Creating policies and procedures, as well as process documents and work instructions, can take months of research and writing. But, consider this: Well-crafted policies and procedures can help your organization with compliance and provide a structure for meeting and overcoming challenges, both big and small.
This article provides you with guidance on how to prepare for, research, write, review, and publish policies, procedures, and work instructions to get the best result for all stakeholders. Experts discuss the unique roles of each document in an organization, and downloadable checklists supply you with detailed guidance for the document creation process.
While the terms are frequently mentioned together, policies and procedures serve different roles. Policies are high-level guidelines that define the culture of an organization by shaping decisions and providing a framework for daily activities. Procedures, on the other hand, enumerate lower-level processes and provide steps your employees need to take to adhere to your policies or complete a process. Together, they can guide an organization to success through legal and regulatory compliance.
Charles Cox is a Principal at Firefly Consulting, an Austin-based boutique consulting firm that specializes in innovation and operational excellence. He is also a featured contributor to the recent book Innovating Lean Six Sigma (McGraw-Hill, 2016). He describes how policies are “at a high level in the organization and almost never linked to a given part of operations. They provide an umbrella under which the entire organization operates. They key into what the organization is all about. Policy links to strategy, to culture, to decision making, whereas procedures and processes or work instructions are the actual documents that govern the transformation of inputs into outputs.”
Policies and procedures in a company serve to define how employees are expected to behave and to detail responsibilities of both management and employees. Company policies and procedures help to ensure that employees receive their legal and ethical entitlements. At the same time, they guarantee that an organization pays proper attention to business concerns.
Policies clarify the expected behavior and output of employees — or volunteers and others, such as board members — in the context of a specific organization, which allows employers and other leaders to manage more effectively. Policies and procedures guide daily workplace activities by promoting compliance with laws and regulations, providing strategic perspective for decision making, and simplifying processes.
Creating good policies takes time and effort, but you can increase your chances for success by remembering a few basics. Most of the work happens before you ever begin to write. Your pre-writing activities include deciding on a document focus and researching background. After writing, your documents should be reviewed, validated, and approved. Finally, you will disseminate your documents and train users in the new policies and procedures.
Before you start to write, keep the following things in mind. A policy or procedure should focus on one concept at a time. Because of the complexity and effort required to develop good policies, and because they influence the values of your office and potentially also have legal ramifications, ensure that your C-level team supports and endorses your efforts. Support the policy with employee education. Don’t expect users to simply read and retain information. As you train, give users a positive reason for learning and adapting to any new guidelines, such as achieving greater efficiency (which leads to a better organizational bottomline).
To get an overview of the policy creation process, follow this workflow, and then review the checklists for each step to ensure that you’ve covered all aspects.
You can also use this pre-formatted template to a policy. Simply add your logo and the specific content of your policy, and customize the sections in the template to fit your needs.
Much of the effort in creating policies and procedures takes place before you begin to write. This pre-writing checklist can help you find the support you need for your formal documents.
The key to strong policies and procedures is understanding how the people who use the documents actually perform the documented activities. Use this research checklist to gather the resources needed for a document people will want to use.
Once you have completed your pre-writing activities, this checklist can help you compose your policies and procedures clearly and efficiently.
In most organizations, policies and procedures must receive written approval. Download this checklist to streamline the document approval process.
No matter how well-written or beautifully designed the document, you can’t just toss your new policies and procedures to the teams and expect them to read and understand everything. This checklist shows you how to present new policies and procedures for a lasting effect.
Every industry, business, and organization of any size, whether for-profit or nonprofit, government or private, regulated or non-regulated, can benefit from policies and procedures. The following are some of the fields that particularly benefit from defined policies and procedures:
Companies implement policies and procedures for a number of reasons. As Cox explains, “Any company needs to have policies which address points of conflict before they happen.” Examples include points of hand off between teams, such as when designs are transferred to manufacturing. Policies also promote conflict resolution. “Many companies have escalation procedures, but that’s after the fact,” says Cox. “A proactive stance is better.”
They communicate internally the values, objectives, requirements, and best practices throughout the company, from the C-level to independent contractors. Policies in particular also communicate the company values and objectives to potential employees, investors, customers, and the media. In general, when executed correctly, policies and procedures serve to bring order where chaos could reign. Here is why policies and procedures are crucial to your organization:
How do you get the best policy and procedure for your situation? Documents must meet your needs. A template can guide you to consider needed content and usable formatting, but the words and format must be customized to your situation. Following these guidelines, good documents provide the following:
Specific policies and procedures may vary depending on the type of organization. At a minimum, you need policies for events, such as holidays or family emergencies, policies for behavior, such as attendance, absences, and harassment, and a policy governing technology, such as a BYOD policy. The table below shows some of the types of policies needed for three sample industries.
Common
Health and safety
Privacy and data protection
Equity, diversity, anti-discrimination, and anti-harassment
The table below shows some of the types of policies needed for three sample industries.Unique to Industry
Board of directors and trustee code of conduct
Board of directors and trustee code of conduct
Board of directors and trustee code of conduct
Bring your own device (BYOD)
Service outside of business hours
Certainly, establishing a consistent, efficient, and effective way of doing things is desirable, and policies and procedures can help. But, documents have their limits.
Andy Nichols is a Quality Program Manager at the Michigan Manufacturing Technology Center. He sees a historical precedent for over-documentation rooted in the pre-ISO 9000 days of military procurement, when government agencies required any type of professionally formatted document that recorded repeatable processes. The original ISO, however, only called for a quality document that provided an umbrella for the entire organization. “Over-documentation was a perception of the standard. It was never prescribed at all,” says Nichols.
This misperception led to the brick-like documents that people still dread — multiple policies with a procedure to match each, often labeled with a number instead of a real-language title and with usable content buried at the lowest layer. “A lot of people never get past the idea that documentation doesn’t make things happen,” notes Nichols. In his opinion, “Trainers and consultants still espouse a structure that wasn’t necessary and caused a bureaucracy that got in the way of people adopting a quality system.”
Nevertheless, Nichols sees a role for documentation beyond process control. Procedures and work instructions in particular can capture knowledge and real-world experience to be passed on to the next generation. In manufacturing, that institutional memory element becomes especially crucial as seasoned workers retire. “Whatever the document type,” he says, “documents are an excellent way of capturing tribal knowledge.”
Progressive company policies include such things as allowing access to personal social media during office hours, permitting work from home or remote work access, or offering paid time off (i.e., a personal pool of days off to be used for sick days or other issues as needed). Another example, demonstrated by the following companies, is generous paid maternity leave, including, of course, adoptive or foster children.
Facilities supporting underage persons require their own set of documents. At a minimum, the following policies and procedures apply:
Health and social care policies include guidelines to protect the health and safety of healthcare workers. They also provide standards for vulnerable citizens, such as guidelines for their healthcare, food safety in facilities, living conditions in facilities or domicile care, general safety and security, and well-being and protection during civil emergencies, such as pandemic, earthquake, or severe weather events.
Although it is important to customize any documents for your situation, policy and procedure documents tend to include core elements that help identify the document and provide the information necessary:
If your organization must create many policies and procedures, consider purchasing a purpose-built policy management platform. Such software provides templates and a central hub for drafting, reviewing, and publishing documentation and built-in version control. Some programs also offer self-training capability, which includes recordkeeping for grades in quizzes. This is important for compliance audits.
Manual template packages are also available for sale, sometimes with software. Policy management plugins provide policy document management for common collaboration platforms. If documents are created in a word processing program, migrating them to a central location is of greater significance. Many organizations provide a web portal for policies and procedures, where users can easily search on keywords for the desired content.
No matter how the documents are created, online publishing options help to ensure that users can easily access the latest version. Binders of documents that no one can find have never been helpful.
Many of the steps for preparing policies are echoed in the preparation of procedures. For procedures, the need to understand the process is of particular importance. When writing a procedure, keep the following things in mind:
Even more so than with procedures, if work instructions form part of your documentation, they must be precise and written in the users’ language. Work instructions must be specific about how a task is completed. Visual cues help learners with marginal or no reading skills, and graphics aid all users to more easily grasp and retain concepts. Keep the following things in mind when writing work instructions:
It’s important to write clearly, concisely, and simply. To help you achieve this, write with the reader in mind and follow these tips:
Download this document with tips on tone to maximize the effectiveness and readability of your policies and procedures.
In addition to writing clearly, you can enhance the usability of your policies and procedures with a clear layout and optimal use of color and graphics, such as charts, diagrams, and images. Many fields and regulatory areas have predefined templates that can expedite your writing process by showing the types of content you must add. Templates usually also provide an attractive, readable format, so you don’t have to worry about layout and design. You can customize the content to suit your organization.
Here are some other formatting tips:
If you have the a designer who can help you create icons or choose existing ones, these symbols can help direct users to appropriate sections of your documents.
Although policies and procedures serve different purposes, they can be combined in one document, particularly when both the policies and accompanying procedures are short. Some believe, however, that their different roles are a good reason to separate then into two documents. Ideally, you should update procedures (and especially work instructions) frequently to reflect innovations in process or address problems and incidents. You can revise policies less frequently.
To have an efficient and compliant organization, you need all three p documents — policies, procedures, and processes — plus something else: work instructions. The terms policy and procedure are sometimes confused and used interchangeably, whereas they serve different purposes.
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