Scheduling

What Is Redeployment?

Quick Definition

The practice of reassigning workers from one location, department, or task to another based on changing business needs.

What Is Redeployment?

Redeployment is the practice of moving existing workers from one role, department, or location to another within the same organization — rather than laying them off or hiring externally. It's a strategic workforce move that keeps institutional knowledge in-house while adapting to changing business needs.

Companies redeploy workers for a variety of reasons: a department is downsizing while another is growing, a project is winding down but the team's skills are needed elsewhere, or seasonal demand shifts require moving people between locations. Done well, redeployment reduces turnover costs, maintains morale, and fills gaps faster than external hiring.

How Redeployment Works

Redeployment typically starts with identifying roles that are being eliminated or reduced and matching affected workers to open positions elsewhere in the organization. This requires a clear picture of each worker's skills, experience, and willingness to transition — plus an honest assessment of what training or support they'll need to succeed in the new role.

The process works best when it's proactive rather than reactive. Companies that maintain an internal skills inventory and regularly assess workforce needs can redeploy workers before layoffs become necessary, turning what could be a disruptive event into a managed transition.

Redeployment vs. Layoffs

Layoffs are expensive — not just in severance and unemployment costs, but in the institutional knowledge that walks out the door and the rehiring costs when demand picks back up. Redeployment offers an alternative by retaining trained, experienced workers and redirecting their efforts where they're needed most.

That said, redeployment isn't always feasible. It requires available openings that match (or can be matched through training to) the skills of displaced workers. When the skills gap is too wide or there simply aren't enough open positions, redeployment may only partially offset the need for reductions.

Redeployment and Flexible Staffing

For businesses that use a mix of core team members and flex workers, redeployment is easier to manage. Core employees can be shifted to where their experience is most valuable, while platforms like GigSmart provide flex workers to backfill the roles they vacated — or to handle the temporary demand that triggered the redeployment in the first place.

Related Terms

Talent Acquisition · Voluntary Turnover · Workforce Analytics · Cross-Training · On-Demand Staffing

Ready to build your workforce?

GigSmart connects businesses with qualified workers for any shift or role.

Get Started Free
This glossary is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, financial, or compliance advice. Employment classifications, labor regulations, and workforce terminology vary by jurisdiction. Consult qualified professionals for guidance specific to your situation.