Best practices for writing corporate policies and procedures

Whether you’re launching a new organization or adapting long-standing policies, here are some best practices for writing policies and procedures.

December 29, 2020

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Writing policies and procedures can seem like a daunting task for businesses and corporations. Do you use the policies and procedures of similar organizations as reference points? Where do you find the most up-to-date legal information to inform your content? How do you that this policy will hold up in court?

It’s hard to know where to begin when creating a policy and procedure manual.

Whether you’re launching a new branch of your organizations or adapting long-standing policies, you may find yourself wondering how to write a particular policy. Crafting effective corporate policies takes planning, research, and revision, but the process doesn’t have to be painful.

Below are some best practices for writing policies and procedures. You can also download a handy policy template to follow along with the process.

Philosophy of Good Policy

Policies and procedures are far more than lists of rules that employees need to follow.

At the core, policies communicate the mission, values, and guiding principles of an organization. Before you start outlining and writing policies and procedures, you’ll need to think through the big-picture goals and values of your organization.

Established goals and values help focus policies and practices.

The philosophies behind policies matter because policies and procedures can’t address every possible situation employees will face. Some procedures will outline a process that never varies. But, more often, employees will have to exercise their own discretion in critical situations.

Well-written policies help guide decision-making. For example, a food service organization’s customer service policy can’t give employees step-by-step instructions on every situation they’ll encounter.

But a well-written policy that emphasizes things such as communication skills, comped meals, and manager intervention can help employees make the best decision in the moment.

Avoiding deliberate indifference

Simply put, deliberate indifference happens when an organization ignores a potentially risky situation that could result in the violation of constitutional rights.

For example, an organization could be charged with deliberate indifference if leaders failed to follow through on investigating a report of sexual harassment.

Avoiding deliberate indifference starts with good policy. When writing policies and procedures, organizational leaders should anticipate potential risks and dangerous situations in their industry.

Effective policies hold employees accountable by outlining how to handle critical incidents, creating checks and balances, and establishing disciplinary measures.

Three Pillars of Excellence

Policies and procedures are the starting point for organizational excellence. However, they are not the only piece of the puzzle. The excellence of an organization is upheld by three pillars.

If any fail, the chances of that organization failing increases.

Policy

Policies and procedures guide day-to-day operations, set clear expectations for employees, and guard against liability issues.

Training

Training communicates expectations and teaches employees how to apply policy in real-life situations. Effective training will allow employees to practice regular procedures and prepare them for critical or emergency situations.

Supervision/accountability

Of course, organizations have to follow through on policies and training in order to hold employees accountable. This doesn’t mean that supervisors have to constantly be looking over employees’ shoulders. But it does mean establishing firm discipline structures.

It may even include creating an internal affairs office to handle audits and investigations. Organizational leaders should also regularly review policies, procedures, and incident reports.

How to Write Effective Policies and Procedures

Step 1: Get organized

Identify key policies

Not all policies are created equal. Certain policies are more important than others in laying the groundwork for smooth operations. Before you start writing policies and procedures, make a list of all the policies that address national, state, or local laws and regulations.

Identify the high-liability issues in your industry—the issues most likely to land your organization in court. You’ll want to spend more time on these than on others.

Along with high-risk issues, think through expectations and acceptable behavior for different areas of operations. Which procedures are essential for employees to complete correctly, and which are up for some interpretation?

What incidents has your organization faced in the past? Consider the 80/20 principle. Which 20 percent of your policies will give you 80 percent of your results?

Begin with the end in mind

Policies need to be clear, focused, and consistent. Before you start writing policies and procedures for a specific area, try to anticipate questions or objections employees might have.

Policies can’t cover every situation, but they should provide clear guidelines and action steps. This means that along with considering the mission and purpose behind policies, you need to consider the following questions:

Thinking through these questions will make sure employees can live out your policy in the real world. Reporting, supervision, investigation, and training make your policy “come to life” and affect the everyday decisions of employees.

Step 2: Find reliable source material

You don’t have to start from scratch when creating a new policy. Policies should be tailored to your organization, but don’t make the mistake of creating them without consulting outside sources.

Model policies

In many industries, organizations and state associations publish sample policies online. For example, corporations can find model policies for almost any topic imaginable on sites like Workable.

Legal counsel

Especially in industries where case law is constantly changing, consulting legal experts is a crucial step in risk management. Talking with a lawyer or a representative from an organization such as the ACLU can help you write policies and procedures that keep your company out of court.

Step 3: Create a policy structure

Build a template

After writing policies and procedures, you’ll want to create a template for the finalized versions of your policies. Each policy should have a similar layout and use the same font.

Having consistent, consistent, professional-looking policies will help your organization’s credibility with future employees and partners and during litigation. Save your policies as PDFs to allow for easy indexing and searching.

Establish a normalized structure

Creating a similar framework for all your policies will help you cover all the necessary aspects of every policy. It will also make policies more consistent and easier for employees to navigate.

A common policy structure might include:

Step 4: Distribute the policy for feedback

Policies and procedures won’t be perfect on the first shot. After completing the first draft, you’ll need to gather feedback and insights from other leaders in your organization.

Policies will need to travel up the chain of command so all company leaders can sign off on them. Gathering notes and changes will help you hone policies so they can best serve your organization.

Paper-based methods

Some organization administrators print copies of the policy draft and hand it out to leaders. They then collect the notated copies and input the changes in the digital file.

This can be tedious and time-consuming. And since leaders can’t see one another’s notes, they may overlook important points.

Electronic methods

With an electronic policy management solution such as PowerDMS, you can easily create a workflow to collaborate on policy drafts. This will automatically send the draft up the chain of command and allow collaborators to see who made which changes.

With PowerDMS, administrators can track where the document is in the process, so the draft never gets stuck or goes missing.

Step 5: Distribute the policy to staff

Once you have the sign-offs from leadership, you need to make sure the new policies make it into the hands of every single employee. This is easier said than done.

You have a few options to distribute policies and procedures to your staff:

“Beginning of shift” physical sign-off

Many administrators send out paper or emailed copies of policies, and then gather employee signatures on a paper sign-off sheet. However, this method provides little accountability and isn’t sufficient for record-keeping.

Sign off sheets can get lost or destroyed. Some employees may forget to sign for policies or note the date.

And leaders have no way of making sure that every employee actually read the policy before signing.

Electronic sign-off

PowerDMS lets you send out policies to every staff member with just the click of a button. You can track employee signatures, schedule automatic reminders, and see timestamps of when each employee read and signed a policy.

With PowerDMS, employees never see conflicting copies of policies and procedures. And you can even create customizable quizzes to test comprehension.