“Check Your inbox, HR just sent an email”
That was the text someone from her workplace sent on WhatsApp. Otubea was just wrapping up with her leave to return to work the following Monday. When she opened the email and read about her “new role,” she read it twice, hoping she had misunderstood. The message was polite, full of corporate phrasing about strategic restructuring and alignment with evolving business needs. But what it really meant was that her position had been quietly dissolved, and she was being reassigned to a lower-visibility role in a department she had no interest in. No one had asked about her preferences or aspirations; there had been no prior discussions whatsoever, just pure ambush. For weeks, Otubea showed up, smiled at meetings, and told herself she’d adjust. But beneath that calm exterior grew a quiet resentment. Three months later, she had updated her CV. Six months after, she was gone! Not with a scene, but with a silence that spoke volumes.
Understanding the Trend: What Is Quiet Cutting?
Otubea’s story mirrors a growing workplace phenomenon now known as quiet cutting, the modern company’s subtle alternative to layoffs. Instead of terminating employees outright, organizations quietly “reassign” them to new roles, often with less responsibility, reduced visibility, or lower prospects for growth. It’s presented as a restructuring move meant to “optimize talent,” but for those on the receiving end, it feels like punishment disguised as opportunity. This silent strategy is on the rise, particularly in uncertain economic periods when companies want to trim costs without public layoffs or morale-damaging headlines. Unfortunately, the emotional and cultural cost of this silence is far more expensive than many leaders realize.

The Emotional Fallout of Silent Restructuring
Quiet cutting leaves a trail of disengaged, anxious employees who feel sidelined, undervalued, and expendable. The unspoken message it sends is, “You’re no longer needed, but we’d rather not say it aloud.” And while it may look efficient on paper, it often triggers a wave of loud quitting; employees resigning abruptly, venting frustrations on social media, or quietly warning peers about the company’s culture. When trust breaks, performance and innovation follow. The irony is striking: a tactic meant to avoid disruption ends up creating an even deeper one, a crisis of loyalty. The truth is, people rarely leave roles, they leave environments that stop treating them with honesty, empathy, and clarity. A job only becomes unbearable when the human connection disappears. If layoffs or restructuring are unavoidable, the least any organization can do is communicate early and openly. Give people the mental and emotional space to prepare, instead of quietly reassigning them into roles that rob them of their spark while rewarding them with peanuts. Silence may seem gentle, but it’s the quietest way to break trust.
What Quiet Cutting Says About Leadership
At its core, quiet cutting isn’t a staffing issue; it’s a leadership issue. It exposes an organization’s discomfort with honesty. Leaders often choose reassignments over direct conversations because confrontation feels messy or emotionally risky. Yet true leadership demands the courage to communicate with clarity and empathy. Employees can handle bad news; what they can’t handle is deceit or avoidance. When leadership hides behind memos instead of engaging in dialogue, it erodes the very culture it claims to protect. A transparent conversation may sting in the moment, but silence stings forever.

The HR Imperative: Lead With Empathy and Clarity
For HR professionals, this trend is both a challenge and an opportunity to redefine how transitions are managed. Difficult conversations don’t have to be cruel; they can be compassionate, structured, and honest. HR must champion a communication culture that prioritizes people over policies. That means involving employees early in change processes, offering genuine support systems, and equipping managers with the emotional intelligence to lead with empathy. When people understand the why behind a decision, they’re more likely to stay engaged even when that decision is painful. The future of HR lies not in protecting the company from emotion, but in guiding the company through it.
The SBP Africa Perspective: Change with Compassion
At SBP Africa, we believe that the true test of an organization’s culture isn’t how it hires, but how it handles change. Restructuring, role shifts, and performance reviews will always be part of business life. But respect, communication, and empathy should be constants. Every conversation is a chance to build trust or break it. When organizations choose transparency over tactics, employees don’t feel blindsided; they feel valued, even in transition. Because the loudest quitting always begins with a quiet cut and the only true antidote is honest leadership.





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Definitely a great piece Miss Delight. Finally the hidden thoughts have been said. Thanks so much for bringing awareness to this.
This reminds me of a remote job opportunity I landed. It was not the usual application process where you apply and get scheduled for an interview. As part of the application process, I was asked to make a 2mins video to state my skills and competencies, with instructions on how to present the video. All was done and an actual interview was schedule and conducted. I received a congratulatory email that I passed and training was to begin the next week. I prepared very well to go all in. You know how remote jobs are—quiet space, good laptop, high speed internet. I didn’t have it all so I borrowed my way into readiness. Three days into the training week, I was told my training is going to be halted because there was NO NEED for an addition to the department I was going to be placed and hence the company is putting me on their bank list. I was so shocked, the only thing I could say was “okay. Thank you!” I couldn’t believe my eyes and ears. I sat still for over 30mins after the call ended, with my thoughts in utter chaos. Too many whys flooded my brain all at once without answers. Why I needed to go through this process just to be told be told this will remain a question for the gods. Nonetheless, I’m still grateful for the lessons. To God be the glory.
It must have been very hard on you. Thanks for sharing Abdul
Great insight
Powerful piece, Anita 👏 transparency and empathy truly make all the difference in leadership.
I understand communication is key but can this also be a bad attempt at Change management?
absolutely Samuel. A lot come to play
I reckon ,Anita😊respect, transparency and empathy makes work smooth in leadership. Beautiful insight.
Thank you.
Such a great read, Pumpkin!
I need this published at our front desk and projected on every screen in my office!
This is a very insightful article Anita. I like the fact that it highlights a crucial, yet often overlooked, link in corporate decision-making: the lack of transparency in “quiet cutting” directly fuels the resentment that leads to “loud quitting.” The solution is not avoiding difficult conversations, but leading them with clarity, empathy, and respect. Love it!!
This was a great read, Anita.
You explained “quiet cutting” so well.
it’s something many people go through silently. I love how you reminded leaders that honesty and empathy matter more than fancy words.
When people feel heard, they stay. When they don’t, they leave quietly.
Thanks for sharing this eye-opening piece!
This piece hots too close to home. A system that values policies than the people always bear the brunt of it. The resentment of the human resource becomes evident in their work which ultimately affects the growth of the organization.
The earlier organizations prioritize their “power house (people), the better.
Thank you for touching on this 👏❤️
Respect, communication, and empathy should be constants.#
This quiet cutting hits differently in relationships. Probably, your book on relationships should be launched soon…Lol
Interesting! Well done Anita.
This is very informative, insightful and inspiring.
All spheres of culture; religiour, social economic and, political organizations, suffer the sting of the menace you highlighted and has lead to the indifference among employees who do.not have the courage to say enough is enough.
Flourishing oganizations that our “fathers” left for us has been mismanaged due to attitudes of this kind; upholding and defending policies and rules more than the emotional needs of fellow humans. I’m sorry to say it is cruel, and should not be part of our nature and culture.
In as much Change management in itself is not a bad thing, it must be tempered with empathy, honesty and effective communication.
#The dignity of the human person should be in mind. Man is never an object, and must not be treated as one.
Thank you.
You’re right Rev. Thank you so much for sharing your thoughts
I’ve had my own share of this disheartening situation…It is really a leadership issue that needs to be curbed..Thank you for sharing