
How to Read a Layoff Email: What the Corporate Language Actually Means
You open your inbox and see it: an email from HR or your manager. The subject line is vague. The tone is measured. The words are carefully chosen. Something feels off, but you can't quite put your finger on it. Your stomach drops anyway. This is the moment when corporate language reveals its true purpose. The email you're reading isn't designed to inform you—it's designed to protect the sender. Every phrase has been selected to minimize legal exposure, deflect responsibility, and maintain plausible deniability. What you're experiencing isn't just bad news; it's a carefully constructed message that's been stress-tested by lawyers and executives. The good news is that once you understand the patterns, you can see through the fog. You can read between the lines and understand what's actually happening, even when the words themselves are trying to hide it. The Architecture of Corporate Euphemisms Corporate layoff language follows a predictable structure. First comes the softening: "We're m
Continue reading on Dev.to
Opens in a new tab



