Employee Engagement HR Consultancy Human Resources Management
22nd December 2025
Last updated: 3rd February 2026 at 14:49pm
6 min read

An employee is poaching clients after resigning: what to do (without making it worse)

An employee is poaching clients after resigning: what to do (without making it worse)

When an employee is leaving, it’s normal to feel that mix of panic and anger, especially if someone hints they’re joining a competitor and you start hearing whispers like “they’ve been calling clients.

The good news, you don’t need to go full scorched-earth to protect your business interests. The best outcomes usually come from doing a few calm, sensible things quickly. Locking down access, gathering the right evidence, communicating clearly, and stabilising client relationships, then escalating only if you need to.

Clients can leave… but that doesn’t mean anything goes

Clients are free to choose who they work with. What you’re trying to prevent (and manage) is behaviour like:

    • using confidential or commercially sensitive information (pricing, pipeline, renewal dates, proposals)

    • soliciting clients while still employed (or acting dishonestly during notice)

    • breaching post-termination restrictions (non-solicit / non-deal / non-compete, where applicable)

    • downloading/exporting client lists or CRM data
    • moving information to personal email/cloud storage (where you can legitimately evidence that via policy)

In other words, the risk isn’t “a client might move”. The risk is “someone is using your information and relationships unfairly, and we can’t prove it because we didn’t act sensibly.

What to do in the first 24 hours

Contain the risk

If you suspect client poaching, your goal on day one is containment, not confrontation.

Start with access and control. Most damage happens through systems, not in meetings.

    • Restrict exports/downloads in the CRM and shared drives (client lists, pricing decks, proposal templates).
    • Remove access to the most sensitive folders and tools, especially for client-facing or senior roles.
    • Check for email forwarding rules and unusual sharing behaviour.
    • Review unusual account activity (bulk downloads, mass edits, odd login times, unexpected file access).
    • Reassign ownership of key accounts immediately (even if temporarily).
    • Put a handover plan in place so clients aren’t left unsupported.
    • Pull the contract + key policies (confidentiality, IT/monitoring, restrictive covenants, garden leave, return of property).

None of this has to be accusatory. It’s a standard “exit control” approach that protects everyone.

Notice Period

Decide what they should (and shouldn’t) be doing

This is where notice period decisions matter. If the employee has high client exposure and there’s a real competitor risk, you may want to reduce what they can touch during notice.

Sometimes that means:

    • limiting duties to internal handover only
    • removing them from client comms
    • considering garden leave (which is often used precisely to protect client relationships and confidential info)

Whether you can do garden leave properly depends on the garden leave clause (and the wider employment contracts position). If it’s not clearly provided for in the employee’s contract, you’ll want HR advice before you go hard on restrictions.

Need support with this right now?

If an employee is leaving and you’re worried about client contact or data being taken, a quick call can help you choose the safest next step. Speak to our HR Helpline for practical guidance on evidence, comms and notice-period options.
Discover the HR Helpline Retained HR Consultancy

First Week – Stabilise Clients & Capture Evidence

Stabilise client relationships

This is where a lot of businesses freeze — then lose accounts because the client feels neglected.

Your client message should be about continuity, not drama.

Do this early:

introduce the new point of contact immediately

    • proactively book short continuity calls with key accounts
    • reassure clients that nothing is slipping
    • log anything relevant calmly and factually

Example client message

“Just a quick note to confirm [Name] will be your main point of contact going forward. We’re doing short continuity calls this week with key clients to make sure everything runs smoothly — does [time] work?”

If a client says “they asked me to move”, you can keep it neutral:


“Thanks for letting us know. Our focus is making sure you’re fully supported. Let’s confirm what you need from us this week.”

Then document it (date, what was said, any evidence the client is comfortable sharing).

Gather Evidence

If you end up needing to take action, the difference between “we think” and “we can show” is everything.

Think about evidence in two categories: system facts and human facts.

System facts

    • CRM audit logs: exports, bulk downloads, unusual access patterns
    • sudden changes to client notes, contacts, pipeline stages
    • email patterns: spikes in outbound volume, unusual attachments, external recipients
    • use of personal email or cloud storage where you have legitimate visibility under policy

Human facts

    • client messages (e.g., forwarded emails, screenshots if the client offers them)
    • internal reports from colleagues who noticed unusual behaviour
    • notes from resignation conversations where competitor plans were discussed

Build a simple timeline

    • resignation date
    • what access changes were made and when
    • what triggered the concern
    • what evidence exists and where it’s stored
    • which clients/accounts are impacted

What not to do

Avoid anything that looks intrusive or disproportionate, especially if your policies don’t support it.

    • digging into personal devices without a clear basis
    • telling lots of people “they’re stealing clients”
    • confronting the employee with allegations you can’t evidence
    • sending emotional, threatening messages you may regret later

Keep it factual, tight, and professional.

Client communication

Protect relationships without defamation

This is where a lot of businesses freeze, then lose accounts because the client feels neglected.

Your client message should be about continuity, not conflict.

A good approach is:

    • introduce the new point of contact immediately
    • reassure them nothing is slipping
    • offer a quick check-in call

Something like:

“Just a quick note to confirm [Name] will be your main point of contact going forward. We’re doing short continuity calls this week with key clients to make sure everything runs smoothly—does [time] work?”

If a client says “they asked me to move”, thank them and log it. Don’t rant, don’t accuse. You can say:

“Thanks for letting us know. Our focus is on making sure you’re fully supported. Let’s confirm what you need from us this week.”

It keeps the relationship steady and preserves evidence without creating reputational risk.

Book a Discovery Call

Book Your Free Discovery Call - 30 Minutes

Together we can devise a plan on what needs to happen next to help deal with your people challenges.

Book your call

How to Speak to the Employee

Firm, neutral, documented

You can say a lot without accusing anyone.

Objectives:

    • remind them of obligations (confidentiality, proper conduct during notice)
    • set boundaries (client contact, data handling)
    • put expectations on record

Neutral script


“As you work your notice period, we need to protect client relationships and confidential information. Please confirm you haven’t retained or shared any confidential client data and that client contact will be limited to agreed handover activity. If you need anything to support handover, please route it through [named person].”

If you have evidence of unusual behaviour (e.g., CRM exports), you can be more direct without being inflammatory:


“We’ve identified activity that suggests client data may have been accessed or exported outside normal handover activity. We’re reviewing this. In the meantime, please don’t export or share client information, and don’t contact clients unless agreed as part of handover.”

If they push back, keep it calm:

“We’re protecting business interests and we’ll follow a fair process.”

Document the conversation and follow up in writing.

If it continues…

Escalate in layers

Layer 1: tighten controls + written expectations

Often enough on its own. Many people back off once:

    • boundaries are explicit

    • access is controlled

    • account ownership is clearly reassigned

Layer 2: formal HR process during notice (if misconduct is happening)

If misconduct is occurring during employment (data misuse, dishonesty, breach of policy), you may need:

    • an investigation

    • formal steps under your disciplinary process

Done properly, it creates a clean record and strengthens your position.

Layer 3: specialist support (HR + legal)

Usually appropriate where:

    • the employee is senior and the risk is material

    • there’s credible evidence of misuse of confidential/commercially sensitive information

    • clients provide statements they’ve been solicited

    • there are post-termination restrictions and you need advice on enforcement

It’s worth saying plainly: legal routes are rarely the fastest or cheapest option — get good advice before committing to it.

Prevention

Reduce opportunity as much as intent

If client-poaching risk is real in your business, the biggest wins usually come from reducing opportunity.

Remove single points of failure

If one person holds the relationships, history, contacts and commercial knowledge, the temptation (and opportunity) rises. Treat client ownership as a team asset:

    • shared account coverage
    • documented client history in one place
    • a clear “second contact” on key accounts long before anyone resigns

Tighten information discipline

Keep sensitive client information on a genuine need-to-know basis:

    • limit who can export client lists and pipeline reports
    • restrict access to pricing/proposal libraries
    • ensure visibility over unusual activity

Make expectations clear before you need them

Resignations get messy when the business assumes it can do things that aren’t reflected in contracts and policies.

    • clear confidentiality wording matters
    • garden leave may be appropriate for high-risk roles (if contract supports it)
    • post-termination restrictions should be proportionate and role-appropriate

Train managers with a simple resignation playbook

A short checklist helps managers act calmly instead of emotionally:

    • who to notify
    • what to document
    • how to start a clean handover
    • how to protect client relationships during the transition

Need a steady next step?

If you’re dealing with a resignation and you’re concerned about client contact or data leaving the business, we can help you choose the safest next move. Speak to our HR team for practical guidance on notice-period options, evidence and client communication.

Book a Free HR Consultation

If you need access to commercial and friendly experts to chat through any HR concerns or challenges your business is facing, you have come to the right place!

Book now

News & Events

Clients & Partners

Join us across our channels:

Having an HR Emergency?

Get fast, confidential help from our HR helpline.

Speak to an expert