Employee Survival Guide® - 5 Ways To Beat Employer Performance Improvement Plans (PIPS)
Episode Date: January 4, 2021In this episode, Mark discusses five ways to beat your employer's performance improvement plan (PIP) and enhance your chances of receiving a severance payout. These tips are groomed from twent...y-four years of litigating PIPS.More and more and more employees are facing PIPs (Performance Improvement Plans). (See related PIP articles we have written about HERE and HERE). Here’s the bad news, the odds are you are going to get fired no matter how you react to the PIP. It’s like being unfriended or canceled, because your presence and contributions to the office are no longer valued. The good news is I have a few ideas to promote your leverage and set yourself up for a severance/settlement package, even where one would never be offered to you. Listen to the Employee Survival Guide podcast latest episode here https://capclaw.com/employee-survival-guide-podcast/If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts.For more information, please contact Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com.The content of this website is provided for information purposes only and does not constitute legal advice nor create an attorney-client relationship. Carey & Associates, P.C. makes no warranty, express or implied, regarding the accuracy of the information contained on this website or to any website to which it is linked to.If you enjoyed this episode of the Employee Survival Guide please like us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. We would really appreciate if you could leave a review of this podcast on your favorite podcast player such as Apple Podcasts. Leaving a review will inform other listeners you found the content on this podcast is important in the area of employment law in the United States. For more information, please contact our employment attorneys at Carey & Associates, P.C. at 203-255-4150, www.capclaw.com.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to another edition of the Employee Survival Guide, where you can learn everything your employer does not want you to know about and more.
Now, here's attorney Mark Carey.
Hey, it's Mark here again. And today I want to talk to you about five ways to beat employer performance improvement plans, so-called PIPs.
Really? You're going to give me a PIP after my dedicated years of service to this company?
That's bullshit.
If this sounds recently familiar, it should be.
More and more and more employees are facing PIPs, performance improvement plans.
Here's the bad news.
The odds are you are going to get fired no matter how you react to the PIP.
It's like being unfriended or canceled.
Because your presence and contributions to the office are no longer valued. The good news is I have a few ideas to
promote your leverage and set yourself up for a severance or settlement package, even where
one would never be offered to you. There is one catch. Do not do this without an employment
attorney. According to SHRM, the Society for Human Resource Management,
a PIP is a tool to set you up on a rotisserie and slow cook you until you are fired 60 to 90 days later.
I have never seen in all my years of practice a PIP that was even remotely justified.
I'm not alone in my disgust of this ancient and crusty management and employment practice.
Forbes published a story in July 2019,
sounding the alarms, entitled, quote, it's time we finally do away with performance improvement plans, end quote. A pip is more like the red paddle in the grade school principal's office
that she used to enforce the rule of law through corporal punishment. In reality, my principal was
a gem of a lady, but you get the point. The pip screams at you to comply, but for what?
You were already
working at 110% capacity and every performance review up to that point was exceeds or average.
So what is the story here? Is it your gender, sexual orientation, race, age, etc. that caused
you to receive a PIP? Unfortunately, it is highly likely. Yes, I am jaded, but at least I know the stats and how routinely this happens to our clients.
As background for this article, I conducted a bit of legal research among employment discrimination cases
that mentioned or discussed the use of performance improvement plans.
I wanted to confirm what I already knew to be true.
The PIPs are used to set employees up for termination, and courts often let employers get away with it.
Performance improvement plans are a means to an end, the end of your job. Although I enjoy working with my colleagues from the bench,
in almost every case I found, the court upheld the validity of the PIP given to the employee.
Why is that? You need to understand that courts are extremely reluctant to second-guess employers.
They seek to avoid becoming super HR departments. I did discover a few cases where the performance improvement plan was viewed negatively by the
courts, only because the employee was successful in demonstrating a discrimination case at the
summary judgment stage of the case. Specifically, as I will show you below, the employee was able
to factually demonstrate evidence of intentional discrimination in and around the administration
of the performance improvement plan, i.e. the employee was able to establish the employer's
reasoning behind the PIP was pretextual or false. However, the odds currently favor employers,
and we seek to change those vaguest odds by empowering you with the following tricks of
the trade. Now, with all this information in hand, let me show you how to beat
a performance improvement plan. But for your information, I have thought about these comments
over a period of weeks to ensure the following strategy points were realistic, practical,
and successful. Number one, never sign the PIP under any circumstances and start looking for
another job right away. Employers always demand employees sign their performance improvement
plans. We advise our clients not to sign them so as to avoid any level of consent or acknowledgement
to the bogus narrative strung through the PIP by the employer. You aren't getting fired anyway,
so why worry about the threat that you will be fired if you refuse to sign it? The moment you
take a step in the direction to admit anything on the PIP was correct, or the very fact that you received one, your employment case is doomed.
Receiving the PIP demonstrates you were put on notice of it and the employer will hold you to it to whatever bogus goals they establish for you.
I have seen this play out in court where a federal judge held my client to the PIP just because she received it, even though she did not sign it.
Hopefully for you, the next job will be a bit better and management will be more employee-focused and enlightened. Two, written PIP
rebuttals and corporate whistleblowing. In this strategy, do a 180-degree turn on your employer
and show them in writing the PIP you just received is part of a systemic problem related to flawed
quality control measures, clearly established violations of
the Sarbanes-Oxley internal compliance rules, outright corporate fraud, and discrimination,
to name a few. If they don't pay attention, well, let them freeze in litigation hell with
the authorities. Employers who receive internal complaints also face external scrutiny from the
Securities Exchange Commission and the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the U.S. Department of Labor. Bottom line, if you are a true professional,
then your demonstration of proper and ethical corporate practices via your PIP rebuttal
and whistleblower claim will protect you from any future allegations of corporate malfeasance or
spurious claims of breach of fiduciary duty of loyalty and care, aka attack claims used by the
defense counsel to make you feel insecure.
You must not go down with a sinking corporate ship, and your professional reputation must remain intact.
After all, you have personal financial obligations to protect.
Number three, an all-out frontal attack.
My favorite.
I have a skiing motto amongst my knucklehead buddies.
It goes like this,
Drop it like it's hot.
There's also a song by Snoop Dogg by the same name. This was a sign posted before entering an avalanche
prone area at Target in Wyoming. When dealing with your unscrupulous employer regarding the pip
you just received, you're going to pull out all the guns. First, get your facts straight. No,
I'm not kidding. Set your facts to paper in chronological
order because there are inferences, large and small, that flow through and between your fact
pattern. Start the day you were hired and move forward to the date of the PIP and then beyond.
You want to specifically focus on your performance reviews, manage your comments, and your own
comments. Pull the PIP accusations apart and factually
rebut them with contemporaneous facts in your fact pattern. You also want to look around and
see if anyone else in your department was treated more favorably than you in any way. Chances are
they were. Internal corporate counsel and HR just do not have the time resources to monitor every
employee-supervisor relationship. Yes, they are
bad eggs inside every organization. This I know to be true, and it keeps my firm busy like bees.
Keep an eye for all possible protected classifications you may fall into.
And the classifications of your colleagues. Is age, gender, sexual orientation, race, disability,
sexual harassment, etc. playing a part in the decisions your employer is making
with respect to your job? You will need to report factual situations where your colleagues were
treated more favorably than you in your attempt to show how discrimination or retaliation was the
real motive behind your supervisor's PIP accusations. Next, file an employment discrimination
complaint internally to HR.
Copy your boss and your boss's boss.
In one case a few years back, I sent the sexual harassment complaint to the CEO's wife.
It worked out in my client's favor.
All it takes is a simple email stating that you are being discriminated against.
Next, take your detailed factual chronology and file an administrative complaint with the EEOC and the relevant state agency. These two acts will insulate you against immediate termination
during the PIP and begin to build a case for retaliation discrimination when you do get fired
or demoted. Remember, internal complaints and complaints to the EEOC are not subject to Google
searches, so your claims are confidential at this point. Now that you have effectively blocked or
checked your employer's nonsense, start to think about what you want to do with your newfound legal leverage. Normally,
our clients start negotiating severance terms, which will eventually lead to your signing
a complete release and waiver of your legal claims in exchange for money. If you are lucky and you
have a good claim with well-supported facts, you can negotiate the right dollar amount to transition
you to the next job. If you are not so fortunate and your employer continues
to give you the cold shoulder, the next step is to file a lawsuit. I do it every day, but
it's not normal for you. Also, you need to consider what effect, if any, having your name
appear on a lawsuit out there on the internet. People do it all the time, so you just need to
get comfortable with this small but significant caveat. Well, now that you are off to the races,
there is some hope of settlement during litigation, as 98% of all cases settle at some point in the
process. We now live in an era of evaporating trials, which is a good sign that parties work
out deals between themselves. But if you continue to receive the cold shoulder, as we sometimes do in 20% of all cases,
then settle in for a lengthy litigation and the associated financial expense.
Please remember to maintain your full frontal attack posture at every stage mentioned above,
as psychology and public exposure play an enormous role in every case.
Good luck, and drop it like it's hot.
Number four, fight with facts but no legal claims.
Okay, so you went through this article and you realized you don't have any legal claims to stand on.
What do you do?
You also can't leave your job because you need the income.
This is a tough one.
I see it quite often.
You just have to hunker down and face that freight train head on.
Who knows? You may just survive the Vegas odds. Go through the PIP and create a Word document,
breaking down each section, and write a rebuttal to each. Ignore any employer resistance to your
filing a rebuttal or lack of space on the PIP document. Under each accusation of poor performance,
locate and list objective facts that demonstrate
your point of view. Hell, throw in your contributions to the financial performance of the company
over the past five years, i.e. you saved or made them money. We will assume here that
your performance was not flailing, but your employer wants to hire his colleague from
another job to replace you. All you can do is send a letter containing your factual arguments
to each of the purported performance problems. Send a letter to your boss, your boss's boss, and the HR
department. I would also encourage you to dig down deep into your corporate culture and try
demonstrating that you are committed to a lengthy career with this employer. Show them you bleed
corporate colors, but make it believable. Next, get on the campaign wagon and start networking
internally, letting everyone know you are as corporate loyal as it gets. Next, get on the campaign wagon and start networking internally, letting everyone know
you are as corporate loyal as it gets. Finally, say some prayers and go buy a few lottery tickets.
Good luck. You'll need it. Number five, quit and don't look back. It's cheaper. In this strategy,
the last strategy I can give you, begs the question of how you define success here.
Sure, you can hire a lawyer and fight
the employer and potentially find yourself in a lawsuit and legal fees. Not spending money on a
lawyer is a practical option that most employment lawyers will not advise. But we do. Leave your
employment immediately and save the time, expense, and anxiety related to dealing with a PIP.
A PIP is really just an employer's way of saying, quote, here's the writing on the wall.
Please leave, end quote.
I actually prefer the employer just terminate the employee instead of putting her through an unnecessary and worthless process.
No one learns anything from a PIP.
Not the employee, not the employer.
There's no management epiphany that causes further efficiency within the organization.
What there are are a lot of scorched professional reputations and deeply diminished corporate cultures.
Really, who wants to work in an office that promotes this sort of thing?
No one.
Yet management continues to follow this tortured practice.
Give me a break.
And give yourself a break.
Run!
If you'd like more information about this topic,
please contact Karen Associates PC on the web at capclaw.com.
Take care and talk to you soon.