How Layoffs Hurt Companies
Time
was, layoffs were seen as an emergency strategy, the last resort in a
downturn or crisis. Today, however, layoffs are a standard tool for
doing business. As the economy continues to heal and job indicators
improve, a number of firms have announced a fresh wave of layoffs
— Nordstrom,Sprint and American
Express among
them — citing the need to improve profitability. Studies have shown
that layoffs do not generally result in improved profits. And yet,
firms continue to keep the pink slips at the ready. Why?
It’s
about the triumph of short-termism, says Wharton management
professor Adam
Cobb.
“For most firms, labor represents a fairly significant cost. So, if
you think profit is not where you want it to be, you say, ‘I can
pull this lever and the costs will go down.’ There was a time when
social norms around laying off workers when the firm is performing
relatively well would have made it harder. Now it’s fairly normal
activity.”
The
layoff mentality has become culturally ingrained by way of both
positive and negative developments — the Great Recession, as well
as the new economy. “In Silicon Valley, the big thing is to be
disruptive. It’s the ultimate: Who are we going to disrupt, and
how?” says Wharton management professor Matthew
Bidwell.
“What does that mean? Laying people off. A lot of these layoffs
reflect that. As new forces come in, some jobs go away.”
Layoffs
“have been pretty constant over the years, and it seems to happen
no matter what the economy is doing,” says Wayne F. Cascio, a
global leadership professor at the University of Colorado Denver who
has studied layoffs for decades. “When the economy is down, it’s
always the argument that we’ve got to cut costs, and when it’s
doing well we often hear we need to improve profitability, because
it’s the best time to do it. The tune hasn’t changed.”
But
some are suggesting it is time for a change. If several decades’
worth of research now shows layoffs to be a poor way to boost
profits, while other strategies may in fact work, perhaps there are
ways of changing the dynamic between what’s happening on Wall
Street and decisions that get made in the board room and on the shop
floor. Says Cobb: “The challenge is: how do we get back to a more
socially responsible way of handling employment given the influence
of financial markets on corporate decision-making?”
Layoff
Myths and Mirages
Contrary
to popular belief, there’s not much evidence that layoffs are a
cure for weak profits, or, to use the current euphemism, that they
reposition a firm for growth going forward. “It’s very difficult
to sort out the relationship because firms that are laying off are
almost by definition in trouble,” says Peter Cappelli, Wharton
management professor and director of the school’s Center
for Human Resources.
“The research evidence has not found any support for the overall
idea that layoffs help firm performance. There is more support
for the idea that where there is overcapacity, such as a market
downturn, layoffs help firms. There is no evidence that cutting
to improve profitability helps beyond the immediate, short-term
accounting bump.”
The
effectiveness of layoffs as a tool for profitability varies from
industry to industry, case to case. Sometimes, layoffs are necessary,
says Bidwell. “Underlying this is the idea that business is
constantly changing, and so a set of activities that were really
important to the business 10 years ago you may find you no longer
want to be doing,” he says. “Either you’ve become so
uncompetitive in the market, like BlackBerry, or there are markets
that grow and disappear. I saw some terrifying graph the other day
about how advertising revenues have skyrocketed, while TV advertising
is flat and at newspapers they have fallen through the floor.
Obviously, if you are a newspaper publisher you cannot go on as you
were.”
But
as a cure for corporate ills, layoffs are a chimera that can come
back to bite a company.
“There
is some evidence that when shareholders are more powerful, companies
are more likely to engage in layoffs, and yet announcements are
usually met with declines in share price, so it’s not clear that
it’s a great sign,” says Bidwell. “Shareholders love it, but it
may punish them even more.”
Companies
continue to use layoffs because it’s a way to be seen as
responsive, he says. Such was the case a year ago when American
Express was making money, but not enough to quell investor concerns.
The company had a revenue growth target of 8%, which it chose to help
meet by cutting costs. After announcing that it would shed 4,000
jobs, American Express’s stock price took an immediate slide, and
remains down by about 25% since
that announcement.
Employers
also often underestimate the cost of layoffs in immediate financial
terms, as well as in the lingering burden it places on remaining
resources — both financially and emotionally. “There is
definitely a huge problem in HR generally that the stuff that is easy
to put on a spreadsheet outweighs the stuff that isn’t,” says
Bidwell.
The
toll of layoffs is high. In many industries, layoffs beget lower
productivity and profits. When sales are slow, for instance, many
retailers cut staff. But several studies show a correlation between
bigger staffing and substantially higher sales.
What
about profitability? One study that examined a large specialty
retailer found that conformance quality (how well an employee
executes prescribed tasks) has a higher impact on profitability than
service quality (defined as the extent to which the customer has a
positive experience). According to a Harvard Business School working
paper, “The
Effect of Labor on Profitability: The Role of Quality”
by Zeynep Ton, stores that cut staff were unwittingly cutting
profits, and yet the practice was standard. Why? “An emphasis on
minimizing payroll expenses and an emphasis on meeting short-term
(often monthly) performance targets,” the study found. Another
consequence of understaffing at this retailer was lowered morale, a
finding echoed in other studies.
Layoffs
are going to reduce costs immediately, says Cobb. “But what does
that mean two or three years from now when the firm is growing and
now has to ramp back up by hiring a bunch of people? Now the firm
must incur all these costs to hire and train workers.” In addition
to the laid-off employees, he adds, other workers may now leave
voluntarily, all of which is disruptive for the firm and lowers
productivity. “Layoffs may look good on paper because they have an
immediate effect on costs. Yet in reality there are a lot of costs
that layoffs impose on firms that might not show up on an income
statement quite as clearly.”
Cascio
is in the home stretch of a project that analyzes the S&P over
three decades, looking at firms that downsized to track financial
performance in the years following. He expects to have results in a
few months.
Tenure
rates — the length of an employee’s stay at one company — have
remained relatively steady in the past two decades. But one recent
study indicates that the American worker is becoming increasingly
unmoored to
the full time employer. The percentage of workers engaged in
alternative work arrangements — temps, on-call workers, contract
workers and freelancers — rose from 10.1% in February 2005 to 15.8%
in late 2015, according to “The
Rise and Nature of Alternative Work Arrangements in the United
States, 1995-2015”
by Harvard’s Lawrence F. Katz and Princeton’s Alan B. Krueger.
The study, released in March, shows that workers hired out through
contract companies showed the sharpest rise, increasing from 0.6% in
2005 to 3.1% in 2015. “A striking implication of these estimates is
that all of the net employment growth in the U.S. economy from 2005
to 2015 appears to have occurred in alternative work arrangements,”
the study concludes.
Investing
in Innovation and People
What
is clear, Cascio notes, is that plenty of firms have handled internal
and external stresses without resorting to layoffs, and come out the
other side with positive results. He points to Southwest Airlines,
which, like the rest of its industry peers, suffered during the Great
Recession. “People were not flying as much, so they took their job
recruiters — who are typically great with people interaction skills
— and instead of laying them off, redeployed
them into
frontline customer service jobs, which made flying on Southwest a
better experience for its customers. And as the economy recovered
they transitioned back to their original jobs.”
Another
approach was taken by Steve Jobs, Cascio says, who took advantage of
downturns to focus on innovation. “When the dot.com bubble burst,
he said, ‘We are going to invest our way through the downturn.’
Look back at when the introduction of the iPod was and the iPad. It
turns out shortly after the 2001 recession ended was when the iTunes
Store opened. Then after the Great Recession, they bring out the iPad
in 2009 and 2010. So while the economy was bad and people were being
laid off, Apple was actually investing in R&D. People really need
to hear examples like this.”
Other
countries — Germany in particular — have regulations that help to
temper the knee-jerk impulse to lay off staff. Cascio doesn’t see
that happening in the U.S., but other strategies might work — such
as a program in some states where companies, in lieu of laying off
staff, can have the state labor department kick in partial
unemployment benefits. “American business responds to positive
incentives rather than penalties for doing something, and that’s a
positive incentive and it keeps people on the job.”
For
Wharton management professor John Kimberly, the key question is how
leadership thinks, in the short run and long run, about the way it
wants to manage its human capital. “I am always amazed when times
get a little tough how quickly the layoffs happen, and when they are
not so tough that they start pulling the trigger — that’s even
more mystifying,” he says.
Kimberly
says that if a company can manage through a rough patch with creative
strategies without laying off, employees will emerge with a greater
sense of loyalty, and that loyalty will pay off for the company. “I
believe at the heart of the issue, that is going to motivate
outstanding performance, in any company, no matter what business they
are in,” Kimberly notes. “I think the data are clear that
outstanding performance comes when people are motivated to do their
best, and that they are motivated to do their best when there is some
reciprocity between senior management and employees and what they do
on a daily basis.”
Cobb
says options before getting to layoffs include offering early
retirement, slowing down hiring and retraining workers. And there is
some indication that firms, worried about loss of talent, are using
these options more than they once did, according to the Society for
Human Resource Management. But real change would take a shift:
understanding that getting long-term gains sometimes means taking
short-term lumps. University of Michigan professor Gerald F. Davis
argues that for a long period, large corporations were a dominant
force in America — through employment practices, expansion choices
and community connections — and that now, the U.S. has a
finance-centered economy. Corporations are no longer the organizing
agent of society, Davis argues in “The
Rise and Fall of Finance and the End of the Society of
Organizations,”
published in the Academy
of Management Perspectives in
2009, and in his forthcoming book, The
Vanishing American Corporation.
“As
Professor Davis argues, the shareholder value model has been the
undoing of corporations in a way,” says Cobb. “There has been a
stark decline in the number of publicly traded companies in the U.S.
over the past few decades. As firms have more and more ability to use
outside contractors in place of full-time employment and production,
many firms do not need to IPO to raise the amounts of capital as did
firms for a century prior.”
Today,
Cobb adds, many firms that do an IPO do so not to raise capital, but
to provide a return to early shareholders and employees. So firms
like Google and Facebook are publicly traded, but their ownership is
highly concentrated among founders, and the companies use dual-class
shares to ensure that the control of the firm remains with the
founders. Other firms, like Dell, have gone private, which allows
them to make longer-term decisions without the fear of missing
quarterly earnings targets. “And the firm has seemed to perform
much better” Cobb notes. “Thus, in its quest to ensure that firms
are flexible and efficient, Wall Street has seemingly helped to
foster an ecosystem of firms that are considerably less reliant on
Wall Street to raise capital.”
One
might imagine, Cobb suggests, a world where Wall Street has less
influence on corporate decision-making. “In that world, short-term
pressures to boost profits and meet earnings targets are balanced by
longer-term interests, and lay-offs might, once again, be a practice
employed as a last resort,” he says.
However
it plays out, there’s a fundamental tension underlying the
interplay of forces to which Bidwell admits feeling conflicted. “The
individual wants stability and security, but as a society we worry
about becoming too sclerotic,” he notes. “One person’s dynamic
economy is another person’s risk and insecurity. And the question
is where we strike the balance between them.”
Knowledge@Wharton
How Layoffs Hurt Companies
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
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