When Career Playbooks Fail: Money Moves to Make Right After a Layoff
The traditional career playbook—get a degree, climb the ladder, secure your future—has officially broken down under the weight of recent tech and corporate layoffs.
When traditional career planning goes out the window, how do you rebuild your financial strategy from the ground up? Amber FitzRysler, a certified financial planner and founder of Minneapolis-based Rising Financial, experienced this firsthand when she was caught in a massive corporate layoff early in her career.
Below is a distilled, actionable guide based on FitzRysler’s personal experience and professional expertise on how to navigate the first 30 days after losing a job.
🛑 Step 1: The Immediate 30-Day Response
When a layoff hits, panic is the enemy. Before making any rash decisions, pause, breathe, and systematically secure your baseline.
File for Unemployment Immediately: Do not wait. There is always a processing delay for benefits. When you are used to a bi-weekly paycheck, getting this process started on Day 1 is critical.
Audit Your Runway: Open a spreadsheet (or use tools like Google Sheets or Monarch) and map out every dollar coming in and going out. Track your severance, unemployment benefits, and liquid cash to calculate exactly how many months of runway you have.
Categorize Your Spending: Break your expenses down into Needs, Wants, and Wishes.
Needs include rent, utilities, and food, but should also include baseline expenses that keep your mental health positive—like doctor visits or occasional time with friends.
Do Not Touch Retirement Accounts: Cashing out a 401(k) or IRA early triggers heavy taxes and a 10% penalty. Leave your long-term investments alone; they are not liquid cash.
🏥 Step 2: Tackle the Healthcare Gap
A medical emergency during a period of unemployment can easily turn a career crisis into a financial catastrophe.
Check the Calendar: Most employer-sponsored health insurance lasts through the end of the calendar month in which you were laid off. If you get laid off early in the month, maximize that window to fit in dental, vision, or doctor appointments.
Weigh Your Options: Look into COBRA coverage to keep your exact plan, but compare it strictly against healthcare marketplace options. Marketplace plans may offer lower premiums, though you must carefully review the coverage limits.
Consider Safety Nets: If your family dynamic allows for it, lean on your support systems. Moving back in with parents or family temporarily can drastically cut your biggest expense (housing) and extend your financial runway.
💰 Step 3: Recalculate Your Emergency Fund
An emergency fund shouldn't be a catch-all for life's minor inconveniences; it is strictly an income-replacement fund.
"It's not your furnace fund. It's not a 'my car needs new tires' kind of thing. It exists solely to keep you afloat when your primary income vanishes." — Amber FitzRysler
How much do you actually need?
The classic "3 to 6 months" rule of thumb is just a starting point. Your real target depends entirely on your industry:
High-Demand Industries (e.g., Healthcare): If you can easily walk into a new job tomorrow, you can comfortably lean toward a 1-to-2-month cushion.
Volatile Industries (e.g., Tech): If your sector is experiencing widespread contractions, you need to plan for a much longer job hunt. Aim for 6 to 12 months of baseline "Needs" covered.
Note: While you are unemployed, you are not rebuilding this fund—you are using it. That is exactly what it is there for. You will rebuild it once you are re-employed.
⚠️ The Mistake to Avoid When You Land a New Job
The psychological fallout of a layoff often creates a lingering mistrust of the system. According to FitzRysler, the single biggest mistake people make after surviving a layoff is waiting too long to restart their retirement contributions.
Out of fear, many professionals hoard cash in low-yield savings accounts rather than investing in their future. Once you are securely re-employed, automate your retirement contributions again as soon as possible.
📌 The Takeaway
If you are in the thick of a career disruption right now, anchor yourself to these two rules: Know your numbers, and do not panic.
A layoff feels deeply personal, but it is a macroeconomic event. Your situation is incredibly stressful, but it is temporary. Focus on what you can control today: your spreadsheet, your immediate expenses, and your baseline security.
