
Whether your employee has chosen to resign from their role, or you’ve had to make the decision to end a staff member’s employment, saying goodbye to a departing employee isn’t always easy. So how can people managers and employers make this process smoother? In all starts with having best-practice offboarding processes in place.
Regardless of who’s decision it is to terminate the employment, having offboarding best practices means you can create a better experience that helps ensure employees leave on good terms. A thoughtful offboarding process isn’t just about tying up loose ends – it’s an opportunity to turn exits into meaningful and professional farewells.
If your business is looking to implement or improve an offboarding process we’re sharing our best-practice tips with you here, so let’s get started…
1. What is the employee offboarding process in HR?
Offboarding is the process a business follows to manage a team member who’s leaving the company, whether it’s due to resignation, retirement, termination, or other reasons. It encompasses all the formalities, tasks, and interactions involved in ensuring a smooth transition for the departing employee and the company.
A successful offboarding process is multifaceted and aims to:
- Safeguard the organisation by collecting company assets, revoking access, and ensuring compliance with legal and contractual obligations.
- Create a positive experience for the departing employee by fostering respectful communication, addressing concerns, and, if appropriate, leaving the door open for future opportunities.
- Protect the employer brand, as former employees may be more inclined to share their exit experiences through professional networks or review platforms like Glassdoor.
2. Onboarding and offboarding: why does employee experience matter?
When you welcome a new team member into your business, you’d want their employee onboarding experience to be positive and seamless – it’s a great way to start the relationship and sets the scene for the new starter. So when it comes to offboarding a staff member, it really is no different. By handling exits thoughtfully and systematically, you as an employer or an HR team can minimise disruption, enhance reputation, and even turn departing employees into long-term advocates for the company.
3. What are the key elements for managing an employee throughout the offboarding process?
A successful offboarding process ensures you have all your bases covered. So what are the key elements that every business should include?
- Exit interviews to gather honest feedback about how employees feel about their experience, pinpoint areas for improvement, and gain insights into workplace culture.
- Knowledge transfer plans ensure that critical responsibilities and information are effectively handed off to the remaining team members.
- Compliance steps, such as ensuring final payroll and benefits are processed correctly and adhering to any regulatory requirements.
- Revocation of access to IT systems, physical offices, and confidential company property for security purposes.
4. How can Citation HR help?
Even if your best employee leaves the company or you’re dealing with a boomerang employee, having best-practice employee offboarding processes in place is essential – and that’s where Citation HR can help.
Having an industry-leading HR team behind you will make offboarding seamless and stress-free. Our software allows you to easily manage each stage of the employee lifecycle, think – recruitment, onboarding, termination and retirement. Plus when it’s time to make those difficult decisions, our HR experts are on standby 24/7 to give you advice. Citation HR really is the end-to-end people management tool that helps you get on with business.
To discover how Citation HR can help streamline your HR processes and protect your business, contact us for a no-obligation chat. Book your call here.