HOW TO DOCUMENT EMPLOYEE ISSUES: CREATING A COUNSELING MEMO
Many human resource professionals have experience with managers who avoid addressing employee behavior until they become so frustrated that they want to fire the employee immediately. As an HR professional, you are now the one frustrated because you know that none of the issues that the manager is so upset about have even been documented prior to this. No one likes confrontation, or being called into the manager’s office, so sometimes the manager will decide to just let things slide until the issue cannot be ignored. In many cases, companies lack an effective process to guide how to document employee issues or explain why proper documentation is so imperative.
Why is Proper HR Documentation Regarding Employee Issues Important? Transparency!
Even in an at-will state, employers know that any termination puts a company at risk of a wrongful termination claim. Therefore, it is imperative that any employee performance issues like underperformance, bad attitude, inappropriate behavior, inconsistent attendance or tardiness, and policy violations are well documented. This written record is used to defend an employer against legal disputes like claims of Title VII violation or unfair termination. Without thorough documentation, there is no way for an employer to prove that he or she issued any prior written warning of performance problems or an outline of clear expectations going forward.
Essentially, a lack of documentation makes it easy for any employee to assert that they were terminated without warning and to win on claims of unfair treatment. There are many ways to document employee issues and it is important for managers and supervisors to find documentation processes that work best for them. One effective way to document employee issues, and the subsequent detailed action plans to address them, is via a counseling memo.
What is a counseling memo?
A counseling memo can be used to document a variety of problems including employee’s behavior issues, poor attendance, workplace misconduct, or intervention of underperformance. As with any performance related documentation, this needs to be completed in a timely manner after there has been a policy violation or a performance issue.
Timely means that the documentation of employee behavior needs to be completed as soon as possible after the violation or issue occurs.
Parameters to Ensure Your Counseling Memo Promotes Fairness & Consistency in the Workplace
A counseling memo is drafted after a performance management face meeting between supervisor and an employee takes place. The meeting should cover any violations or issues that have occurred or have been occurring, and the supervisor should discuss company policies, expectations, how those expectations were not met, and specific steps the employee must take moving forward. This discussion should only focus on facts and relevant details, and should not include opinions or emotional statements.
Once the meeting is concluded, the supervisor should draft the counseling memo. The memo should reiterate what was discussed during the performance management meeting.
How to Document Employee Issues and Resolutions with a Counseling Memo
Just like any other documentation, counseling memos should contain factual information. It should only be addressed to the personnel, and also be concise, clear, contain specific details such as deadlines, and should be drafted in a respectful tone. It is important that they also have the following information:
- First, a discussion of the reason for the meeting between the supervisor and the employee along with the date, time, and location of the meeting.
- The next portion of the counseling memo should discuss the reason for the meeting.
- Third, it should cover any issues or problems that lead to the meeting and should describe these matters in as much factual detail as possible.
- The memo should additionally discuss the responses the personnel provided during the meeting. Managers and supervisors attending these meetings need to make sure they listen during the meeting so that this portion of the report is as accurate as possible.
- The final portion of the counseling memo needs to cover expectations. The expectations for the employee moving forward and specific articulable goals as to how they are expected to improve their performance or behavior.
Any follow up activities for the employee and the supervisor, like regular check-ins or additional training, should also be noted.
Additional Documentation Best Practices
- The information in the counseling memo should only consist of what was discussed in the meeting.
- It needs to be factual and objective. It should not contain any opinions, statements made on emotions or assumptions.
- It should not be characterized as a disciplinary measure.
Supervisors and managers creating the counseling memo need to keep in mind that the purpose of this report is to provide support and guidance to a personnel regarding how they are to improve their job performance and/or behavior in the workplace.
You’ve had the meeting. You’ve provided proper documentation. What next?
One the drafted counseling memo has been completed, a copy of the memo should be provided to the employee and a copy should also be included in the employee’s personnel file. This document should only be provided to individuals who need to be aware of the situation and no one else. The information should not be shared with others in the department or organization. Confidentiality applies to these files, just like it applies to any other personnel matters.
Final Thoughts Documenting Employee Issues via a Counseling Memo
Completing counseling memos for issues that involve poor performance, policy violations, or other behavioral issues in the workplace ensures that employers will be in a good position to justify any termination decisions they may make. Further, proper coaching of employees with follow-up documentation makes employees feel like their voice matters within the organization and puts employees on notice when they are not meeting expectations.
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