Ethical practice is a foundational principle of strategic communication management, particularly during periods of organizational change that directly affect employees’ livelihoods. In this scenario, the most appropriate recommendation is toconduct interviews after layoffs have occurred, because proceeding beforehand would involve a significant ethical breach related to transparency, trust, and respect for stakeholders.
Conducting interviews with managers who are unknowingly slated for redundancy places the communication manager in a position of deception by omission. Strategic communication ethics emphasize honesty, fairness, and the avoidance of practices that exploit stakeholder participation under false assumptions. Asking employees to contribute ideas about a future they will not be part of undermines trust and can cause lasting reputational harm once layoffs are announced.
Postponing interviews until after layoffs ensures that participation is informed and voluntary. It respects the dignity of those affected and protects the organization from accusations of manipulation or bad faith engagement. While leadership may want to move quickly, ethical communication leaders are expected to provide counsel that balances efficiency with integrity.
The alternative options are ethically flawed. Soliciting volunteers or using random sampling still risks involving individuals who will be laid off without their knowledge. Interviewing only those not affected requires disclosure of layoff decisions, which leadership has not yet made public and may not be prepared to manage. Strategic communication management recognizes that timing and transparency are critical during reorganizations.
By recommending interviews after layoffs, the communication manager demonstrates ethical leadership, safeguards organizational credibility, and reinforces trust among remaining employees—an essential factor for successful change implementation. This approach aligns with professional standards that prioritize ethical conduct over short-term convenience in communication decision-making.