Supporting Clients Through Job Loss: A Grief-Informed Approach

Job Loss

As career development professionals, we are trained to empower clients to move forward: align a résumé to a job, activate the network to identify opportunities, and prepare for interviews with impact. But for many clients, job loss is not simply a transition to navigate. It is a loss to process.

This distinction is important to recognize. When grief is present (whether acknowledged or not), it can significantly shape a client’s ability to engage in job search activities. Without space to process the loss, even the most well-designed strategies can bump up against roadblocks and stall.

Recognizing Job Loss as a Type of Loss

Often, we think of loss as a death: the loss of a parent, a pet, or a close family friend. Yet, there are many other types of loss: the dissolution of a marriage or relationship, the selling of a cherished home, or the loss of income or savings.  Add job loss to this list. And with loss comes a wide range of emotions: sadness, emptiness, loneliness, anger, resentment, and guilt – to name a few.

Job loss can disrupt far more than employment status. Clients may be grieving a sense of identity and purpose, daily structure and routine, professional relationships and community, and financial stability and future plans. However, unlike other losses, job loss is often minimized. Clients may hear from people close to them (even those in their circle of support) to “move on” quickly or to focus on solutions, such as spending hours finding a new job.

Job loss is an example of disenfranchised grief: grief that is not always recognized or validated by others. As a result, clients may carry their loss quietly, often alongside feelings of shame or self-blame. In my own coaching practice, I’ve seen how deeply this can land. One client, after more than 25 years with the same organization, did not tell her adult children about her job loss for six months due to the shame she felt.

The Impact of Compounded Loss

For some clients, job loss is not an isolated event. They may have experienced cumulative loss. Like interest, losses become larger and heavier when stacked on top of each other. A recent layoff may:

  • Reawaken the emotional impact of a previous job loss
  • Intersect with other life events, such as the death of a loved one or the end of a relationship
  • Intensify an already heavy emotional load

This layering effect can make the experience feel disproportionate to the event itself, both to the client and to those supporting them. One reflection from my training as a certified Grief Companion has stayed with me: “Just because I’m carrying it well doesn’t mean it’s not heavy.” Clients may appear composed, articulate, and even proactive in your meetings and coaching sessions, while still carrying a significant emotional weight beneath the surface.

Why Grief Can Disrupt Forward Movement

So – how does grief “show up” with clients – what’s observable in their behaviour and actions? When clients are grieving a job loss, they may experience:

  • Difficulty concentrating or making decisions
  • Reduced motivation or avoidance of job search tasks
  • Heightened self-doubt or loss of confidence
  • Emotional fatigue

From where you’re sitting, this may look like a lack of engagement. In reality, it can be a signal that the client’s internal experience processing their loss has not yet caught up with the external expectations of a job search (and we all know the demands of a job search are heavy).

Creating Space for the Conversation

CDPs are not expected to act as therapists, and according to our Code of Ethics, nor should we. However, acknowledging the emotional dimension of job loss is well within our scope and can significantly strengthen the effectiveness of the support you provide to your client.

Creating space for this conversation begins with the language you choose. You can invite your client to share, using phrases such as:

  • “Losing a job is a significant life change. What has this experience been like for you?”
  • “Many people feel a sense of loss after a layoff. Does that resonate for you?”
  • “Before we focus on next steps, I want to check in.  How are you doing with everything that’s happened?”

These invitations are simple, but they signal that clients do not need to set their emotions aside in order to move forward. Processing loss can be part of a job search strategy.

Questions to Explore When Grief May Be Present

If a client appears stuck, overwhelmed, or disengaged, gentle, open-ended questions can help surface what may be underneath:

  • “What feels hardest for you about this transition right now?”
  • “What do you miss the most – from your job, from the company?”
  • “What do you need right now before you feel ready to take the next step?”

These questions are not about diagnosing grief, but about creating an opportunity for clients to name their experience, and for you to hold space for them as they discuss their loss. When you frame their restructure or layoff in the context of loss, they can feel seen, heard, and understood.

Supporting Clients Without Overstepping

There are practical ways we can support clients through their experience while remaining within our professional scope:

1. Normalize the Experience

Acknowledging that job loss can feel like a loss helps reduce isolation: “It’s not uncommon for this to feel bigger than just a job change.”

2. Separate Identity from the Event

Clients often internalize job loss as a reflection of their worth. Some clients have even shared with me, “If I were a better performer, they would have kept me.”  The reality – a business decision was made to let them go, and this business decision impacts humans at their core: “This is something that has happened to you – it doesn’t define who you are. Your achievements won’t disappear – they are still there even after job loss.”

3. Introduce Light Touches and a Gentle Structure

Rather than moving immediately into a full job search plan, begin with small, manageable steps – for example, reaching out to have coffee with a friend, reflecting on what’s important to them in this stage of their career, framing their “leave story” or asking a colleague to act as a reference. Encourage them to consistently carve out a small amount of time to start focusing some attention on their search, as well as time each day to do something for themselves.

4. Know When to Refer

If grief feels particularly intense or persistent, it may be appropriate to suggest additional support: “This is a lot to carry. It might be helpful to have someone dedicated to supporting you as you work through your loss. How do you feel about that?”

Moving Forward – At the Right Pace

Supporting grief does not mean delaying progress indefinitely. Instead, it acknowledges that sustainable forward movement often begins with processing and grounding. When clients feel seen in their experience, they are better able to engage with their job search plan, rebuild confidence, and gain clarity about what they want next. And for clients experiencing job loss, what comes next is shaped by what has just been lost.

If you felt it appropriate, you could recommend resources to help your client process their loss. Two books which offer gentle, compassionate support and practical strategies for a path forward are Grief Unleashed by Dina Bell-Laroche and Transitions: Making Sense of Life’s Changes by William Bridges.

By recognizing job loss as a form of grief – particularly one that may be unseen or compounded – we can offer more compassionate support, helping clients not only move forward in their careers, but also regain their footing in a period of disruption. Seeing and acknowledging their grief is one of the most powerful gifts you can give.

– By Michelle Schafer

Photo by Mikhail Nilov on Pexels.

This article was edited with the support of ChatGPT (developed by OpenAI). The ideas and insights shared are entirely the author’s own. 

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Michelle, this really resonated with me, both personally and professionally.

I’ve experienced job loss that was outside of my control, and even then, there was a sense of loss and a quiet feeling of failure that was hard to name. I’ve also walked away from a role I loved because the environment wasn’t sustainable for me, and that grief stayed with me far longer than I expected.

What stands out to me in your article is the reminder that this kind of loss often goes unspoken. In my work, I’m very focused on helping clients move forward, but this is an important reminder to be mindful that forward movement and grief can exist at the same time—and that making space for both can actually support more sustainable progress.

This is such important article to have written. Thank you for putting language to something many people carry quietly.

I’m touched by your comments here, Shauna. Thank you for vulnerably sharing your own experience with job loss and feeling the grief that can accompany this transition. In my Grief Companion program, we talked about how clients can carry this grief well, but it doesn’t mean it isn’t heavy, which may prevent us from exploring their grief more. Recognizing that our clients feel a diversity of emotions connected to job loss (often not recognized by others), allows us to hold space for them while helping them with taking steps forward into something new. Thank you so much for reading!

We move so quickly to “next steps” that we sometimes miss what just happened to the person. Losing a job often cuts much deeper than people realize.

In my experience, slowing down and simply acknowledging what’s happened can make all the difference. When you allow space for the reality of that loss, things start to move forward again, naturally.

Sometimes, what’s most needed is a moment to be real and present before moving to the next step.

Thank you, Michelle, for this great article!

This right here Eman: “sometimes what’s most needed is a moment to be real and present before moving to the next step”. This is so true – and when we slow everything down (including our enthusiasm to help and be of service), we help the other person feel seen, heard and understood. And for some clients, we may be the only ones who see them in the way they need to be seen, in the days following a job loss. Being there for them and holding space, while also giving them room to express, is the biggest gift we can give in a time where it’s needed the most. Thank you for reading, and commenting.

Job loss isn’t just a financial disruption—it can be a deeply personal loss, especially for people who have spent decades in one industry or workplace. In many cases, particularly among those nearing retirement without the financial ability to step away, being let go can feel like having a significant part of life abruptly taken away.
Work often becomes more than a means of income. Over time, it creates structure, identity, and a sense of belonging. Colleagues can begin to feel like an extended family, and the workplace itself can carry a familiarity not unlike a second home. When that suddenly disappears, it’s not just a role that’s lost—it’s routine, connection, and a piece of personal history.
What makes this especially difficult is how invisible that grief can be. Job loss isn’t always recognized as something to mourn in the same way as other losses, yet the emotional impact can be just as real. People may feel shock, anger, sadness, or even a loss of purpose, and those reactions are valid.
It’s important to make space for those feelings rather than dismiss them. Acknowledging the emotional weight of job loss allows people to process what’s happened and begin to rebuild in a meaningful way. Whether through conversation, support networks, or simply giving oneself permission to grieve, that recognition is a crucial step forward.
In supporting others—or even ourselves—through job loss, the key is to remember that it’s not “just a job.” It’s often years of dedication, relationships, and identity wrapped into one experience. Treating that loss with the seriousness it deserves can make all the difference in how someone moves through it.
I apologize for the length of my response but in my industry we are seeing more and more of this. Thanks for this information and recognition.

Delee – each word of your response was so thoughtfully crafted, so I appreciate all of what you share here. Thank you for reading, reflecting, and commenting. You are so right when you say how hard this can especially be for individuals who have invested most of their career in one workplace or industry, and how much is connected to their job loss. They are experiencing loss on multiple levels (as it’s not just a job) and for the individual, if they have experienced other losses in life, then loss compounds loss and the job loss can feel even harder and heavier to bear. I’m working with a client right now who was with the organization for decades, and simply talking to former colleagues (who she loved working with) brings such strong emotions about her exit from the company. Through talking about it and giving time for the conversation, she has expressed the grief she experiences, and is intentionally taking time for herself doing things that support her during this heavy time. If we would have moved immediately to developing her job search strategy and working on her resume, she never would have shared her feelings (or felt like she could). Making space for someone else to talk about their job loss is a gift.