Engineering a Severance Package from a Performance Improvement Plan
Learn how we helped an employee navigate a Performance Improvement Plan (PIP) and negotiate a severance package that provided financial security and a clean exit.
A senior employee was told he would be placed on a performance improvement plan. He considered the performance allegations a sham designed to pressure him into resigning, but he had no intention of leaving on notice pay alone. The employer had not offered any settlement agreement as an alternative to the PIP and was pushing ahead without giving him that option.
The client needed to create leverage to prompt a settlement offer that didn’t yet exist and to maximise the time he remained employed on full pay while negotiations unfolded.
Step 1: Grievance Timing
We advised the client on both the content of a formal grievance and, critically, the right moment to submit it. Filing the grievance first paused the PIP immediately, keeping the client in employment on full pay while the company carried out its investigation.
Step 2: Without Prejudice Approach
Once the grievance outcome was issued (approximately two months later) and as the employer attempted to restart the PIP, we sent a without prejudice letter setting out settlement terms, pausing the PIP for a second time while negotiations began.
Step 3: Settlement Negotiation
We negotiated the ex-gratia payment upward to the employer’s best and final offer, then advised on the full settlement agreement. This included the meaning and scope of the client’s restrictive covenants and the negotiation of a reduction or full waiver of the six-month non-compete clause.
This was a great outcome in this particular case, bearing in mind that the client originally came to us facing a PIP with no settlement agreement on the table from the company.
Instead of the client resigning and working his three months’ notice period, we were able to achieve an exit package of nine months’ pay, including a payment in lieu of notice. This meant that the client was not required to work his contractual notice period and could leave the company immediately. The reduction of the non-compete clause was also significant, as the client was a very senior figure in the company and his career was in the same sector.
Not working for 6 months after termination would have had disastrous consequences for the client and his family. Reducing the scope to three months was of huge importance.
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Email: jmcconkey@settlementagreements.co.uk
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