Ford gives underperforming employees option to take severance package

Ford Motor Co. is giving longtime employees with job performance issues the option to voluntarily leave the company under a policy update, the company confirmed Monday.

A new option gives certain employees the ability to leave the company with severance packages rather than go through the automaker’s performance management system, known internally as a Performance Enhancement Plan or PEP, according to company spokesperson Marisa Bradley.

That plan has long been in place for U.S. salaried workers with at least eight years of service at Ford. Under that process, white-collar workers who have been flagged for underperforming in their roles have weekly check-ins with their managers and objectives to meet over a roughly six-week period. Failure to turn around their performance at the end of the process could result in their termination.

Managers were informed of the new severance option in a note Oct. 4, and the updated policy is now in effect. The Wall Street Journal first reported the new component of the program.

Typically how Ford’s performance management system would work, Bradley said, is that employees who are struggling to meet their performance goals would have numerous conversations with their managers before the company made them go through a PEP. Employees who go through the process have to show each week what progress they are making on turning things around.

The updated policy now allows employees who have reached that point of intervention to leave the company with severance payouts based on length of employment, continuation of benefits and career transition services. The process would remain unchanged for those who opt to go through a PEP rather than leave — meaning they could be subject to termination, without severance, if they ultimately fail to turn around their performance.