Most printing company leaders know the feeling: that one employee you’ve got who’s talented, experienced, and seemingly indispensable, but whose toxic behavior poisons the team. Might be your top sales rep or best press operator. And while they may deliver results, the cost comes in other ways such as low morale and a blow to the culture you’ve worked so hard to build. Not dealing with this creates a constant undercurrent of tension that drags everyone down.
Yet, there is often hesitation to act. Why? Because on paper, this employee performs. They know the systems, the customers, the shortcuts. Maybe they’ve been around forever. Firing them feels risky, like pulling out a key block in a Jenga tower.
But the reality of the situation is that by keeping a toxic, rude, or disruptive employee because they’re “good at their job” can be a false economy. The hidden costs almost always outweigh the contributions. And when companies finally make the decision to let them go, I’ve never once heard the leader say, “I wish I had waited just a little longer.” More often, I hear: “I should have done this a long time ago.”
The Real Cost of a Toxic Employee
Just one toxic employee can cost a company a great deal. Think about it – the damage to morale, folks avoiding collaboration, tensions flaring, and the first thing you know, good employees start looking for the exits. And then there’s the loss to productivity. Think about the time and energy that is drained managing conflict rather than focusing on clients. Finally, there’s the hidden cost of culture erosion: If toxic behavior goes unchecked, it signals that rudeness, disrespect, or negativity are acceptable. Remember, as a leader you get what you tolerate.
Why the Hesitation?
Why don’t companies act sooner? A few reasons come up again and again:
- Fear of losing knowledge: They’ve been here forever and without tight, documented process and procedures, it’s hard to replace tribal knowledge.
- Fear of losing clients: They own key relationships. One more reason to have business reviews where key leaders get involved with the clients as well.
- Fear of short-term disruption: It will be chaos without them – maybe it will, usually for about a day. The bigger question is are you ready to take one step back so that you can take two steps forward?
But here’s the irony: most leaders find that once the toxic employee is gone, things don’t fall apart. In fact, they often improve quickly. The rest of the team steps up. New leaders emerge. Clients appreciate smoother communication. And the company feels lighter, more energized.
A Story from the Field
I recently worked with a client who had been struggling with this exact situation. After agonizing over this, leadership made the difficult call to let this person go. The change was immediate and palpable. The CEO described it as a “relief” not just for him, but for the entire company. The mood lifted and people felt free to contribute again. And more than one person thanked the CEO and said, “I wish this had happened years ago.”
The Lesson for Leaders
If you’re wrestling with whether to keep or let go of a toxic employee, here’s a mindset shift–don’t just measure what they produce. Measure the cost of keeping them. And while there may be a short-term risk, consider the long-term benefit to the business.
Your company’s culture is too valuable to be held hostage by one person’s bad behavior. My experience is that nobody ever regrets making this decision. They only regret waiting too long to act.
A key takeaway from this is that removing a toxic employee isn’t just a personnel decision—it’s a leadership decision. It shows your team that respect, collaboration, and culture matter more than tolerating bad behavior. And that, in the long run, is what drives sustainable success.
Mike Philie helps owners and CEOs in the Graphic Communications Industry validate what’s working, identify what needs to change, and create a practical path forward.
PhilieGroup | mphilie@philiegroup.com | LinkedIn
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