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How to be prepared for layoffs

What you can do today to avoid getting caught off guard in case layoffs come for you

Lenny Rachitsky's avatar
Lenny Rachitsky
Feb 21, 2023
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👋 Hey, I’m Lenny and welcome to a 🔒 subscriber-only edition 🔒 of my weekly newsletter. Each week I tackle reader questions about building product, driving growth, and accelerating your career.


Q: I fear layoffs are coming at my company. What can I be doing to prepare in case I get laid off?

I imagine many people are feeling this way right now. Grateful they still have a job, but scared of what may be coming around the corner.

Not being in this situation myself but with the benefit of a large audience of insightful readers, I went to Twitter and LinkedIn to ask people who’d recently been laid off what they wish they had done to have been better prepared. Here’s the most common advice I heard:

  1. Document your accomplishments

  2. Build (and freshen up) your network

  3. Update your resume

  4. Add some cushion to your savings account

  5. Explore additional sources of income (e.g. a side hustle)

  6. Save your favorite people’s contact info

  7. Don’t let work define you

Below, I’ll dig into these suggestions and share specific things you can do within each. If there’s anything else you’d recommend from your own experience, other readers would really appreciate your advice 👇

Leave a comment

Thank you to Matt Quinn for encouraging me to write about this topic, and to everyone who contributes their advice 🙏

1. Save your accomplishments

Surprisingly, the single most common piece of advice was to save details about your accomplishments. Since you’ll suddenly lose access to many of the details, and all of your future interviewers will ask about what you’ve accomplished, this is a high-ROI task.

Twitter avatar for @rhaecker2
Raechel Haecker @rhaecker2
@lennysan Keep detailed records of all of your accomplishments, reflections on things that went well/did not go well with your team or XFN, collect records of any accolades you were given. Helps a LOT with both your resume and your interviews.
12:37 AM ∙ Feb 16, 2023
Twitter avatar for @sevedkim
Seve Kim @sevedkim
@lennysan Better documented my wins to tell a better story in my resume/portfolio
8:26 PM ∙ Feb 15, 2023

How to go about doing this: So easy! Go open up a new doc and start dumping a list of times you’ve made an impact at your current job. Include metrics, screenshots, timelines, stories—anything that’ll help you tell the story of your successes.

Do it today, while your memory is fresh and you have access to the details. Don’t overthink it. Here are some templates that may help: guide 1, guide 2, guide 3.

2. Build (and freshen up) your network

You’ve heard this a million times, but it’s still true: it’s not what you know, it’s who you know. Networking sucks, but it sucks more when you don’t have a job.

Twitter avatar for @GrowthWithG
Greg Robinson @GrowthWithG
@lennysan Network and build relationships with colleagues and industry professionals BEFORE you need them.
6:39 AM ∙ Feb 16, 2023
Twitter avatar for @rhaecker2
Raechel Haecker @rhaecker2
@lennysan Also network more consistently, even when things are “good”, because those will be your advocates when things are not!
12:38 AM ∙ Feb 16, 2023

How to go about doing this:

  1. Who are your 5 most talented friends and former colleagues who work at other interesting companies? Casually ping them to see how things are going.

  2. Start participating in a community (hint: the Friends of Lenny’s Newsletter Slack community is a great place to start—if you’re a paid subscriber and haven’t gotten an invite, reply and let me know)

  3. Participate in a hackathon (browse here and here)

  4. Go to a local meetup or talk on a subject you’re excited about

  5. Reply to that one recruiter who reached out to you a while back, and ask them about the market these days

3. Update your resume

Resumes still matter, and going through the exercise will help you with these other items. Update your LinkedIn profile while you’re at it.

Twitter avatar for @1sprintatatime
Deepa Goyal @1sprintatatime
@sevedkim @lennysan I recommend that everyone update their resumes once or twice a year. Its a helpful exercise to zoom out from your day-to-day and reflect on the work you’ve been doing, by trying to present it for an external eye.
7:00 AM ∙ Feb 16, 2023

How to go about doing this:

  1. Capture your accomplishments (see Step 1 above)

  2. Put together a V1 resume. Some templates to get you started: template 1, template 2, template 3, or get a cool custom resume design from Etsy

  3. Ask your successful friends/colleagues for feedback

  4. Share it in an online community that you’re (hopefully) involved in, and ask for feedback

  5. Explore resume review services like this one

4. Add some cushion to your savings account

Imagine no more paychecks starting next month. What are you spending per month, and how much runway do you have?

Twitter avatar for @tomwrightnow
TOM WRIGHT @tomwrightnow
@lennysan I wasn't, but a few colleagues were. And only one had at least 3 months salary saved up. My goal is to always have the same, or salary equivalent in second income
8:42 PM ∙ Feb 15, 2023
Twitter avatar for @Mcraigpdx
Michelle Craig @Mcraigpdx
@lennysan Stronger savings & budgeting; kept a personal crm of folks that I connected and had good chats or engagements with
2:57 AM ∙ Feb 16, 2023

How to go about doing this:

  1. Cancel unnecessary subscription services and memberships (I use Rocket Money for this)

  2. Track your spending and/or create a budget using apps like Copilot, You Need A Budget, and Simplifi

  3. Try an automatic savings app, like Digit, Chime, or Qapital

  4. Put money into a high-yield savings account

  5. Learn about about FIRE (financial independence, retire early)

5. Explore additional sources of income

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