the less-experienced staff

member is to learn how his senior colleague gets things done; the goal for the

expert is to mentor, which is part of leadership development, he says. Of

course, some experts are disinclined to teach others how to do their jobs

because they want to be seen as irreplaceable. But you can t afford to have an

employee with a monopoly on company-specific knowledge. To prevent this,

training and coaching should be part of the promotion process or an incentive

for phased retirement. They should need to prove that they ve trained their

backfill, he says.

Principles to Remember

Do:

Create opportunities for less-experienced colleagues to observe the expert in

action

Encourage team members to keep a log of what they ve learned from the expert

and, more importantly, to practice new skills and behaviors

Make training and coaching part of the promotion process in order to motivate

experts to mentor possible successors before they leave

Don t:

Panic determine the timeframe and the scope of the knowledge that needs

transferring to figure out which strategies will work best for your team

Bother asking the departing expert to write a lengthy how-to manual instead,

ask him to share stories of how he handled problems in the past

Treat the person like a traitor for leaving the organization use the

off-boarding process to demonstrate your respect

Case Study #1: Determine a workable timeframe and be flexible

Julie Lavender, director of personnel relations and employee policies at Ford,

admits that she was rattled when Maria, one of her high performers who had

worked at the automaker for close to 30 years, announced her plans to retire.

There was a moment of panic, says Julie. Maria had a complicated job. She

worked on government contracts and compliance issues, and she was very good at

digging into details. She also had relationships with a lot of key

stakeholders. Losing that could be very difficult.

With Julie s approval, Maria applied for Ford s phased retirement program,

which allows prospective retirees to work part-time for six months at full-time

pay. Her application was granted. Whew. That took pressure off me because

Maria s primary responsibility during that time would be to onboard her

replacement in a high-quality way, says Julie.

Julie quickly identified Kelly as Maria s successor. Maria opted to work three

months full-time and then have three months off at full-time pay. But timing

was a challenge. Kelly was being promoted and her negotiations with the union

took longer than we expected, says Julie.

In light of the scheduling issues, Maria offered to take some of her time off

earlier, so there would be more overlap with Kelly. Maria was really flexible,

and that helped make it a positive experience for everyone.

Under Julie s supervision, Kelly and Maria soon began working closely on a

transition plan. Using Ford s internal knowledge transfer tool, Maria created a

reference for Kelly that detailed the access codes she would need, information

on how to write reports, and the names and contact information of relevant

internal and external colleagues.

Maria also facilitated meetings with Kelly and each of the key stakeholders;

this was a way to introduce her to the people and the issues, says Julie.

Because of timing, Kelly never got to take the lead in the meetings with Maria

in attendance, but that would ve been ideal.

Julie says that during the off-boarding process, her goal was to demonstrate

respect for Maria and all that she did for the organization, and also support

Kelly. I wanted to show her that I had confidence in her.

Maria s paid leave was up in December, and she recently delivered her laptop

and company key cards at a department potluck. She told us we could call

anytime with questions.

Case Study #2: Lead storytelling sessions for colleagues and replacements

Tamar Elkeles, chief people officer of Quixey, a technology company that helps

users find information inside mobile apps, says she hates the term

off-boarding because it feels inadequate. People are your number one asset,

and the term off-boarding sounds almost derogatory, she says. It should be

more about helping people transition to their next stage whether it s a new

career, retirement, or something else altogether.

At her former job, she led the transition process for Bob (not his real

name), who was leaving the company to start his own venture. Bob not only

headed the company s marketing department, he was also the person who started

the department from scratch, so everyone was worried about losing his

expertise.

To help the marketing team get up to speed, Tamar held a series of focused

storytelling sessions where she would interview Bob about a specific ad

campaign or initiative that he had run in the past. We had a tremendous amount

of respect for Bob s work and wanted to celebrate him as well as capture his

knowledge, she explains. The sessions lasted 30 or 40 minutes each, and she

held about a dozen per week over a two-month period, acting as the primary

facilitator but also encouraging other employees to chime in with questions.

I would ask questions like, Tell us about the messaging of this campaign. Why

did you choose this collateral? How did you pick the colors of the logo? Why

did you decide to use this agency? she says. I wanted people to understand

the thinking behind the decisions.

After each session, one employee was tasked with summing up the essence of the

story in several paragraphs and sending it to the rest of the team in an

email. These stories are also now shared with new hires during the onboarding

process so that all employees benefit from Bob s experience and expertise, even

though he s no longer with the company.

Rebecca Knight is a freelance journalist in Boston and a lecturer at Wesleyan

University. Her work has been published in The New York Times, USA Today, and

The Financial Times.