In today's offices, not all job exits happen through formal layoffs or termination letters. A growing workplace trend called quiet firing is making employees leave their jobs without being officially fired and many don't even realise it's happening to them. Quiet firing is when a manager or company slowly pushes an employee to resign by making their work life difficul or meaningless.

What is Quiet Firing?
Quiet firing happens when employers stop supporting an employee instead of clearly telling them what's wrong or letting them go. There is no official warning, no performance discussion, and no clear communication.
Instead, the employee may suddenly Stop getting feedback, Be ignored by their manager, Be denied promotions or salary hikes, Lose access to important projects and also Be left out of meetings and emails. Over time, the employee feels unwanted, confused, and mentally exhausted, eventually choosing to quit on their own.
What are the Common signs of quiet firing at work
Many employees experience quiet firing without knowing the term for it. Some common warning signs as per an article by Builtin
- Your manager no longer checks in or guides you
- You are given boring, low-value, or unnecessary tasks
- Your growth, training, or promotion discussions disappear
- You are micromanaged but never appreciated
- Your work is criticised but never improved through feedback
These actions slowly make employees feel sidelined, undervalued, and disconnected from their team.
Quiet firing vs quiet quitting; what's the difference?
While the terms sound similar, quiet firing and quiet quitting are very different.
Quiet firing is done by employers. The goal is to make the employee resign without officially firing them.
Quiet quitting is done by employees. Workers do only what their job requires, no extra effort often due to burnout or lack of motivation.
In many cases, quiet firing leads to quiet quitting, as employees emotionally detach before finally leaving the organisation.
Why do companies use quiet firing?
Many companies quietly push employees out to avoid legal issues, severance costs, or difficult conversations. By forcing a resignation, organisations save money and paperwork
The biggest impact of quiet firing is emotional. Employees often blame themselves, feel insecure, and question their abilities. The lack of clarity creates stress, anxiety, and burnout.
Because there is no official feedback, many workers suffer silently, unsure whether to stay, fight, or quit.
Quiet firing may look harmless on the surface, but it is a serious workplace issue. It shifts responsibility away from employers and places emotional pressure on employees to walk away.
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