Insights

Outplacement, Leadership, and the Moments That Matter Most

VB&A Founder Victoria Buckenham reflects on the leadership judgement required when organisations face redundancy decisions. She explores how thoughtful outplacement support can help leaders navigate these moments with integrity, care, and long-term cultural impact.

March 5, 2026   |   Victoria Buckenham

Redundancy is never just a business decision. It’s a human moment, one that people remember long after the spreadsheets are closed and the org charts are redrawn. How leaders show up during these times matters deeply, not just to those leaving, but to those who remain, and to the story the organisation tells about itself.

Last week, a conversation with a client stopped me in my tracks and reminded me why outplacement, done properly, is such a powerful leadership capability.

A conversation that stayed with me

I was speaking with a senior leader who is having to make their entire team redundant. As part of the same restructure, they will also be leaving the organisation.

One of the questions they brought to our conversation was this:

‘Should I personally conduct the redundancy consultations for my team, or should this be handled by another leader and HR?’

It’s a deceptively simple question, and a deeply human one.

What followed was a thoughtful discussion about leadership presence, emotional impact, responsibility, and long-term consequences. Not just what the right process was, but how it would feel for the people involved.

The case for leaders being personally involved

There were clear reasons why their instinct was to stay close to their people:

Trust and relationship: They knew their team well. They trusted them, and they understood their individual circumstances, strengths, and concerns.
Authenticity: Hearing difficult news from someone familiar can feel more honest and human than a handover to someone more removed.
Leadership ownership: There is something powerful about leaders standing behind hard decisions rather than stepping away from them.

Handled well, this approach can preserve dignity, respect, and a sense that people matter, even at the point of exit.

The risks leaders must also hold

But we also talked openly about the potential downsides:

Emotional weight: Being both impacted and responsible can be incredibly draining, particularly when leaders are processing their own uncertainty. My client also spoke to the fact they didn’t agree with the decisions being made by the organisation which made this even tricker for them to personally navigate.
Misplaced blame: Even when decisions are not theirs alone, leaders can become the focal point for frustration, anger, or disappointment.
Reduced clarity: Emotional proximity can sometimes make it harder to communicate with the clarity and consistency these moments require.

There is no perfect answer. Only conscious leadership judgement.

What this really comes down to

At its heart, this isn’t about process. It’s about human response.

Leadership shows up most clearly not in easy moments, but in how we communicate, support, and follow through when things are uncomfortable. Whether a leader is personally affected or not, how they behave during redundancy shapes:

– How safe people feel
– How much trust remains
– What those leaving say about the organisation
– What those staying believe about working there

These moments become cultural reference points, i.e ‘This is how things are handled here.’

Where outplacement genuinely helps

This is where thoughtful outplacement support makes a real difference.

At VB&A, our outplacement programmes go far beyond CV updates and interview preparation, although those things absolutely matter. We support individuals with:

– Personal branding (CV, LinkedIn, messaging)
– Career strategy and job search approach
– Interview preparation, negotiation, and onboarding

But just as importantly, we create space for the human side of transition:

– Rebuilding confidence after unexpected change
– Making sense of identity when a role or team ends
– Reflecting on what’s next, rather than rushing into the next available option

For organisations, this support sends a clear message: people still matter, even when the answer is no longer yes.

An opportunity to lead well

Redundancy will never be easy. Nor should it be.

But it can be handled with care, integrity, and thoughtfulness. Leaders don’t need to have all the answers, but they do need to be intentional about how they show up.

Outplacement, when done well, is not just support for those leaving. It’s reassurance for those staying. And it’s a reflection of organisational values in action.

Final takeaway

Long after people forget the detail of the restructure, they remember how it felt to be treated.

The organisations that get this right understand one simple truth:

Integrity isn’t proven when things are easy. It’s revealed when they’re not.

Victoria Buckenham 2026

Further reading

Leadership Development that Supports Strategy

March 5, 2026 | Victoria Buckenham

VB&A Founder Victoria examines how leadership development can move beyond workshops to become a true driver of organisational strategy. She outlines what effective programmes look like, and the key questions decision-makers should ask before refreshing their leadership framework.

Bedroom to Boardroom: Build a People Strategy That Grows With You

March 5, 2026 | Victoria Buckenham

VB&A Founder Victoria Buckenham looks at why many successful SMEs reach a point where growth outpaces identity. She explains how a clear people strategy helps leaders attract talent, strengthen culture, and scale their organisation with confidence.

Outplacement as a Strategic Capability (Not a Tick-Box Exercise)

March 5, 2026 | Victoria Buckenham

VB&A Founder Victoria Buckenham shares why outplacement should be seen as a strategic leadership capability, not simply a process to manage during redundancy. Drawing on years of experience supporting organisations and individuals through transition, she explores how these moments shape culture, trust, and reputation.

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