The primary purpose of documenting is to:
In the event the employee does not close the gaps and consequences follow, the documentation leading up to imposing consequences will help protect the employer from claims of discrimination or wrongful termination. Enforcement agencies and the Courts rely on an employer’s documentation to help determine the merits of employee claims that come before them.
For this reason alone, we can make the case for the business necessity of documenting employee matters. You understand this yet, you procrastinate or elect not to document at all. Why?
If you view documenting an employee issue to be of value, then you will find the time to document the issue. If you believe the time spent handling other issues will yield a greater return on investment of your time then you will conclude that you shouldn’t document. In truth, this may be a viable argument.
To determine if your time is best invested not documenting an employee matter, calculate the cost of the time needed to document the issue and then compare to the cost of higher unemployment insurance premiums or legal fees to defend an adverse employment action. If you will achieve a greater ROI of your time by not documenting—then don’t document. Just be willing to write a check instead.
Understanding the reasoning and the value of documenting employee issues is the first step of protecting yourself and your company. In our next blog, we will teach you the key talking points to address and ensure proper documentation of any employee issues that come your way.