delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appeal provides us with an opportunity to clarify an issue that has dogged courts across the nation: on a Law Against Discrimination (LAD) termination claim, what is the plaintiffs evidentiary burden that will satisfy the second prong of the prima facie case under the McDonnell Douglas 1 burden-shifting scheme. We hold that so long as the employee shows that he has been performing in the position from which he was terminated, the second prong is fulfilled. We further hold that the quality of the employee’s performance does not come into play on the plaintiffs prima facie case.
I.
Because the case comes to us on Stanley Roberts’s appeal from the denial of its motion for a directed verdict, we accept as true all the evidence supporting Zive and accord him all legitimate inferences.
R.
4:40-1;
Verdicchio v. Ricca,
179
N.J.
1, 30,
So viewed, the following are the facts of the case: Stanley Roberts, an importer of flatware for retail sale, hired Zive in May 1991 to head its new “Homeworld” division. Prior to working for Stanley Roberts, Zive had substantial experience as a sales executive.
Between 1991 and 1994, Homeworld’s sales steadily increased from $905,000 to $2 million. In 1995, sales declined for the first time to $1.7 million and in 1996, to $1.3 million. To help meet sales goals, Zive hired an assistant, Tom Garda, and Homeworld’s sales increased to $1.8 million in 1997.
Despite the fact that Homeworld had never earned more than $2 million, Edward Pomeranz, the president of Stanley Roberts, told Zive that Homeworld needed $2.5 million in yearly sales to justify keeping the division open. Zive thought that Homeworld would earn that amount in 1998 and agreed to meet the goal. In September 1998, Garda was asked to head another division and reduced the time he spent with Homeworld. By October of 1998, it was apparent that Homeworld would not achieve the sales goal; instead, it reached only $1.5 million. Those numbers were not explained; however, sales for the entire company declined substantially in 1998.
Although Zive admittedly was unable to reach the $2.5 million sales goal imposed by Pomeranz, and there was discussion of possibly closing Homeworld, neither Pomeranz nor any other Stanley Roberts official ever suggested, even obliquely, that Zive was in danger of losing his job. The only discussion of his employment occurred when Pomeranz mentioned a potential move from a salaried to a commissioned position.
Zive suffered a debilitating stroke on December 3, 1998 that paralyzed the left side of his body. According to Zive, Pomeranz *443 visited him in the hospital and told him to “hurry up and get better and get back to work” and asked Zive to attend the Chicago Housewares show in January 1999. After the stroke, he worked from home, talked to Garda and to his secretary by phone, and reviewed business reports.
The last time Pomeranz actually saw Zive before the firing, which took place by telephone, the effects of the stroke were still obvious. Zive was limping, needed a cane, and had to speak slowly in order to be understood. On March 8, 1999, after rehabilitation, Zive called Harold Pomeranz, the Chairman of the Board of Stanley Roberts, to state that he was ready to return to work. He was told that his “services would no longer be required” and was offered a severance package of $20,000 plus medical insurance for a year. Zive went to the office on March 15, 1999 but was unsuccessful in saving his salaried position.
Stanley Roberts issued a memorandum on March 22, 1999, advising Homeworld Sales Representatives that Zive was no longer with the company and instructing them to “[e]ontinue to direct all inquiries [regarding Homeworld] to Tom Garda and Tina Patterson, as we are going to continue with the division.” (emphasis added). According to Zive, Stanley Roberts never closed Homeworld and subsequently replaced Garda with another employee, Mel Rudy, who performed essentially all of Zive’s former job functions.
On June 24, 1999, Zive brought this action, claiming discriminatory discharge in violation of the LAD. At trial, Stanley Roberts moved for a directed verdict, claiming that Zive had not presented a
prima facie
case of discrimination because he faded to prove that he had met the “legitimate expectations of his employer” under the test formulated in
Clowes v. Terminix Int’l, Inc.,
109
N.J.
575, 597,
The Appellate Division affirmed, holding that a discharged employee in a LAD case need not show that his performance met Ms employer’s subjective legitimate expectations but need only show that he was “objectively qualified” for the position. The court equated objective qualification with basic performance, holding that because Zive had worked for Stanley Roberts for eight years and had been “actively engaged in the management and administration of Homeworld,” there was “more than a scintilla of evidence that he was objectively qualified for the position he held.”
In ruling, the Appellate Division refused to accept the $2.5 million sales target as an “objective” measure of Zive’s performance because it involved “external and internal, tangible and intangible factors,” such as the market for the product, the market share and reputation of the company, the economy, the competition, and the commitment of the company to spend time and money to meet the target. Rather than objectively measuring Zive’s performance, the Appellate Division viewed the $2.5 million as a subjective goal established to determine whether Homeworld was “worthy as a permanent extension of defendant’s established lines of business.”
Frnally, the Appellate Division approved the trial judge’s decision not to instruct the jury with regard to the burden-shiftmg analysis of McDonnell Douglas and to pose only the ultimate issue of whether Zive proved an act of discrimination by a preponderance of the evidence.
We granted Stanley Roberts’s petition for certification.
Zive v. Stanley Roberts, Inc.,
179
N.J.
373,
II.
On appeal, Stanley Roberts argues that it was entitled to a directed verdict because Zive did not satisfy the second prong of the
prima facie
burden under the LAD insofar as he failed to prove “that he was performing his job at a level that met his employer’s legitimate expectations.”
Clowes, supra,
109
N.J.
at 597,
Zive counters that he needed only to show that he was “objectively qualified” to satisfy the second prong of his prima facie ease, and that he did so by proving that he held the position as head of Homeworld for an extended period of time. He further argues that no trial error, warranting our intervention, occurred.
The amici argue that the second prong analysis is an objective one that is to be judged without resort to an employer’s subjective views. They contend that because plaintiffs burden on the prima facie case is intended to be modest, so long as he can show that he was qualified to hold his job, for example, by establishing that he actually performed it for a period of time, the second prong is satisfied.
III.
Enacted in 1945, the New Jersey LAD guarantees that all citizens be afforded the civil rights promised by the State
*446
Constitution.
Viscik v. Fowler Equip. Co.,
173
N.J.
1, 12,
The LAD prevents only
unlawful
discrimination against disabled individuals; it does not prevent the termination or change of employment of any person who “is unable to perform adequately the duties of employment, nor [does it] preclude discrimination among individuals on the basis of competence, performance, conduct or any other reasonable standards.”
Viscik, supra,
173
N.J.
at 13,
What makes an employer’s personnel action unlawful is the employer’s intent.
Marzano v. Computer Sci. Corp.,
our legal scheme against discrimination would be little more than a toothless tiger if the courts were to require such direct evidence of discrimination. As we explained in Chipollini [v. Spencer Gifts, Inc., 814 F.2d 893, 899 (3d Cir.1987)], “we do not require direct proof of ... discrimination because it is often unavailable or difficult to find----‘Even an employer who knowingly discriminates on the basis of [protected status] may leave no written records revealing the forbidden motive and may communicate it orally to no one.’ ”814 F.2d at 899 (citing LaMontagne v. American Convenience Products, Inc.,750 F.2d 1405 , 1410 (7th Cir.1984)). [Marzano, supra,91 F.3d at 507 .]
To address the difficulty of proving discriminatory intent, New Jersey has adopted the procedural burden-shifting methodology articulated in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
411
U.S.
792, 93
S.Ct.
1817, 36
L.Ed.2d
668 (1973);
Viscik, supra,
173
N.J.
at 13-14,
McDonnell Douglas
enables a plaintiff to make his or her ease through circumstantial evidence.
Marzano, supra,
The evidentiary burden at the
prima facie
stage is “rather modest: it is to demonstrate to the court that plaintiffs factual scenario is compatible with discriminatory intent — i.e., that discrimination
could
be a reason for the employer’s action.”
Marzano, supra,
That consistent reaffirmance of the plaintiffs slight evidentiary burden acknowledges that requiring greater proof would generally prevent a plaintiff from accessing the tools, i.e., evidence of the employer’s motivation, necessary to even begin to assemble a case. Such a result would not be consistent with “the complex evidentiary edifice constructed by the Supreme Court, and [would] impose on plaintiff the very burden that
McDonnell Douglas
sought to avoid — that of uncovering a smoking gun.”
Marzano, supra,
Procedurally, courts have recognized that the
prima facie
case is to be evaluated solely on the basis of the evidence presented by the plaintiff, irrespective of defendants’ efforts to dispute that evidence.
Cline v. Catholic Diocese of Toledo,
One court aptly described the prima facie burden as giving plaintiff
the right, as in a poker game, to require the employer to show its hand — that is, to offer an explanation other than discrimination why the employee suffered an adverse employment action. It is as if plaintiff told the employer, “I cannot get into your mind to prove with certainty that you acted against me based on a discriminatory motive. You, on the other hand, know the reason why you acted against me. I have done the best I can, which is to show that discrimination could have been the motive. Therefore, it is your turn to prove me wrong by articulating the non-discriminatory reason for your action.” If the employer is unable to proffer a nondiscriminatory reason, plaintiff is entitled to summary judgment or judgment as a matter of law, as the case may be, if the employer proffers a reason and the plaintiff can produce enough evidence to enable a reasonable fact finder to conclude that the proffered reason is false, plaintiff has earned the right to present his or her case to the jury.
[Marzano, supra, 91 F.3d at 508.]
The establishment of the
prima facie
ease creates an inference of discrimination,
Furnco Constr. Corp. v. Waters,
438
U.S.
567, 577, 98
S.Ct.
2943, 2949-50,
In the third stage of the burden-shifting scheme, the burden of production shifts back to the employee to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the reason articulated by the employer was merely a pretext for discrimination and not the true reason for the employment decision.
Ibid.
To prove pretext, a plaintiff may not simply show that the employer’s reason was false but must also demonstrate that the employer was motivated by discriminatory intent.
Viscik, supra,
173
N.J.
at 14,
IV.
Because
McDonnell Douglas
arose in a hiring context, in
Clowes,
we recognized a need to adjust the elements of the
prima facie
case to account for differences in a discharge situation.
Clowes, supra,
109
N.J.
at 596-97,
Zive contends that the Appellate Division correctly concluded that he proved the second prong by showing his “objective qualification” for the job as revealed by his eight year performance. Stanley Roberts counters that the words of Clowes mean exactly what they say — that on the prima facie case it is plaintiffs burden to show that he did what his employer expected of him and that *451 because Zive conceded that he did not meet the $2.5 million sales goal, he failed the second prong.
A.
Of the forty-one jurisdictions (forty states and the District of Columbia) with case law on this subject, only eight (including New Jersey) have adopted the “employer’s legitimate expectations” standard.
Chang v. Inst. for Pub.-Private P’ships, Inc.,
There is a similar split in the federal circuits, which, like the states, have generally rejected the “employer’s legitimate expectations” standard. The Court in
Bienkowski v. Am. Airlines, Inc.,
*452 Although the Loeb approach has some appeal as a matter of principle, we cannot reconcile it with the Supreme Court’s attempts, in McDonnell Douglas and Burdine, to simplify presentation of an employment discrimination case. Placing a plaintiffs “qualifications” in issue at both the prima facie case and pretext stages of a termination case is an unnecessary redundancy. Courts have struggled with the bifurcated analysis that results from Loeb. The requirement that a plaintiff prove he is meeting his employer’s reasonable expectations represents an imperfect attempt at analogy with McDonnell Douglas. ... Consequently, a plaintiff challenging his termination or demotion can ordinarily establish a prima facie case of age discrimination by showing that he continued to possess the necessary qualifications for his job at the time of the adverse action. The lines of battle may then be drawn over the employer’s articulated reason for its action and whether that reason is a pretext for age discrimination.
[Id, at 1505-06 (citations omitted); see also Carter v. Three Springs Residential Treatment,132 F.3d 635 , 643 (11th Cir.1998)(holding plaintiff must show only that he had minimum requirements or qualifications for job to establish prima facie case).]
The Third Circuit adopted the same approach in
Sempier v. Johnson & Higgins,
45
F.
3d 724, 729 (3d Cir.),
cert. denied,
515
U.S.
1159, 115
S.Ct.
2611,
The Ninth Circuit has adopted a position midway between “objectively qualified” and “legitimate expectations,” requiring evidence of satisfactory job performance sufficient to create a jury question.
Douglas v. Anderson,
656
F.
2d 528, 533 n. 5 (9th Cir.1981). Likewise, in
Crimm v. Mo. Pac. R.R. Co.,
the Eighth Circuit has held that a plaintiff need not prove compliance with all of his employer’s rules and regulations in order to establish a
prima facie
ease but only that his performance was satisfactory, at
*453
least until the incident in question.
Interestingly, the Second Circuit has accepted the “performing satisfactorily” language but interprets it as “objectively qualified”:
Thus a mere variation in terminology between “qualified for the position” and “performing ... satisfactorily” would not be significant so long as, in substance, all that is required is that the plaintiff establish basic eligibility for the position at issue, and not the greater showing that he satisfies the employer. The qualification prong must not, however, be interpreted in such a way as to shift onto the plaintiff an obligation to anticipate and disprove, in his prima facie case, the employer’s proffer of a legitimate, non-discriminatory basis for its decision.
[Slattery v. Swiss Reinsurance Am. Corp., 248 F. 3d 87, 91-92 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 534 U.S. 951, 122 S.Ct. 348,151 L.Ed.2d 263 (2001).]
Although the Sixth Circuit utilizes the “employer’s legitimate expectations” as the theoretical framework for the second prong, in
Cline, supra,
The Tenth Circuit melds all approaches by allowing a plaintiff to make out the second prong of the
prima facie
termination case in three distinct ways: by showing that she continued to possess the objective qualifications she held when she was hired, by testifying that her work was satisfactory, even when disputed by her employer, or by evidence that she had held her position for a significant period of time.
MacDonald v. E. Wyo. Mental Health Ctr.,
*454
As their language reveals, at issue in all of those cases is not the semantic difference between “objectively qualified” and “satisfying the employer’s legitimate expectations.” Indeed, many of the eases interchange those terms by setting forth a paradigm in which performance equals qualification.
Slattery, supra,
We dealt with that problem in
Viscik, supra,
to some extent, where we held that the “employer’s legitimate expectations” is an objective and not a subjective standard and, as the vast majority of our sister jurisdictions have, reserved the issue of the employer’s subjective expectations for the pretext stage of a LAD case.
Viscik, supra,
173
N.J.
at 21,
Today we address what kind of evidence will satisfy that objective standard. We continue to believe that Loeb, supra, and Clowes, supra, sensibly recognized the need for a distinction between the prima facie standard in a hiring case and in a termination case. We also reaffirm the obvious — that although the second prong in a termination case necessarily requires refinement to address the differences between failing-to-hire and firing, it is not intended to impose a heavier burden on the plaintiff.
That said, we recognize the language of Loeb, supra, and Clowes, supra, regarding the second prong as, at best imprecise and at worst, misleading. All that is necessary is that the plaintiff produce evidence showing that she was actually performing the job prior to the termination. Along with the remaining prongs of the prima facie ease, that evidence is sufficient to support the conclusion that the plaintiffs claim of discrimination is plausible *455 enough to warrant promotion to the next step of the McDonnell Douglas test. That is not a heavy burden nor was it meant to be. Indeed, the opposite conclusion would have the effect of precluding cases in which poor performance contributed to but was not the determinative factor in the termination decision. See Bergen Commercial Bank v. Sisler, 157 N.J. 188, 207, 723 A.2d 944, 953 (1999) (stating LAD plaintiff must show that prohibited consideration played role in decision-making process and had determinative influence).
As we have indicated, only the plaintiffs evidence should be considered. That evidence can come from records documenting the plaintiffs longevity in the position at issue or from testimony from the plaintiff or others that she had, in fact, been working within the title from which she was terminated. Because performance markers like poor evaluations are more properly debated in the second and third stages of the burden-shifting test, they do not come into play as part of the second prong of the
prima facie
case.
Greenberg v. Camden County Vocational & Technical Schools,
310
N.J.Super.
189, 202,
Contrary to Stanley Roberts’s contention, the refinement we have here adopted will not result in affording a jury trial to every aggrieved plaintiff in a protected class. As stated in Fuentes v. Perskie, 32 F.3d 759, 764 (3d Cir.1994), if the employer proffers a non-discriminatory reason, plaintiff does not qualify for a jury trial unless he or she can “point to some evidence, direct or *456 circumstantial, from which a factfinder could reasonably either (1) disbelieve the employer’s articulated legitimate reasons; or (2) believe that an invidious discriminatory reason was more likely than not a motivating or determinative cause of the employer’s action.” That is a significant enough burden to relieve any practical concerns over the rule we have limned today. If it is clear that that obligation cannot be met, defendants will prevail at summary judgment. We note, incidentally, that although a plaintiffs acknowledgment of performance deficiencies does not factor into the second prong of the prima facie ease, it will generally lighten the employer’s burden on the second phase and render more difficult plaintiffs ability to prove pretext.
B.
Applying that standard, we are satisfied that Zive established a prima facie case, including the second prong. Concededly, he was a member of a protected class. He had significant experience as a sales executive prior to his employment with Stanley Roberts. He had worked for Stanley Roberts for eight years and had been actively engaged in the management and administration of Homeworld. Importantly, until the time of his stroke, he had never been told that his job was at stake. He was terminated shortly after the stroke, at which time Stanley Roberts continued Homeworld with Tom Garda, and later another employee, performing Zive’s functions. 2 That is all that is required.
It is true that Zive acknowledged that he had fallen short of the $2.5 million sales goal. However, as we have said, that was not an issue on the prima facie case. Whether Pomeranz’s goal was realistic or merely aspirational, and whether reasons other than the nature of Zive’s performance affected the outcome remained for full debate in the second and third phases of the *457 McDonnell Douglas paradigm, otherwise as part of plaintiffs case-in-chief, or as part of defendant’s substantive defense.
Y.
We turn now to Stanley Roberts’s allegation that the trial judge improperly instructed the jury. Stanley Roberts argues that the trial judge erred in refusing to charge the jury on the elements of the
prima facie
case. We thought that issue was laid to rest in
Mogull v. CB Commercial Real Estate Group, Inc.,
162
N.J.
449, 472,
Once defendants [come] forward with their legitimate, non-diseriminatory reasons for terminating plaintiffs, the presumption and burden-shifting of the prima facie ease bec[ome] irrelevant. The jury was properly required to make only the ultimate finding of fact, whether defendants discriminated against plaintiffs [because of disability],
... [M]any courts which have considered the issue have determined that, in an employment discrimination case, it is either unnecessary or incorrect to charge the jury on the elements and burden-shifting of the prima facie case. See Shattuck v. Kinetic Concepts, Inc.,49 F.3d 1106 , 1110 (5th Cir.1995) (rejecting the employer’s contention that the jury charge was erroneous because it omitted an element of the prima facie case, concluding that “the pertinent inquiry is whether the plaintiff has proven discrimination, not whether he has made a prima facie case.”); Gehring v. Case Corp., 43 F.3d 340, 343 (7th Cir.1994), cert. denied, 515 U.S. 1159, 115 S.Ct. 2612,132 L.Ed.2d 855 (1995) (“burden-shifting model applies to pretrial proceedings, not to the jury’s evaluation of evidence at trial”)----
[Baker, supra, 312 N.J.Super. at 288,711 A.2d at 927 .]
As we have said, the
prima facie
case on a termination claim — plaintiff’s proof by a fair preponderance of the evidence that plaintiff (1) belongs to a protected class, (2) was performing in the position from which she was terminated, (3) nevertheless was fired, and (4) the employer sought someone to perform the same
*458
work after she left — serves essentially a gatekeeping function.
Mogull, supra,
162
N.J.
at 471,
It bears repeating that the fact that the jury is not instructed on the prima facie case does not remove the issue of performance from the jury’s consideration. The jury will necessarily consider an employee’s performance when it decides the ultimate question of whether the employee was fired as a result of discrimination.
VI.
The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed.
For affirmance — Chief Justice PORITZ and Justices LONG, LaVECCHIA, ZAZZALI, ALBIN, WALLACE and RIVERA-SOTO — 7.
Opposed — None.
Notes
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green, 411 U.S. 792, 93 S.Ct. 1817, 36 L.Ed.2d 668 (1973).
Although Stanley Roberts challenges that the fourth prong was satisfied, the March 22, 1999 memo it circulated after Zive’s termination amply supports this prong on a directed verdict inquiry.
It may be that Viscik, supra, caused this issue again to rear its head. There, the trial judge instructed the jury regarding the prima facie case. That issue was not raised on appeal before us and therefore was not addressed in our opinion.
