Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee
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@scottalanmiller said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
@RojoLoco said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
We just dealt with this - we withheld the last paycheck until all equipment was returned. Non-compliance would have resulted in us deducting the cost of all the equipment from said last check.
Can't do that legally for US employees though, in most cases.
We do this for non-US employees if they are somewhere where we can easily pick it up. If not, sometimes we just let them keep it. Not worth the cost and effort of shipping.
Well, people that are here on H1B work visas are more likely to comply to our return policy, whether technically legal or not. And this particular person only lives 15 min from the office.
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@JasGot said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
Oh, and file it THEIR home town.
If you even know where that is. Often you don't.
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@Dashrender said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
you could make the costs of the equipment part of the hiring contract - you're talking what - $2000? I mean it's not nothing, but is it enough to be wasting much time over? and it's only $2000 when you first send it to them... half that at 1 year old, etc.
Yeah, depreciation happens really quickly. For computers, we pretty much assume that they are a gift in most cases. For more business items like phones (we provide Yealink T41S to most staff with headsets) we try to get that back. We are a good employer (we like to think at least) and we've never had people give us a problem returning things. We try to have someone else in the region meet them for coffee or something and just collect stuff and hand them their final check.
This is an advantage of working in jurisdictions where final paychecks are allowed an eight week hold. Offering to hand them the money on the spot means getting paid weeks earlier than they have to be, and possibly earlier than the normally would be.
Example...
Betty would normally be paid next Tuesday. Betty has a phone. Betty quits or is fired today. Mary offers to meet her for coffee tomorrow and hand her her final paycheck early in exchange for picking up the phone and headset that Betty had. Everyone wins. Mary gets coffee on the company. Betty gets paid early and a free coffee. We get our phone.
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@scottalanmiller said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
@gjacobse said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
Hardware is of course one thing, but what of the data on that hardware?
Why would there be data on the hardware in this day and age? I guess there are cases, but super rare.
I won’t really disagree with you there. But even with all the security the state has in place, there is still data on the device here.
And it is difficult to say how much and to what level- I mean- there are still Access Databases here,...
So many of the agencies just can’t afford to have there needs integrated into the infrastructure needed to limit access.
Looking at the building I am in, an it’s twin across town, it’s five floors of cubes, nearly 1,500 people each. And each have staff that are across the entirety of the state, or on the case of forestry and building inspections, are in areas that have absolutely no connectivity.
How can they access a web app if the only option is a Sat phone? Yea- can you see the state getting and paying for those,.. yea, not going to happen
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@magicmarker said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
When a remote employee is terminated how do you handle the collection of the hardware (laptop, docking station, printer, etc..)? In the new company I work for, almost 60% of the workforce is working from home throughout the US. Our HR department is out-sourced, but we have 1 main in-house employee that does HR tasks to help bridge the gap between the out-sourced HR service and internal employees. Employees are typically terminated over the phone by their managers. The IT department is then tasked with the collection of the hardware. This includes contacting the terminated employee over a personal email, or personal cell phone number. We are also tasked with working with the shipping manager to prepare a pre-paid shipping label and box to ship the equipment to the employee’s residence to send back the hardware.
It’s been a major challenge getting hardware back from the terminated employees. For obvious reasons, the fired employees are hard to get ahold of, and are difficult to work with. We are sending 1,2, 3 emails and/or calling the employee multiple times.
When the IT department proposed the holding the paycheck to VP’s until the hardware is returned, we were told it’s illegal. In all my previous companies I’ve never had to worry about this. This was always handled by HR or the fired managers employee. Is this normal? How can I get this task off our plate and worry about more important IT related tasks?
It's really easy. You should just follow the company's written procedure how to handle the equipment of terminated employees.
If the procedure isn't working, management needs to change it or just accept that they wont get the equipment back.
Because why should the fired employee even bother with packing and shipping back the company's used equipment? They don't work there anymore. You need either a stick or a carrot to convince them and right now it's neither.
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@scottalanmiller said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
@magicmarker said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
This was always handled by HR or the fired managers employee. Is this normal? How can I get this task off our plate and worry about more important IT related tasks?
So this is where semantics are helpful. This is an HR action, whoever does it, is HR. So what is actually happening is that staff hired to be IT are now acting as the HR staff. The issue isn't HR tasks to an IT department, it's an HR department being mislabeled as IT. If you are doing this job, you are HR. If you put HR on your resume, and someone checked your references, it would be a lie for them to claim you weren't at least part time HR.
Other than explaining that having IT trained people doing HR tasks that they have no skills, desire, or knowledge to do and having HR not doing their job is a problem, there is nothing you can do to get it off of your plate.
Love this comment. Yes, I worked part-time in the HR department goes on my resume.
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@Pete-S said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
@magicmarker said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
When a remote employee is terminated how do you handle the collection of the hardware (laptop, docking station, printer, etc..)? In the new company I work for, almost 60% of the workforce is working from home throughout the US. Our HR department is out-sourced, but we have 1 main in-house employee that does HR tasks to help bridge the gap between the out-sourced HR service and internal employees. Employees are typically terminated over the phone by their managers. The IT department is then tasked with the collection of the hardware. This includes contacting the terminated employee over a personal email, or personal cell phone number. We are also tasked with working with the shipping manager to prepare a pre-paid shipping label and box to ship the equipment to the employee’s residence to send back the hardware.
It’s been a major challenge getting hardware back from the terminated employees. For obvious reasons, the fired employees are hard to get ahold of, and are difficult to work with. We are sending 1,2, 3 emails and/or calling the employee multiple times.
When the IT department proposed the holding the paycheck to VP’s until the hardware is returned, we were told it’s illegal. In all my previous companies I’ve never had to worry about this. This was always handled by HR or the fired managers employee. Is this normal? How can I get this task off our plate and worry about more important IT related tasks?
It's really easy. You should just follow the company's written procedure how to handle the equipment of terminated employees.
If the procedure isn't working, management needs to change it or just accept that they wont get the equipment back.
Because why should the fired employee even bother with packing and shipping back the company's used equipment? They don't work there anymore. You need either a stick or a carrot to convince them and right now it's neither.
The company has no written procedure. Can anyone point me to where I can find a template for this?
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At this point, calling the police seems to be a good option.
We don't currently deploy any remote wipe software on home users pc's. After thinking about this, we will be blocking apps and disabling the USB ports on the laptop's with Sophos Central in our off-boarding process. When they can't open IE, Chrome, Firefox, or Office apps the laptop becomes pretty useless. Along with disabling USB that can't transfer files to their jump drives. It may motivate them to ship back the laptop since it becomes a big paper weight as long as they are not smart enough to slave the drive.
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@magicmarker said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
@Pete-S said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
@magicmarker said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
When a remote employee is terminated how do you handle the collection of the hardware (laptop, docking station, printer, etc..)? In the new company I work for, almost 60% of the workforce is working from home throughout the US. Our HR department is out-sourced, but we have 1 main in-house employee that does HR tasks to help bridge the gap between the out-sourced HR service and internal employees. Employees are typically terminated over the phone by their managers. The IT department is then tasked with the collection of the hardware. This includes contacting the terminated employee over a personal email, or personal cell phone number. We are also tasked with working with the shipping manager to prepare a pre-paid shipping label and box to ship the equipment to the employee’s residence to send back the hardware.
It’s been a major challenge getting hardware back from the terminated employees. For obvious reasons, the fired employees are hard to get ahold of, and are difficult to work with. We are sending 1,2, 3 emails and/or calling the employee multiple times.
When the IT department proposed the holding the paycheck to VP’s until the hardware is returned, we were told it’s illegal. In all my previous companies I’ve never had to worry about this. This was always handled by HR or the fired managers employee. Is this normal? How can I get this task off our plate and worry about more important IT related tasks?
It's really easy. You should just follow the company's written procedure how to handle the equipment of terminated employees.
If the procedure isn't working, management needs to change it or just accept that they wont get the equipment back.
Because why should the fired employee even bother with packing and shipping back the company's used equipment? They don't work there anymore. You need either a stick or a carrot to convince them and right now it's neither.
The company has no written procedure. Can anyone point me to where I can find a template for this?
Rather than a template on this it might be worth understanding the rules regarding this.
Sorry that may be a paywall, it loaded one minute and now that I'm relooking at it. . .
An employer cannot withhold a terminated employee's paycheck until equipment is returned. ... An employer might be able to deduct the cost of the equipment from the final pay of non-exempt employees. The specific circumstances of the situation and state wage deduction laws will determine whether an employer can do this.`
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We have our employees (office-based and home-based) sign a company equipment agreement upon their hire. It states along the lines that they agree to care for all company equipment they are issued and return in proper working condition upon termination of employment. Failure to do so will be considered theft and lead to criminal prosecution. On the employee's last day they are informed that any vacation accrual they have will be held for payout until the equipment is returned. This usually does the trick for us. I've only had to threaten police action with a former employee once before the laptop magically showed up a couple of days later.
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@sully93 that's not a bad process/policy but it very much is dependent on where you live and work. It may be completely illegal to withhold any pay or benefits at termination, regardless of the reasons.
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@sully93 said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
We have our employees (office-based and home-based) sign a company equipment agreement upon their hire. It states along the lines that they agree to care for all company equipment they are issued and return in proper working condition upon termination of employment. Failure to do so will be considered theft and lead to criminal prosecution. On the employee's last day they are informed that any vacation accrual they have will be held for payout until the equipment is returned. This usually does the trick for us. I've only had to threaten police action with a former employee once before the laptop magically showed up a couple of days later.
@sully93 I like this approach. I'll leave the whole vacation accrual up to HR and accounting, but I like the failure to return equipment can lead to criminal prosecution company equipment agreement.
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@magicmarker Unless you are your companies decision maker, make the suggestion, don't make the policy.
It's the businesses choice to have to draft and possibly enforce any policy.
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@magicmarker said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
@Pete-S said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
@magicmarker said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
When a remote employee is terminated how do you handle the collection of the hardware (laptop, docking station, printer, etc..)? In the new company I work for, almost 60% of the workforce is working from home throughout the US. Our HR department is out-sourced, but we have 1 main in-house employee that does HR tasks to help bridge the gap between the out-sourced HR service and internal employees. Employees are typically terminated over the phone by their managers. The IT department is then tasked with the collection of the hardware. This includes contacting the terminated employee over a personal email, or personal cell phone number. We are also tasked with working with the shipping manager to prepare a pre-paid shipping label and box to ship the equipment to the employee’s residence to send back the hardware.
It’s been a major challenge getting hardware back from the terminated employees. For obvious reasons, the fired employees are hard to get ahold of, and are difficult to work with. We are sending 1,2, 3 emails and/or calling the employee multiple times.
When the IT department proposed the holding the paycheck to VP’s until the hardware is returned, we were told it’s illegal. In all my previous companies I’ve never had to worry about this. This was always handled by HR or the fired managers employee. Is this normal? How can I get this task off our plate and worry about more important IT related tasks?
It's really easy. You should just follow the company's written procedure how to handle the equipment of terminated employees.
If the procedure isn't working, management needs to change it or just accept that they wont get the equipment back.
Because why should the fired employee even bother with packing and shipping back the company's used equipment? They don't work there anymore. You need either a stick or a carrot to convince them and right now it's neither.
The company has no written procedure. Can anyone point me to where I can find a template for this?
That standard answer would be... get it from HR or management
LOL, not something many of us would have around.
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@magicmarker said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
When they can't open IE, Chrome, Firefox, or Office apps the laptop becomes pretty useless.
LOL, what does that take, five minutes to work around? Not much of a deterent.
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@scottalanmiller said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
@magicmarker said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
When they can't open IE, Chrome, Firefox, or Office apps the laptop becomes pretty useless.
LOL, what does that take, five minutes to work around? Not much of a deterent.
We are talking about a standard user with no admin rights. The Sophos policies will block all browsers, office applications, USB ports, and PDF readers on a per device policy. Why would a standard user have a work around for this in 5 minutes? At that point the users only option is hire a tech to slave the drive and copy the data. The Sophos policies just make it harder to use the pc after they are terminated.
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@magicmarker said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
@scottalanmiller said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
@magicmarker said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
When they can't open IE, Chrome, Firefox, or Office apps the laptop becomes pretty useless.
LOL, what does that take, five minutes to work around? Not much of a deterent.
We are talking about a standard user with no admin rights. The Sophos policies will block all browsers, office applications, USB ports, and PDF readers on a per device policy. Why would a standard user have a work around for this in 5 minutes? At that point the users only option is hire a tech to slave the drive and copy the data. The Sophos policies just make it harder to use the pc after they are terminated.
Reinstall OS, done. Possibly reflash BIOS/UEFI if that is locked down. That's at the longest possible time. I've forcibly removed a locked down Sophos without benefit of the unlock code before. 5 minutes is a little long for that in my personal opinion.
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@travisdh1 said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
@magicmarker said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
@scottalanmiller said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
@magicmarker said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
When they can't open IE, Chrome, Firefox, or Office apps the laptop becomes pretty useless.
LOL, what does that take, five minutes to work around? Not much of a deterent.
We are talking about a standard user with no admin rights. The Sophos policies will block all browsers, office applications, USB ports, and PDF readers on a per device policy. Why would a standard user have a work around for this in 5 minutes? At that point the users only option is hire a tech to slave the drive and copy the data. The Sophos policies just make it harder to use the pc after they are terminated.
Reinstall OS, done. Possibly reflash BIOS/UEFI if that is locked down. That's at the longest possible time. I've forcibly removed a locked down Sophos without benefit of the unlock code before. 5 minutes is a little long for that in my personal opinion.
The user still needs to hire a @travisdh1 to do that for them. It's still annoying to them. Users are not going to know how to slave a drive and re-install an OS. So factor in the users time to find a computer tech and then pay for the work to be done. It's not 5 minutes.
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There's Absolute Security. But that's more for securing your devices than obtaining your hardware.
You can lockdown and track the device location but that doesn't mean you will get your equipment back.https://www.absolute.com
https://www.absolute.com/platform/editions/From Dell
https://www.dell.com/learn/us/en/04/help-me-choose/hmc-absolute-computrace -
@black3dynamite said in Obtaining hardware from terminated remote employee:
There's Absolute Security. But that's more for securing your devices than obtaining your hardware.
You can lockdown and track the device location but that doesn't mean you will get your equipment back.https://www.absolute.com
https://www.absolute.com/platform/editions/From Dell
https://www.dell.com/learn/us/en/04/help-me-choose/hmc-absolute-computraceGreat point. I wanted to look into those programs. The Sophos block policy isn’t going to get me very far in getting the hardware back. At least I feel like I still won since they can’t freely use the laptop without wiping and reloading the OS. My point is that the pc becomes more useless to the employee. They MAY be more inclined to return it.