Why you should fire that superstar employee

The CEO of one of the world’s biggest tech companies talked about why firms should, in certain circumstances, fire a high performing staff member.

During a weeklong trip to Melbourne, Australia, founder and CEO of Twitter and Square, Jack Dorsey, spoke of why it was sometimes necessary to let top employees go.
 
“One of the things I learnt early, early on in Twitter is sometimes you have these people who are just superstars – they have all the right answers, they have all the skills and they’re amazing,” he said at a Square Talk Shop event in Federation Square.
 
If they are too negative in their attitude however, they won’t fit in with the company culture, he added. If they can’t provide a positive influence on others, it won’t work out.
 
“You tend to optimise for skills rather than recognising that the negative is actually dragging everything down.”
 
This, he noted, can be a crucial mistake as negative individuals tend to make work harder for others because of their attitude.
 
“No matter how good this person is, if they can’t bring a positive and optimistic attitude to their work you’re probably going to be slowed down.”
 
Dorsey recounted a moment from the early days of Twitter where he had to let go of certain superstar employees.
 
“That was really hard for me because we did have people that were just amazingly skilled, brilliant people but ultimately they were just super negative,” he said.
 
Although resistant at first, Dorsey realised that this decision then led to other more positive results.
 
“All this new leadership emerged and all this new positive energy emerged. It just unlocked all these interesting attributes in other people.”
 
More like this:

Union calls for fair pay on employee appreciation day

Two thirds of workers admit they’re “out of their depth”

Tech firm Tinder offers internship to ousted student
 

Recent articles & video

Over 200 employers banned from hiring skilled migrants under AEWV

Fonterra bans EY staff facing misconduct probe: report

Tesla to lay off over 6,000 employees: reports

What are the top factors driving women to leave employers?

Most Read Articles

Kiwi firms still looking to hire despite challenging economy

'We need to be constantly pulse-checking with employees'

Woolworths pleads guilty in $1.1-million wage underpayment case