HR Policies and Procedures: A Practical Guide for SMEs

68%
of workplace disputes escalate because there was no clear, written policy to refer to. Well-documented HR policies and procedures protect your business, set clear expectations, and give employees and managers a shared reference point — before problems start.

Every business, regardless of size, runs on rules — written or not. The difference between a business with strong HR policies and procedures and one without is simple: in one, everyone knows what's expected and what happens if something goes wrong. In the other, every situation becomes a judgment call, decided differently depending on who's in the room — and often, on how the manager happens to be feeling that day.

That inconsistency is where most workplace conflict, legal risk, and employee frustration comes from. This guide breaks down what these documents should cover, how to create them step by step, and how to make sure your team actually follows them — not just files them away.

What Are HR Policies and Procedures?

HR policies are the rules — what your business expects and allows. Procedures are the steps — how those rules get carried out in practice. Together, they form the operating system for how people are hired, managed, supported, and, when necessary, let go. When this system is missing or incomplete, even small misunderstandings can turn into formal complaints or legal disputes.

Policy vs. procedure, simply put: A policy says "employees get 12 days of paid leave per year." The procedure says "submit leave requests through the HR portal at least 3 working days in advance, and your manager will approve within 48 hours." One sets the rule; the other shows how it works day to day.

Clear, well-documented rules aren't about bureaucracy for its own sake. They exist to protect employees from inconsistent treatment, protect the business from legal exposure, and free up managers from having to invent a new answer every time a similar situation comes up.

Core HR Policies That Every Small & Medium Businesses Needs

While every business has unique needs depending on size, industry, and location, a solid foundation usually covers these six areas.

🕒
Policy 01
Attendance & Leave
Working hours, leave types, approval process, and how absences are recorded.
💰
Policy 02
Compensation & Benefits
Pay cycles, overtime rules, reimbursements, and benefit eligibility.
⚖️
Policy 03
Code of Conduct
Expected behaviour, dress code, workplace ethics, and disciplinary process.
🛑
Policy 04
Anti-Harassment
Definitions, reporting channels, and investigation process for complaints.
📈
Policy 05
Performance Management
Review cycles, rating criteria, and how feedback is documented and shared.
🚪
Policy 06
Exit & Offboarding
Notice periods, final settlement process, and asset/access handover.

How to Create HR Policies and Procedures Step by Step

Building a complete policy framework from scratch can feel overwhelming, especially for a small team without a dedicated HR department. The good news is that it doesn't need to happen all at once — here's a practical sequence that works for businesses of any size.

1
Identify what's already happening informally
Most businesses already have unwritten rules — how leave gets approved, how disputes get handled. Start by writing down what currently happens, even if inconsistent. This becomes your first draft.
2
Check legal requirements for your location
Labour laws vary by country and state — minimum leave entitlements, working hours, termination notice periods, and anti-discrimination rules are usually non-negotiable. Make sure every policy meets or exceeds the legal minimum before anything else.
3
Write policies in plain language
Avoid legal jargon where possible. A policy employees can't understand is a policy they won't follow. Use simple sentences, concrete examples, and avoid ambiguous words like "reasonable" or "as needed" without defining what they mean in practice.
4
Define the procedure for each policy
For every policy, answer: who does what, in what order, using which form or tool, and by when? This is what turns a policy from a statement into something people can actually follow.
5
Get sign-off and communicate clearly
Once policies are finalised, walk the team through them — don't just send a PDF. Make sure every employee acknowledges receipt, and keep the document somewhere accessible, like an employee handbook or HR portal.
6
Review annually or when laws change
These documents should be revisited at least once a year, and immediately whenever relevant labour laws are updated. An outdated policy can create legal risk even if no one has noticed yet.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

1
Copy-pasting generic templates
Policies need to reflect your actual business, team size, and local laws — not a one-size-fits-all template downloaded online.
2
Inconsistent enforcement
A policy applied differently for different employees creates more legal and morale risk than having no policy at all.
3
No clear ownership
Someone in HR or leadership should be responsible for keeping policies updated and answering employee questions.
4
Burying policies in long documents
If employees can't find the relevant policy quickly, they won't refer to it when it actually matters.
5
Treating procedures as optional
A policy without a defined procedure leaves room for exactly the inconsistency you're trying to avoid in the first place.
"Good policies don't restrict people — they remove the guesswork so everyone can focus on the work itself." — HR Best Practice

The Bottom Line HR policies and procedures are not paperwork for paperwork's sake — they are the foundation that makes a workplace fair, predictable, and legally sound. Start with the basics: attendance, conduct, performance, and exit. Write them in plain language, define the procedures clearly, and review them regularly as your team grows and the law evolves. The businesses that get this right spend less time managing disputes and more time managing growth — and their employees feel that difference too.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about creating and managing HR policies and procedures.

  • FAQ 01

    A policy is the rule — what is allowed, expected, or entitled. A procedure is the process — the specific steps to follow to act on that rule. For example, a policy might state that employees are entitled to sick leave; the procedure explains how to apply for it, who approves it, and what documentation is needed.

  • FAQ 02

    Yes — even a team of five benefits from written policies covering leave, conduct, and basic grievance handling. Without them, every situation is handled case by case, which often leads to perceptions of favouritism and increases legal risk. Small businesses don't need a 100-page manual, but a concise 8–10 page document covering the essentials is well worth the time.

  • FAQ 03

    At minimum, review them once a year. Update them immediately whenever local labour laws change, your business grows significantly, or you notice a recurring situation that current policies don't address well. An outdated policy can create compliance gaps even if no one raises an issue right away.

  • FAQ 04

    Store them somewhere every employee can access easily — an employee handbook, HR software portal, or shared company drive. New hires should receive and acknowledge them during onboarding, and the document should be easy to search so employees can quickly find the relevant section when a question comes up.