I put off firing my first genuinely poor-fit employee for nearly four months past the point I’d honestly known it needed to happen, hoping the situation would somehow resolve itself without me having to have the actual conversation. It didn’t resolve itself. It got harder, more expensive, and more disruptive to the rest of the small team the longer I avoided it, and when I finally did have the conversation, it went more smoothly than months of anxious anticipation had led me to expect.
I’m not an employment attorney, and this isn’t legal advice specific to your situation, since termination processes and requirements vary significantly by jurisdiction and by the specifics of the employment relationship. Get advice from an actual employment attorney before terminating anyone, particularly around documentation and any state-specific requirements. What follows is what nobody prepared me for emotionally and practically, beyond the legal specifics themselves.
Why First-Time Founders Delay This Longer Than They Should
Firing someone as a first-time employer carries a specific kind of weight that’s different from a more experienced manager’s version of the same decision. There’s often a real personal relationship involved, especially in a very small team, and there’s genuine uncertainty about whether the problem is really the employee or actually a failure of your own management, unclear instructions, insufficient feedback, unrealistic expectations. That uncertainty is worth taking seriously and honestly working through, and it’s also frequently used, including by me, as a reason to delay a decision that honest reflection has already actually confirmed.
I spent real time genuinely trying to determine whether the issue was management or fit, which was a legitimate exercise. I then spent additional months delaying the decision after I’d already honestly concluded it was a genuine fit problem, which was avoidance dressed up as continued reflection.
The Real Cost of Delaying Once You’ve Actually Reached a Conclusion
Beyond the obvious cost of continued poor performance, delaying a termination you’ve already honestly concluded is necessary has real costs on the rest of a small team, who are often aware of the problem well before you finally act, and who begin to lose some confidence in your judgment and standards the longer an obviously poor fit remains unaddressed. In a small business specifically, one employee’s underperformance is far more visible and disruptive to the rest of the team than it would be in a larger organization with more people to absorb the gap.
I underestimated this cost significantly. My other employee mentioned afterward, gently, that she’d noticed the situation for months and had quietly wondered why nothing was changing, a comment that made clear the delay had cost more in team trust than I’d realized while I was in the middle of it.
What Actually Made the Conversation Itself Go Better Than Expected
Being direct and specific about the actual reasons, without excessive softening that obscures the core message, made the conversation clearer for both of us than a vaguer, more cushioned version would have. I’d rehearsed a version that hedged and softened extensively, worried about the emotional impact, and the actual conversation worked better when I stated things clearly and directly while still remaining respectful and calm.
Having genuinely documented specific instances beforehand, not vague general impressions, made the conversation more concrete and, honestly, easier for both of us, since it moved the discussion away from something that could feel personal or subjective toward specific, factual patterns that had actually occurred.
What I’d Tell a First-Time Founder About to Do This
Confirm you’re not still in genuine, honest reflection about whether this is a management issue versus a fit issue, that’s a legitimate process worth taking seriously. But once you’ve honestly reached a conclusion, recognize any further delay as avoidance, not continued reflection, and treat it accordingly.
Get real guidance from an employment attorney beforehand about the specific requirements in your jurisdiction and situation, not just for legal protection, but because that guidance often clarifies practical details, exactly what to say, what documentation to have ready, that reduce a meaningful amount of the anxious uncertainty around the conversation itself.
The Part That Surprised Me Most
The employee’s actual reaction was calmer and more understanding than the anxious version I’d built up in my head over months of anticipation. She told me, honestly, that she’d sensed the mismatch herself for a while and had been quietly relieved someone finally addressed it directly rather than continuing an uncomfortable situation neither of us was genuinely benefiting from. This isn’t universal, some terminations are genuinely difficult and contentious regardless of how well they’re handled, but it’s common enough, and worth knowing, that the anticipation is frequently far worse than the actual conversation turns out to be.
What to Do Now
If you’re currently in a similar situation, honestly assess whether you’re still in genuine reflection or have already reached a real conclusion you’re simply avoiding acting on. If it’s the latter, schedule a consultation with an employment attorney this week to understand the specific requirements for your situation, and set a real, specific date for the conversation rather than letting it continue to drift.
The anticipation is very often worse than the actual conversation, and the cost of delay, to the business, to the rest of the team, and to your own credibility as a manager, compounds every additional week the decision sits unaddressed.