On paper, your team looks fine.
Revenue is steady, trucks are rolling, and nobody’s flipping desks or screaming in meetings. And yet, quietly, your best people are leaving. Not with a dramatic blowup, but with a polite two weeks’ notice and a vague “I found a better opportunity.”
You probably do what most owners do: blame the market, remote work, or “kids these days.” But there’s a good chance the real problem isn’t coming from the outside. It’s in your own building.
More specifically, it’s in your break room. Sitting at the same table. Drinking the same coffee. Doing the same bare minimum they’ve done for years.
I call this person the cockroach.
Just like real cockroaches, these employees don’t usually cause a big, obvious scene. They don’t scream at customers, they don’t steal trucks, and they don’t do anything spectacularly wrong. They just survive. They show up, contribute as little as possible, and retreat back into the shadows when things get tough.
Everyone knows they’re dead weight—except, apparently, leadership.
Here’s the hard truth: your top performers aren’t quitting because of one big disaster. They’re quitting because they’re sick of living in a house where cockroaches are allowed to roam the halls.
Let’s talk about how to spot a cockroach, why they’re so toxic to your best people, and what to do about it before you lose anyone else you’d actually fight to keep.
Real cockroaches don’t strip your pantry bare; they contaminate everything they touch. The same is true in a business.
Your cockroach employee usually looks like this:
They don’t rage. They don’t openly sabotage. And they rarely break rules in a way you can easily document. That’s what makes them so slippery. If you challenge them, they’ve got excuses ready: “The office messed that up,” “Dispatch didn’t tell me,” “The system is glitchy,” “The customer was unreasonable.”
From a distance, you may think, “Is addressing this really worth the headache? We’re busy. He’s not that bad.”
But your team sees something very different. They see a person who contributes the least and suffers the least. That gap between effort and consequence is what starts to poison your culture.
To find the cockroach employee, take these steps:
Over the next 30 days, carefully review employee metrics. Don’t just check gross production. Check the following:
If the data confirms what your gut already knows, congratulations. You’ve found your cockroach.
Your high performers can live with hard work. They signed up for that. What they won’t live with is unfairness.
When your best techs, sales reps, or administrative staff see someone like the cockroach skate by for years, a few things happen:
“If the boss can’t see this, what else is he missing?”
“Why am I beating myself up if Carl makes the same paycheck doing half as much?”
“If this is the standard here, maybe this isn’t where I want to build my career.”
That’s how you lose people who actually drive the business.
From the cockroach’s perspective, survival is the game. From your top talent’s perspective, the game is rigged. When they decide to leave, it rarely has anything to do with the last straw; they’ve been collecting straws for years while you were looking the other way.
Your next steps:
Have an honest, off–the–record conversation with one or two of your strongest people. Ask them one question:
“Who here gets away with the most while contributing the least?”
Don’t defend, and don’t explain. Just listen. If the same name comes up more than once, you’ve just witnessed how your culture actually feels from the inside.
Cockroaches thrive in the dark. They love vague expectations, fuzzy metrics, and leaders who prefer “not rocking the boat.”
So, flip the lights on.
You don’t need to shame people, but you do need to make contributions visible. That means:
Cockroach employees are masters at hiding behind ambiguity. The moment you define specific expectations and track them consistently, their cover starts to crack. Either they step up—unlikely, but possible—or their lack of contribution becomes undeniable.
Your next steps:
Pick three metrics that clearly define “pulling your weight” for one role, say, a field technician:
Share these with the team, start posting them weekly, and commit to talking with anyone who consistently falls below the line. You’ve just made the environment much more hostile for cockroaches.
One reason cockroach employees survive so long is fear. Leaders are afraid of what will happen if they’re gone.
“They know all the legacy accounts.”
“No one else understands that software.”
“They’re the only one who knows where that information is.”
So you tolerate low effort, bad habits, and quiet resistance because losing them feels risky.
Here’s the reality: you’re already paying a steep price to keep them. You’re paying in morale, turnover, and trust. You’re paying every time a strong performer shoulders their work while cockroach employees coast. You’re paying every time you find yourself thinking, “I can’t let them go; they know too much.”
Your next steps:
Start a 60‑day “knowledge extraction” sprint:
You’re not threatening them; you’re reducing the hostage value of what they know. Once that’s done, you suddenly have options: coach them up with clear expectations—or coach them out. Either way, they no longer hold your culture hostage.
Eventually, you’re going to have to make a decision about your cockroach.
You can keep nudging, coaching, and hoping they magically transform into a high performer. Or you can accept that their greatest skill is survival and ask yourself a better question:
“What message am I sending everyone else by keeping this person here?”
When you finally remove a cockroach employee—even if it’s uncomfortable, even if there’s short term disruption—you send a shockwave through the team. And it’s not the shockwave you fear.
Most high performers don’t think, “Wow, that could have been me.” They think, “Finally. The boss sees what we’ve been living with.” Trust goes up, not down. People breathe a little easier. Standards make more sense. The house feels cleaner.
You don’t build a strong culture by giving big speeches. You build it with a few decisive moments where you prove, through action, what you will and will not tolerate.
Your next steps:
Look at your roster and ask: “If I were starting this company from scratch tomorrow, would I rehire this person?” If the honest answer is no, that’s your signal. Either start a real improvement plan with clear deadlines, or start planning their exit. Keeping them “because it’s easier” is exactly why your best people are polishing their resumes.
If you find a cockroach in your kitchen, you don’t debate how bad it is. You call it what it is and deal with it. Your business deserves the same urgency.
“If you won’t evict the cockroach in your break room, don’t be surprised when your best people decide to find a cleaner house.”
Tim Whitt is an entrepreneur with 45 years in pest control: 30 in corporate leadership and 15 building Pied Piper Pest & Lawn from the ground up. A speaker, coach, and author, he offers field-tested wisdom and practical tools that help both new and established businesses. His newly released book is Infested: End Workplace Drama, Stop Toxic Employees, Build a Thriving Small Business. Learn more at TimWhitt.com.
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