Barbara Corcoran: I Used to Fire 25 Percent of My Sales Team Each YearThe 'Shark Tank' star knows a thing or two about how to fire someone. After all, she made it an annual, company-wide practice at her real-estate firm.

ByGeoff Weiss

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

In a blog post entitled "Shoot the Dogs Early,"Shark Tankstar Barbara Corcoran lays out what is perhaps the most dreaded -- though necessary -- responsibility of any effective leader:letting underperformers go.

Not unlike a killing, Corcoran advocates swift execution: "to keep my company healthy," she writes, "I had tofirethe losers fast."

She turned firing into a regular, company-wide practice by dismissing -- annually -- the bottom 25 percent of her sales force at The Corcoran Group, the New York real-estate firm she founded in 1973 with $1,000 and sold in 2001 for almost $70 million.

"I knew if the bottom quarter of the sales force wasn't earning its keep, I wouldn't be able to support the top salespeople who were making all the money."

Related:Shark Tank's Barbara Corcoran: 4 Things Successful Entrepreneurs Do

Though she speaks of these inevitabilities in matter-of-fact terms,Corcoranoffers valuable tips on how to soften the blow. "Extending a last minute invitation," preferably on a Friday, typically "works best and is never seen as the cloak and dagger approach it is," she says.

And after the door shuts, she cuts immediately to the chase: "it's bad enough being let go, but even worse sitting there through five minutes of small talk wondering why you're in the boss's office in the first place."

Subsequently, Corcoran divides dismissed employees into two factions: those who were unfit but trying their best, and "chronic complainers." With the first group, she commends the dismissed employee for his strengths and tries to think of other opportunities that might better match his gifts. With the latter, she "relishes" the firing.

"Nothing rots a business faster than a cluster of negative people," she writes, "so I get them out fast -- usually the minute I spot them."

Related:How Hiring and Firing Employees Is Just Like Poker

Wavy Line
Geoff Weiss

Former Staff Writer

Geoff Weiss is a former staff writer at Entrepreneur.com.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business Culture

The Newest Workplace Trend Has HR Sounding The Alarm

HR departments are still figuring out how to handle "quiet quitting," but a new trend is taking over.

Money & Finance

Want to Become a Millionaire? Follow Warren Buffett's 4 Rules.

企业家是不能过度指狗万官方望太多a company exit for their eventual 'win.' Do this instead.

Business News

An 81-Year-Old Florida CEO Just Indicted for a $250 Million Ponzi Scheme Ran a Sprawling Senior Citizen Crime Ring

卡尔·鲁德尔曼是第五高级公民Miami-Fort-Lauderdale-Palm Beach metropolitan area to face charges in connection with the scam.

Business News

Taco Bell Slammed With Lawsuit Over 'Especially Concerning' Advertisements, Allegedly Deceiving Customers

The class action lawsuit claims the chain is advertising more than they deliver.

Business News

Body of Missing 27-Year-Old Goldman Sachs Banker Found in Nearby Body of Water

John Castic, a 27-year-old Goldman Sachs employee, went missing around 2:30 a.m. on Saturday after attending a concert at the Brooklyn Mirage in East Williamsburg.

Business News

These Are the Highest Paid CEOs — And 9 Make More Than $100 Million a Year, According to a New Report

Blackstone CEO Stephen Schwarzman took the top spot from Alphabet's Sundar Pichai in total compensation in 2022.