Click to Print

Let's Get Personnel

Guidelines for creating personnel policies and standards
Posted by Pamela Rohland | November 1, 2000
URL: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/33338

In the high excitement of starting and running a business, entrepreneurs often overlook the need to create a set of personnel policies and standards. When a problem arises-a sexual harassment suit, for example-the CEO and the management team can quickly find themselves in a courtroom wondering "What happened?" The outcome of such a suit could be financially devastating to the company.

Too often, in fact, young executives aren't even aware there are personnel issues that need to be dealt with upfront-or, when they do, they pass on the job of developing policies to an administrative assistant who is untrained in the law, according to Kari Uman, senior associate at Executive Coaching & Consulting Associates in Washington, DC. "You should put as much energy into developing personnel policies as you would any other part of your business," she warns. "It can't be an afterthought. It's extraordinarily dangerous to not understand the legal ramifications of what goes on in the workplace."

You and your top-level managers need to bone up on what's OK and what's not in terms of personnel practices, then train other supervisory staff. Advises Uman, "Have managers who are informed, not just buddies you dragged in from other jobs."

You can turn to the Society of Human Resource Managers (703-548-3440, www.shrm.org) for guidance, or even hire a consultant who can guide the company through these murky waters, especially in the policy-development stage. But whatever you do, just make sure you address these issues-and quick:

When preparing to fire someone, you should document in writing a pattern of poor behavior and opportunities that were given to the employee to improve. Says Braff, "Except in cases where the employee was stealing, the courts don't look favorably on cases where someone was given no warning before they were fired."

Prevention is the goal in developing personnel policies. Uman suggests you create an office climate that will deter lawsuits by following these tips:

Contact Sources

Cozen and O'Connor, jbraff@cozen.com.

Executive Coaching & Consulting Associates, (703) 648-1882, kfuman@aol.com.