used properly, is a reference guide for both employees and managers and a way to introduce a new employee to the company and culture. Some primary policies include: harassment, standards of conduct, ethics code, social media, electronic assets and usage, and benefits.
Employees and managers can reference these policies to see how to navigate issues and see what perks are available to them. It’s important to include common practices and revise any policies which have caused confusion. If multiple people ask about something, addressing it in the handbook is a good place to start.
3.Culture
Most employees use a handbook to look up policies addressing time off or away from work such as bereavement, jury duty, PTO, attendance, leaves of absence and business closures, but it is also often the first document a new employee sees.
While most handbooks are largely text without pictures, the tone and manner in which you address things will be a part of the company’s voice. This is the shared book of the company that your people belong to. Be sure to outline your company’s mission and values, showcasing it as a valuable part of work life.
4.Productivity
By setting clear expectations, being fair, and defining your culture, you are also enabling employees to be more productive. This resource will reduce confusion and disputes.
It will resolve most issues before they become serious. It may direct people to the proper channels for resolution sooner. It offers protection against baseless claims and affords reassurances that result in allowing employees to focus their energies on work efforts instead of confusion.
5.Protection
You should write the handbook for the one employee who reads it thoroughly. And that employee might be called a plaintiff one day unless you consistently follow a well-written handbook that protects the company and management.
You may not realize that the guidelines that you laid out in your social media policy interfere with rights under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). In fact, you might have removed all policies or sentences that reference the NLRA because you’re not a union shop without realizing that all employees have these rights. The cost to have a manual for legal protection is a lot cheaper than settling a lawsuit.
Information provided by: HR Morning
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