Inform callers of employee's death?
Caroliso
352 Posts
I've recently experienced two different ways of handling informing callers of an employee's death, and was interested in knowing how others handled this.
The first happened in my own company. I received a call on a Monday that an employee had died the previous Friday from a sudden fatal fall. Her adult daughter gave me the news, and during that call asked me to inform her co-workers, and to send an e-mail to people in her e-mail address book to reach people she might not know about. There was only one call that came in for her that week and the switchboard routed it to me (HR Director). I informed the person of her passing. We have no policy on this (not the sort of thing you even think about until it happens) although generally we do not give out information about employees, except for verification of present or former employment, without out their consent.
Recently a co-worker was trying to track down someone who was due to attend a conference here (we'd made his air reservations and everything) and she just could not track him down. No response to e-mails. She called his current employer and reception said he was no longer with the company, and HR had no forwarding info for him. She couldn't find him listed in his home town, and was racking her brain trying to think of how she could contact him. She finally learned from an obituary she found by doing an internet search, that he'd passed away in early August.
I found myself wondering why an employer would not tell a caller that the employee hadn't just left their employ (let's assume they were informed), but he was dead. Can anyone speak to this, or share your own approach if you've had occasion to think what you would do or, heaven forbid, have been in this situation?
Thanks.
The first happened in my own company. I received a call on a Monday that an employee had died the previous Friday from a sudden fatal fall. Her adult daughter gave me the news, and during that call asked me to inform her co-workers, and to send an e-mail to people in her e-mail address book to reach people she might not know about. There was only one call that came in for her that week and the switchboard routed it to me (HR Director). I informed the person of her passing. We have no policy on this (not the sort of thing you even think about until it happens) although generally we do not give out information about employees, except for verification of present or former employment, without out their consent.
Recently a co-worker was trying to track down someone who was due to attend a conference here (we'd made his air reservations and everything) and she just could not track him down. No response to e-mails. She called his current employer and reception said he was no longer with the company, and HR had no forwarding info for him. She couldn't find him listed in his home town, and was racking her brain trying to think of how she could contact him. She finally learned from an obituary she found by doing an internet search, that he'd passed away in early August.
I found myself wondering why an employer would not tell a caller that the employee hadn't just left their employ (let's assume they were informed), but he was dead. Can anyone speak to this, or share your own approach if you've had occasion to think what you would do or, heaven forbid, have been in this situation?
Thanks.
Comments
I know my employee who called the deceased's employer probed more because she really needed that individual and not because of his current employer, and she was stopped cold at reception based on HR's instructions that he was gone and they had no forwarding information. But I guess I'll just chalk it up to another organization's way of handling this for whatever reason. I prefer our approach.
So I got drafted to write a small piece for the quarterly newsletter--not the easiest thing I have ever written. The response was quite overwhelming--people actually sent flowers and condolence cards.
For most of our other clients, it really didn't matter. None of them have asked where she went. If they did, I think we would just say she died suddenly and then move on.