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Extended employee life cycle – mourning culture in the company

Extended Employee Lifecycle – Strengthening a Culture of Mourning in the Organization

Expand your employee lifecycle with remembrance and appreciation for colleagues who have passed away:

 

The employee lifecycle in HR often ends with departure – but that’s where it truly begins.

As HR professionals, we bear not only organizational but also human responsibility. When a colleague passes away, it is more than just an “exit” – it affects teams emotionally, culturally, and interpersonally. This is not a “soft” component – it is lived corporate culture and genuine care.

1. Workforce Planning / Securing the Company’s Future

  • Strategic foresight; planning, responsibility, and care
  • Planning of resources and competencies

2. Personnel acquisition / Talent engagement

  • Emotional and cultural connection between talents and the company
  • Recruitment, selection, hiring

3. Onboarding / Joy of arrival

  • Welcoming, beginning of a new journey
  • Training, integration, and cultural onboarding

4. Employment and development / Growth journey

  • Personal and professional development
  • Career progression, further education, motivation, and retention

5. Exit, separation, death / farewell moment

  • Letting go; appreciation and recognition
  • Resignation, retirement, death

 

In many HR models, the employee lifecycle ends with termination or retirement. But what happens when someone dies?

An extended HR lifecycle therefore also includes:

 

6. Aftercare in the event of death / Dignified remembrance

  • Compassion, respect and responsibility
  • Administrative processing
  • Internal & external communication
  • Contact with relatives
  • Organization of participation in funeral (if desired)

7. Mourning phase in the company / Remembering together

  • Collective emotions and cohesion
  • Space for grief in the team (e.g. discussions, psychological support)
  • Optional: Grief counseling by HR or external specialists
  • Sensitive handling of the position’s replacement

8. Remembrance and appreciation / gratitude

  • Joint commemoration (e.g. condolence book, minute of silence, internal communication) – digital memorial page
  • Promote a culture of remembrance if appropriate to the corporate culture
  • Recognition of the deceased person’s achievements

 

As HR managers, we bear not only organizational responsibility, but also human responsibility. When a colleague passes away, it’s more than just a “departure”—it affects teams emotionally, culturally, and interpersonally. This isn’t a “soft” component—it’s a lived corporate culture and genuine care.

  • How do you deal with grief in your company?

  • Is there room for remembrance and sympathy?

  • Do we have tools or rituals that strengthen cohesion?

Tributoo is happy to support you in shaping this sensitive area mindfully and effectively.

Your Tributoo Team

 

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