Hannah is a semi-recovered perfectionist and longtime subscriber to the squiggly model of success. She spent 11 years learning from the best at brands like HubSpot and Food52 and loves running, cooking, and helping people feel A++ at work. 🤗
Table of Contents Table of contents loading. The bottom line Create how-to guides, in seconds.A policy and procedure manual is a gold mine of need-to-knows for growing businesses—and everyone contributing to that growth.
It explains the what, why, how, and when for day-to-day operations (in writing). And it guides how major decisions will be made, now and into the future.
Don’t love how long it takes to create documentation that no one uses or appreciates?
Do love helping everyone on your team teach, learn, and do their best work?
Join the club. (Literally—there’s a whole community of us!)
Whether you’re a start-with-a-template kind of a person or someone who wants to write their own rules, we’re here to make writing a policy and procedure manual easier, faster, and more fun.
Just in case anyone hasn’t told you lately—this work is important. We’ll help you remember why, and then give you some tips, tricks, and a policy and procedure template.
As you might imagine, a policy and procedure manual goes deep into company DNA. It brings together all of the:
Curious about what goes into a policy and procedure manual? It’ll vary from organization to organization, but here are a few ideas to consider.
Note: As with most things in 2023, shorter = better. Take what you need; leave what you don’t!
Individual contributors. Managers. Teams. Companies. Customers. Stakeholders. Investors. Shareholders. It’s easier to come up with people who benefit from a policy and procedure manual than people who don’t.
Let’s take a look at four advantages in turn.
Nothing slows teams down like a lack of information. Access to a resource with all company policies and procedures offers people a starting point to solve problems on their own, make informed recommendations, and empower others to serve themselves. Separate but related: Learn how to create a training manual people will actually use.
This one nearly goes without saying, but as someone who loves to help people take back time: standardized policies and procedures can improve efficiency (dramatically!). Good process documentation gives clear and concise guidance and details best practices, but it doesn’t stop there. A well-executed policy and procedure manual can also reduce confusion, misunderstandings, and avoidable mistakes—and increase consistency, competence, and confidence. What else rises, as a result? Overall productivity.
How long has it been since you were the new kid? If it hasn’t been long, your empathy should know no bounds. If it’s been a minute, chances are you can still point to someone who made the experience less painful. Did that person take you to lunch? Take the time to share institutional knowledge? Show you how to complete a task more efficiently? If yes—may we suggest you treat them to their beverage of choice? These people are your company’s Knowledge Champions. To become one yourself, all you need to do is pay it forward—by teaching your teammates where to look, what to do, and how to navigate exceptions to the rule. Fact: You can do all three of these things with a policy and procedure manual.
You may be in an industry where compliance is key. If meeting regulatory requirements and industry standards is part of your role and responsibilities, having documented policies and procedures will serve you day in and day out. Mitigating potential risks and liability is a big job—why not make it a little less hard?
If procedures are the building blocks for business as usual, policies are the foundation. Put the two together, and you should get a blueprint of how your company operates. Easy enough, right? But as anyone who has ever built anything from scratch can tell you, straightforward doesn’t always mean simple.
That’s why we’re passing along everything we’ve learned about creating a policy and procedure manual—as effortlessly as possible.
Download Tango’s policy and procedure manual templateHere’s the thing about a policy and procedure manual. It’s full of many policies and procedures, not just one.
We’ve been there. Let’s see if we can take policy and procedure writing from the most dreaded part of your day to the most delightful—starting with an easier way to write a policy.
Step 1: Pinpoint the purpose (explain the pain/problem that will be solved).
Ask five people to describe a good policy in one word. We’ll bet you dinner someone says “clear.” Without an obvious (and compelling!) reason to create a written policy, it’s tough to do it well.
Step 2: Validate the need with stakeholders.
What’s rarely a bad idea? A quick gut check. Once you have a solid case for creating a new policy, the next step is to confirm other people are on board, too. Figure out who your final decision makers will be, and get their buy-in sooner rather than later.
Step 3: Decide who will write, review, approve, and announce the policy—and when.
Once you have buy-in at a conceptual level, then you can start ironing out the details—including who will do what, by when. Now you’re looking at the beginning of a game plan.
Step 4: Agree on what to include and what to omit.
An effective policy is *just* as comprehensive as it needs to be. No more, and no less.
Step 5: Determine who the policy will affect—and invite those people into the process, if possible.
Creating a company policy is often a cross-functional effort, with input needed from multiple departments. Crowdsourcing information for your policy serves two purposes. One, it will poke holes in any flawed logic—before you launch it into the world. Two, it will motivate people to champion the policy once it’s live.
Step 6: Research and write your first draft.
Self-explanatory—but not unimportant! You might include: a title, a document header, an introduction/purpose statement, a policy statement, a policy owner, a list of requirements, a list of exceptions, information about enforcement procedures, a glossary of terms, an effective date, and a revision date (if applicable).
Step 7: Link to any related policies and relevant procedures.
What do people tend to appreciate, when they’re being told what to do? Context. Linking to any related policies may help people connect the dots at a high level, and linking to any relevant procedures may save them a step down the road.
Step 8: Confirm alignment with your company’s mission, values, and goals.
If there’s one step on this list that’s underrated and essential, it’s this one. Think of your policies like puzzle pieces. When you put them all together, you should have no doubts about what your company believes in and stands for.
Step 9: Circulate the policy for review and decide when you’ll revisit it.
Here’s your opportunity to get very meta—and make a policy on policy review. Things change quickly, in life and at work. (Wouldn’t it be wild if suddenly we all had to work from home?!) Determining if and when your policies will be up for review—and what that process will look like— should help you plan ahead and pivot when needed.
Step 10: Publish it—where everyone can find it.
The policy you worked so hard on shouldn’t be doomed to collect dust, literally or figuratively. Adding your distribution strategy to your initial to-do list will pay dividends, we promise.
You didn't think we'd leave you hanging and gloss over how to write a procedure, did you? Check out the 10 steps below.
Step 1: Determine what needs documenting—and confirm it hasn’t already been done.
Why reinvent the wheel if you don’t have to? Go ahead and write a procedure in zero steps. 🕺
Step 2: Decide where you’ll document it.
The options are endless—and overwhelming. Zeroing in on your platform of choice early on will help inform everything from how you organize your content to how you drive adoption of your training materials.
Step 3: Pick the best format, structure, and layout.
While we’ve listed 10 steps here, there are approximately one million ways to write a procedure. Having some basic rules of the road will help keep information consistent as you codify more of your essential processes.
Step 4: Figure out who you’ll be helping—and what will help them most.
Less text? Fewer long videos? More screenshots, links, and annotations? Asking the people who will be using your documentation what will be most useful is never a bad idea.
Step 5: Connect with subject matter experts.
Everyone's an expert at something—but very few people are experts at everything. To make your procedures as helpful as possible, take a few minutes to connect with people who manage the processes that feed into the training programs, knowledge bases, and/or systems you own.
Step 6: Create a step-by-step guide (in seconds, with Tango!).
This is probably the step that makes you wish for a magic wand the most. Tango is the next best thing—and the secret to conjuring up standarding operating procedures in seconds.