Kitty L. Fields, SPHR, CPM Employee Services Manager Sumter County Board of County Commissioners The...
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Kitty L. Fields, SPHR, CPM Employee Services Manager Sumter County Board of County Commissioners The Importance of Documentation Even in today’s virtual,
Text of Kitty L. Fields, SPHR, CPM Employee Services Manager Sumter County Board of County Commissioners The...
Slide 1
Kitty L. Fields, SPHR, CPM Employee Services Manager Sumter
County Board of County Commissioners The Importance of
Documentation Even in todays virtual, paperless world
Slide 2
Introduction Effective documentation can give employees the
opportunity to take corrective action and ward off potential
lawsuits, especially if an organization has a progressive
discipline policy. Documentation of employee performance and/or
conduct issues is very important to both management and to
employees. Documentation establishes an official record of the
disciplinary action.
Slide 3
Objective At the close of this session, you will be able to: 1.
Define documentation 2. Cite the reasons documentation is
important. 3. Discuss implications of NOT documenting. 4. Determine
what to document. 5. Describe how to document effectively. 6.
Describe various forms of documentation.
Slide 4
What is documentation? Corrective Fair Consistent Progressive
Due Process
Slide 5
What is documentation (cont.) Hand-written or typed notes from
coaching and counseling sessions with employees. Written comments
including specific examples in performance reviews. Disciplinary
actions, such as warning documents with specific examples and
consequences. Hand-written or typed explanations with business
reasons for employment actions such as demotions, promotions,
layoffs.
Slide 6
Why is documentation important? It establishes a record of
employment actions taken and the reasons for the actions. Memories
fail, managers move on and other circumstances change. It informs
employees of what is expected of them and the consequences if they
dont meet expectations. Employees should never be surprised when
they are in a termination meeting. From a performance management
standpoint, it serves as a written record to guide both the
employers and the employees future behavior. It gives the employee
the guidance necessary to improve. It serves as evidence of the
employers business reasons for actions taken in the event an
employee takes formal or informal steps with a claim against a
manager or employer. It brings about fair and equitable treatment.
No one wants to be blindsided or treated differently than other
employees.
Slide 7
Why it is bad not to document Performance or attendance doesnt
improve, and there are negative impacts to business, morale, and
eventually the managers own performance. Increased frustration by
manager and co-workers. Misunderstandings on interpretation of
discussion. Employees not equitably treated; may have
discrimination claim. Employees not treated fairly; may have
wrongful termination claim. Lack of documented formal evidence for
defense in the event of a legal claim.
Slide 8
What do you document? Setting and revising annual performance
goals and objectives Mid-year and annual performance reviews
Violation of company policy, procedure, practice, or code of
conduct Attendance issues Poor performance Demotions Promotions
Change in job duties Training needs and accomplishments Bonus and
merit increase decisions Hiring decisions
Slide 9
How to Document. Good documentation answers these questions:
Who What Where When NOT why, unless employee gives their own
explanation.
Slide 10
What should a document contain? The date the document was
created Your name and title The employees full name and nickname An
opening statement about the purpose of the document The answers to
the 5 Ws Any previous documentation The consequences of further
infractions
Slide 11
How to document. Start early. Make it a habit to discuss the
employees performance with the employee continuously as part of the
performance management process. This includes positive and negative
feedback. Dont wait to act, hoping issues will improve; they
usually wont. Document only the facts, not subjective judgments or
conclusions. Be thorough. Ask yourself, if someone outside the
organization read the documentation, would they understand the
situation and the impact it had on other employees or the company?
Is there too much company jargon and too many assumptions in your
documentation? Make notes in writing. Include when (date and time),
who was present, what was discussed, the employees response, and
the outcome, including a date for a follow-up meeting.
Slide 12
How to document (cont.) Cite examples of how the employee has
not met performance or attendance expectations. Give specific
guidance for improving performance or attendance. Have face-to-face
discussion (whenever possible) with employee and review warning
document in detail. Ask employee to sign warning indicating they
have had the discussion, received a copy, and understand the
document. If the employee refuses to sigh the document, note that
on the document and have it witnessed Document the discussion from
the discipline meeting in writing. E-mail the employee a synopsis
of the meeting.
Slide 13
Summary Documentation is important for both the employer and
the employee. Good documentation answers the questions Who, What,
When, Where, and Why. Document early. Dont wait. Discussion without
documentation equals misunderstandings. Without documentation it
didnt happen. Discuss and document only the facts. Give specific
examples for how employee is not meeting expectations and specific
guidance for how employee can improve. Ask employee to sign
documentation of disciplinary actions. Give copy of disciplinary
action to HR and employee. Discuss any issues arising from meeting
with HR.