Why companies hire back people they just laid off
Briefly

Why companies hire back people they just laid off
"Many of us have heard of "boomerang employees"-someone who leaves a company and later returns-but there's a newer version showing up in the workplace: the layoff boomerang. Maybe you've seen it yourself. A coworker disappears after a round of cuts, only to show up again a few months later. Same desk. Same job. Sometimes even a bigger paycheck."
"According to research done by Dr. Andrea Derler at workforce analytics firm Visier, 5.3% of laid-off employees now get rehired by the same organization after a layoff. But the most surprising part isn't the number-it's that it's been happening for years. We just didn't know. "What surprised me the most was that this has been happening for the last several years. The 5.3% isn't just a recent figure; consistently, organizations seem to be rehiring after layoffs," she says."
"While it might feel more prevalent now, with AI adding confusion and uncertainty for business leaders, it was happening during the pandemic as well-and maybe even before then. "Change has always happened," Derler said. "We've always had those crisis moments, but things just come out into the open more nowadays. We have the data.""
Layoff boomerangs occur when employees who were laid off are later rehired by the same organization. Research from a workforce analytics firm found that 5.3% of laid-off employees are rehired by the same employer after a layoff. The rehiring pattern has been consistent over several years, including during the pandemic and possibly earlier. Some returning employees reclaim the same role and sometimes receive higher pay. Increased visibility, data availability, and factors such as AI-driven uncertainty for business leaders coincide with the perception that the practice is becoming more noticeable.
Read at Fast Company
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