Vishal Garg, the CEO
of Better.com, had fired almost 900 employees over a Zoom call just weeks
before Christmas last year.
“I come to you with
not great news. If you're on this call you are part of the unlucky group that
is being laid off. Your employment here is terminated effective immediately,”
Garg had said, drawing widespread criticism over the way he informed about 9
percent of the company's employees that they were being let go.
Garg had later apologised for the way he
handled the layoffs, saying, "I failed to show the appropriate amount of
respect and appreciation for the individuals who were affected and for their
contributions to Better. I own the decision to do the layoffs, but in
communicating it I blundered the execution.
In doing so, I embarrassed you." It
was announced on Wednesday that Garg is returning to his position, weeks after
the company's board had announced in a staff memo that he was “taking time off”
following the “very regrettable events.”
A report in The New York Times cited an
email sent by the company's board to staff that read, “As you know, Better's
CEO Vishal Garg has been taking a break from his full-time duties to reflect on
his leadership, reconnect with the values that make Better great and work
closely with an executive coach."
"We are confident in Vishal and in the
changes he is committed to making to provide the type of leadership, focus and
vision that Better needs at this pivotal time,” it said.
A CNN report said that in a separate letter
to employees, Garg said, “I understand how hard these past few weeks have been.
I am deeply sorry for the angst, distraction and embarrassment my actions have
caused. I've spent a lot of time thinking about where we are as a company and
the type of leadership Better needs ... and the leader I want to be."
After firing the employees, Garg had told
them that they could expect an email from the Human Resource department,
detailing benefits and severance. Garg had cited market efficiency, performance
and productivity as the reasons behind the firings.
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