how does a company select people to layoff on a recession?
Usually, companies conducting layoffs have a “cost-saving target” in mind. Companies figure out how much they would need to cut costs to extend their runway by a certain number of months, and then use that figure to decide the number of staff they need to lay off. 
They analyse which departments and people are most essential to business function, and decide what the “minimum viable organisation” would look like for the business to continue running while hitting that cost-saving target.

Typically the functions that are most affected by layoffs, in decreasing order, are: 

1) Support roles (recruitment, operations, HR and finance)
2) Individuals from sales and commercial who are underperforming (low return on investment)
3) Product and engineering staff who are working on product lines aside from the company’s core product
4) Staff from the core product team


Within these categories, employees may be laid off based on a few different systems, listed here in order of objectivity:

1) Last in first out, where the most recently hired are laid off first
2) Performance metrics, where employees with a worse mathematically determined performance are laid off first
3) Forced rankings, where managers opinions of performance are used to determine who to lay off first

These are selected based on the level of available information, and ease of defending layoff decisions in court.

The CEO, CFO and Chief People Officer “drive decision-making” on layoffs, with the internal communications team and legal team closely involved.