Policies and Procedures: A Guide for Workplace Professionals

Get answers to the following questions: What is a policy? What is a procedure? What is the difference between policy and procedure?

gerente del lugar de trabajo utilizando la plantilla de políticas y procedimientos

Published 23 Jan 2024 Article by SafetyCulture Content Team | 10 min read

What are Policies and Procedures?

Policies and procedures are guidelines that help shape company culture and employee behavior. They usually include lists of what is allowed, what is prohibited, and what should be done in certain scenarios. Both employees and managers are responsible for the success of policies and procedures.

Why are Policies and Procedures Important in the Workplace?

Policies and procedures are important in the workplace because they set the tone for how processes and activities are conducted in an organization. Ineffective policies and procedures can harm a company’s operations by adding unnecessary roadblocks to the actual execution and completion of work. The improper development of policies and procedures may also lead to a decline in the business’s reputation since these documents reflect the goals and values of the company.

What is a Policy?

A policy is defined as a comprehensive set of rules on a specific topic (such as a process, a situation, a group of people, or a particular environment). The overall purpose of policy creation is to establish protections against incidents that would disrupt the organization’s dynamic or workflow as well as the individual lives of employees.

What is a Procedure?

A procedure is defined as an ordered list of recommended steps for performing a task. Standard operating procedures , for instance, must be followed step-by-step to get the desired output (work that is on par with the organization’s quality and safety standards). Deviating at any step in the procedure may lead to unexpected outcomes with serious consequences.

Policy vs Procedure: What is the Difference?

The difference between policy and procedure is that policy requires organizations to take a stand or make a decision on how to approach a specific problem occurring in the workplace while procedure requires organizations to agree on how to perform a task for the best results.

difference between policy and procedure

Policy and Procedure Examples

Below are the various types of workplace policies and procedures:

Policies and Procedures for Attendance

Attendance policies and procedures specify the required working hours and times. For example, employees are required to work 8 hours a day from 9 am to 5 pm. These policies and procedures also include what counts as tardiness. For example, if the employee is in the building lobby at 9 am, but only gets to the office at 9:10 am, is it considered being tardy? Workplace managers will need to provide answers to these kinds of questions in the policies and procedures for attendance.

Policies and Procedures for Employee Conduct

Code of conduct policies and procedures are typically based on company values, which act as the guiding pillars for how employees at all levels should behave. In policies and procedures for employee conduct, it’s important to state what is appropriate and what is deemed unacceptable behavior. By clearly establishing the lines which employees should not cross, workplace managers will have less incidents concerning harmful or indecent behavior from employees.

Policies and Procedures for Use of Company Property

By company property, most organizations are referring to the physical (Information Technology) IT equipment and assets provided to employees to help them do their jobs. These are items such as computers, keyboards, headsets, and even laptops. But sometimes, company property can also refer to the software or the digital platforms and tools that employees need to use. Additionally, company property includes the physical office spaces (e.g., rooms and corridors) and the items within them (e.g., desks and whiteboards).

Policies and Procedures for Harassment and Discrimination

Harassment and discrimination in the workplace is a serious issue that needs active policies and procedures to stop them from happening. Though wider company culture issues need to be addressed, specific acts and behaviors displaying harassment or discrimination should be identified and strictly prohibited. Policies and procedures against harassment and discrimination should also be legally binding, acting as a deterrent and to prevent such incidents from being seen as trivial, merely internal, or just personal disagreements.

How to Develop Effective Policies and Procedures

A complete 5-step guide on developing effective policies and procedures—from writing to implementation:

Step 1: Define the Purpose of the Policy

Before policy writing, workplace managers should know exactly what they are writing about. For example, if the topic of the policy is gender-based discrimination, then the workplace manager or policy head should research on what that means, how it appears in the workplace, and its effects on employees and company culture.

Once the policy head has conducted sufficient research on the policy topic, they will need to propose the creation of the policy to company executives or the Human Resources (HR) department. The policy head should outline the following in their presentation:

If the group of company executives or the HR department approves, then the policy head can start forming a policy development team and proceed to writing the policy draft.

Step 2: Write the Policy Using a Template

The reason why workplace managers should use a template when writing the policy and its procedures is that they don’t have to start from scratch. Using the same template for all policy writing also ensures that there is uniformity in the structure and format of the policies. Another reason why using a template is recommended for policy writing is that it’s easy to turn completed policies and procedures into compliance checklists that employees can go through on a daily basis.

However, even with a template, the policy head and other members of the policy development team should still be careful when writing the policy and its procedures. Keep in mind that a policy should have the following characteristics:

When the actual policy writing is done, submit the policy draft to management (which can include company executives and/or HR) and to the company’s legal counsel for initial review and approval.

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Step 3: Prepare for Policy Implementation

Once all parties have approved of the policy draft and no further edits need to be made, the policy head can finalize it and begin preparing for implementation. For a successful implementation of the policy and its procedures, the policy head needs to do the following: