
Why businesses consider role changes instead of termination
Role changes are usually considered when:
- performance issues are ongoing but not extreme
- the employee has strengths that may suit a different role
- the business is changing anyway
- leaders want to avoid termination if possible
On paper, this can feel fair and commercially sensible.
In practice, it sits in a legally sensitive space.
The difference between a role change and a demotion
Not all changes are equal.
A role change typically involves:
- different duties
- adjusted scope
- similar seniority
A demotion usually involves:
- reduced responsibility
- reduced status
- often reduced pay
The greater the impact on status or remuneration, the higher the legal risk.
Fair Work looks at substance, not labels.
When role changes are most likely to cause problems
Risk increases when changes are:
- imposed without consultation
- framed as punishment
- linked too closely to conflict
- poorly documented
- inconsistent with the contract
Even well-intended changes can be viewed as adverse action if handled clumsily.
This is where many businesses are caught off guard.
What the law cares about in these situations
Fair Work focuses on:
- whether the change was reasonable
- whether consultation occurred
- whether the employee had a genuine choice
- whether the change caused detriment
A role change that significantly disadvantages an employee may be treated as a termination, even if employment technically continues.
This is known as constructive dismissal risk.
The role of the employment contract
Contracts matter a lot here.
Contracts that support role changes usually include:
- flexibility or variation clauses
- broad but reasonable duty descriptions
- clear classification alignment
Contracts that are narrow or outdated limit options.
This is why role changes often expose contract weaknesses rather than solving performance issues.
Can pay be reduced due to performance?
Generally, no — not without agreement.
Reducing pay due to performance:
- usually requires employee consent
- must not breach award or NES minimums
- carries high risk if imposed
Unilateral pay reductions are a common trigger for claims.
If pay changes are on the table, advice should be sought early.
How restructures differ from performance-based changes
Restructures are driven by business needs, not individual performance.
A restructure may involve:
- role redesign
- redundancy
- redistribution of duties
Using a “restructure” to deal with individual underperformance is risky.
Fair Work looks closely at whether a restructure is genuine or simply performance management in disguise.
When changing the role is the wrong move
Role changes usually backfire when:
- trust between manager and employee is already broken
- the employee does not want the new role
- the business is trying to avoid a hard decision
- termination is inevitable
In these cases, role changes:
- prolong stress
- increase legal exposure
- damage team confidence
Sometimes, a clean decision is the safer decision.
Risk-based options when performance isn’t improving
There is no single correct path. There are safer and riskier ones.
Lower risk:
- clear performance management with defined expectations
- mutual agreement on role changes
- genuine restructures based on business need
Medium risk:
- informal role changes
- partial duty shifts
- ambiguous documentation
Higher risk:
- imposed demotions
- pay reductions without consent
- using restructures to manage individuals
Good HR advice helps businesses choose the least damaging option, not the most comfortable one.
Where HR support adds the most value
HR support is most valuable when:
- assessing whether a role change is lawful and sensible
- reviewing contract flexibility
- planning consultation properly
- identifying when termination is the safer option
This prevents businesses from stepping into avoidable claims while trying to do the “nice” thing.
FAQs
Before changing someone’s role
Role changes feel like a softer option, but they carry hidden risk.
If you’re considering changing duties, demoting, or restructuring due to performance, that uncertainty is usually the signal to pause and get advice before acting.
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