Involuntary departures (layoffs, terminations for cause, role eliminations) require a different communication approach than voluntary exits. The logistics are similar, but the tone, timing, and who sends what changes significantly.
For terminations, the manager conversation happens first. The offboarding logistics email follows the same day or the next morning, covering equipment return, access revocation, and any severance or final pay details. Keep this email factual and to the point. Farewell language is out of place and can come across as insincere. Where an HR team is involved, they should send the logistics email rather than the manager.
Team departure announcements for involuntary exits should be brief and neutral. Confirming someone's last day and transition plan is enough. Avoid phrases that imply performance issues ("pursuing other opportunities") or that speculate on what's next for the person. For layoffs affecting multiple people, a single announcement from leadership explaining the business context works better than individual departure notices sent one at a time.