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Inside Netflix: The postmortems exposing exactly why employees are fired

New reports reveal that streaming giant Netflix has some very frank, and sometimes distressing, human resources policies.
Matthew Elmas
Netflix

Imagine being fired and then showing up for a meeting where your colleagues discuss why.

That was a reality for Netflixโ€™s former vice president of content Sean Carey, who after five years at the online streaming giant was asked to leave.

Forty to 50 people from his team attended a โ€œpost-mortemโ€ where Ted Sarandos, Netflixโ€™s chief content officer, explained as the companyโ€™s focus shifted to original programming, Carey was no longer suited for his role.

Thatโ€™s according to a deep-dive into Netflixโ€™s corporate culture published by the Wall Street Journal over the weekend, which is shining a light on the rather unique way the business operates.

The WSJ reported fired workers donโ€™t usually attend their โ€œpost-mortemsโ€ but they are regular practice within the company,

โ€œIt was certainly awkward for some, but was also consistent with the culture โ€” there is sometimes a cost to transparency,โ€ Carey told the WSJ.

Netflix says values candour and transparency in its corporate culture, which is designed to promote a high-performance work environment which supports the companyโ€™s ongoing growth.

Some workers even said they appreciated the postmortems, despite feeling as though they were a little awkward.

Managers at Netflix are reportedly told to apply a so-called โ€œkeeper testโ€ to staff, where they ask themselves whether theyโ€™d fight to keep a given employee.

If the answer is no, an employee may be fired, billed as a way to get rid of people who donโ€™t fit the company culture.

Netflix isnโ€™t the only large tech company with blunt HR practices, but it is rather unique in its level of transparency about the way it runs its house.

โ€œBeing part of Netflix is like being part of an Olympic team,โ€ the company said in a written statement to the journal. โ€œGetting cut, when it happens, is very disappointing but there is no shame at all.

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