The Changing Outplacement Process This page intentionally left blank The Changing Outplacement Process New Methods and Opportunities for Transition Management John L. Meyer & Carolyn C. Shadle FOREWORD BY David A. Lord Q QUORUM BOOKS WESTPORT, CONNECTICUT • LONDON Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Meyer, John L. The changing outplacement process : new methods and opportunities for transition management / John L. Meyer and Carolyn C. Shadle ; foreword by David A. Lord, p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-89930-890-2 1. Job hunting. 2. Unemployed—Counseling of. 3. Outplacement agencies. 4. Employees -Recruiting. I. Shadle, Carolyn C. II. Title. HF5382.7.M49 1994 650.14—dc20 94-2988 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is available. Copyright €> 1994 by ICS, Inc. All rights reserved No portion of this book may be reproduced, by any process or technique, w ithout the express written consent of the publisher. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 94-2988 ISBN: 0-89930-890-2 First published in 1994 Quorum Books, 88 Post Road West, Westport, CT 06881 An imprint of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc. Printed in the United States of America The paper used in this book complies with the Permanent Paper Standard issued by the National Information Standards Organization (Z39.48-1984). 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 32 Copyright Acknowledgments The authors and publisher gratefully acknowledge permission to reprint the following pre viously published item: Selected quotes from Career Planning & Adult Development Network Newsletter, Vol. 14, No. 11, November 1992, pp. 1-2. Copyright O 1992 by Richaid L. Knowdell. Reprinted with permission of the author. In order to keep this title in print and available to the academic community, this edition was produced using digital reprint technology in a relatively shoit print run. This would not have been attainable using traditional methods. Although the cover has been changed from its original appearance, the text remains the same and all materials and methods used still conform to the highest book-making standards. Contents Figures and Table ix Foreword by David A.Lixd ix Preface xi Acknowledgments xiii Introduction xvii PARTI. THENEWCAREERISM 1 1. The Turbulent World of Work 3 2. When the Employee Is Outplaced 19 3. The Ripple Effect 27 PART II. THE NEW OUTPLACEMENT PROCESS 41 STAGE ONE: PLANNING AND PREPARING 43 4. Contracting for OTR 45 5. Getting Terminated Employees Started 51 6. Accoutrements for People in Transition 63 7. Personal Counseling—What and When 69 VI Contents STAGE TWO: MAKING DECISIONS 81 8. Assessing the Unemployed Candidate 83 9. Career Decision Making 95 10. Career Pathing 103 STAGE THREE: LAUNCHING THE CAMPAIGN 113 11. The Marketing Metaphor 115 12. The Resume—A Personal Sales Representative 125 13. Networking: Contacts and Connections, Links and Linkages 131 14. Employment Interviewing 145 PART III. THE OTR PROCESS AND ITS INDUSTRY 169 15. Changes in the OTR Process 171 16. The New OTR Process and the New Careerism 185 17. The New Face of Today's OTR Industry 199 18. Challenges and Responses: Issues and Ethics 225 19. Choosing Wisely: How to Select the Right OTR Service 247 Appendix A: Historical Perspective 265 Appendix B: Chronology of the Outplacement Profession 265 Appendix C: Career Transition Resources2 265 Appendix D: Reemployment Act of I94 265 Selected Bibliograp h 265 Index 283 Figures and Tables FIGURES 1.1 PeopleData 4 2.1 Reactions Along a Curve 20 3.1 Communication of the Plan to Remaining and Separated Employees 33 4.1 The Three-Stage OTR Process 44 7.1 Financial Review Form 75 10.1 Biographical Worksheet 105 13.1 One Link or Tie 134 13.2 Inner-Circle You 135 13.3 Outer-Circle You 136 13.4 Weaker Ties 136 13.5 Steps and Links 137 14.1 Screening Interviews 148 14.2 Taking Stock 152 15.1 Management Levels Receiving Outplacement 173 15.2 The Helping Continuum 181 16.1 Research Techniques 192 17.1 How the Outplacement Market Is Divided 202 VIII Figures and Tables 17.2 Circle of Services 208 17.3 Outplacement/Career Transition Activities 219 TABLES 14.1 Six Stages and Phases to the Employment Interview 156 17.1 Outplacement Industry Serves More Candidates Every Year 201 17.2 Types of Outplacement Assistance: A Five-Year Trend 201 Foreword This book is about professional services, but it also provides a professional ser vice: a comprehensive, independent view of outplacement^ history, its current state-of-the-art methods, and its prospects for change and growth in a changing economy. This is a first-of-its-kind effort, and one that probably could not have been car ried out by anyone within the outplacement profession, since the true value of any professional service lies largely in the independent view it brings to a situation of significance. The situation of significance here is the transformation of what we know as outplacement to a broader field: transition consulting, both for individu als and organizations. It's never easy to write about change—it is a moving target. And in this case, the moving target is seen from several vantages: corporate clients, individual job seek ers, consulting practitioners, and observers from related businesses and profes sions. These differing views are reflected, and well-documented, in this very thorough report. But the authors have gone one important step further: They have assimilated the most impressive elements of today's transition consulting methods into what can be considered a model program for the profession. As outplacement practitioners continue to redefine the profession's body of knowledge, The Changing Outplacement Process will be an important point of reference in a rapidly evolving business. The authors have indeed provided a pro fessional resource to these professional services. David A. Lord
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