Operations Nation (ON), a community-powered knowledge hub for operations leaders, hosted a ConversatiON with Co-founder Charlene Chen and me about how to set up your company for success by getting the right documentation systems in place.
The video is available below on YouTube, and a combination of transcript and interview answers I prepared are below the video. You can watch or read according to your preferred learning style. There were more prepared answers than we had time for in our discussion, so the text has a bit of extra content.
Topics in this blog and video:
Addressing objections and pitching the value proposition -- not in the video
Creating a long-term culture of documentation -- not in the video
I am one of the people who wished they knew what operations was earlier in my career journey. Like many people, I fell into it,
My first career was in print graphic design, including a daily newspaper and weekly magazine. It was fast-paced, high-volume work. These jobs all had tight non-movable deadlines with the printers and mailing subscription schedules with big consequences, which required a lot of project management, creating and using templates and other tool/tech efficiencies, streamlining approval processes, and quick problem-solving. Looking back on it, it was a lot of ops for someone with an art degree, but I really thrived in those areas of the job. Getting things done on time and on budget.
While working at design jobs, directing photo shoots made me interested in photography. Long story short, my second career was starting a photography art business, which involved creating, documenting, and running all the processes a business needs. It all had to be efficient since it was only me.
My favorite part of that job was learning about business and marketing, so a few years later, I went back to school for an MBA. I love learning and I also wanted to build more foundational business knowledge about companies larger than one person.
I thought my third career would be marketing, but after grad school, I started working at a HubSpot agency which is now called Remotish. It was their second month in business, so I ended up helping build the business, as one of the first employees. Looking back on that time, it was building the operations foundation of the agency through a variety of client-facing job titles and then management roles.
After about two years, we split off Operations into its own role and department, giving me an official operations title. All ops were mine! Internal operations at an ops agency, so a lot of ops!
At the end of October 2022, I left that job to further pursue instructional design and other educational content creation. This was inspired by the work I did at Remotish, building an onboarding program and knowledge base, different types of content to help people at a larger scale than training or coaching 1-1, which I think we’ll talk a bit more in a moment.
A common thread in all those careers was having an ops mindset related to repeatable processes, efficiencies,
problem solving, documentation, being super curious and wanting to know how everything ties together, discovering how everything works... but I didn’t know that just doing those things could be a career path on its own until recently.
You can read more in-depth about my career journey in this Linkedin article.
Operation Educator is the best title I’ve been able to think of to describe what I am doing right now.
It involves a few things:
I haven’t seen a lot of education on ops topics other than project management, for example, so there seems to be a need for this educational content, which I think relates to a mission shared with Operations Nation.
See the Operations Nations course for aspiring and first-time Chief Operating Officers (COOs)
Documentation is recording who, what, where, when, why, and how to do everything in your company or role.
And...
Storing that information in one place where other people can find it and use it.
Basically, documentation is any recorded information. Information that is not only located in someone’s head.
If you need to have a meeting in order to get access to the information you need (by verbal communication) then that info is probably not documented, or the knowledge holder missed the “sharing” step.
Documentation is content. Helpful content!
Saving documentation where people know where to find it, plus communicating about changes and new items, is knowledge distribution and knowledge management. You are helping people find and use this helpful content.
This is a good question. I think the definition of a good documentation system is one that people actually use and keep updated. A system that helps or enables people to be successful in their roles and helps their company to be more successful. Helping people helps the company.
Some of the aspects of good documentation processes or systems include a common theme: remember that you’re not just dealing with documents, for any kind of system, you’re really dealing with people’s behavior.
People are the main component of a system, so it is important to have:
Documentation helps companies succeed in many ways!
These are all benefits I saw at my last role at Remotish, for example. Because we documented so much from Day 1, I was able to create a robust onboarding program in year 3 and double the company quickly from 10-20 people in 6 months. Those new team members said they felt supported since they had access to this documentation about how things worked. They didn’t have the burden of figuring it all out for themselves in their first month on the job. They didn’t have to wait for someone to be available to ask in real-time, which would be a bottleneck since we were remote and flex time in many different time zones.
We also would not have been able to offer that reduced work 30-hour workweek benefit if we didn’t have our processes documented. Documentation enabled our small team of 10-20 people to cross-train and fill in for each other when co-workers were out of office or unavailable (due to only working 30 hours a week). Expecting someone to remember how to do everything in their job and someone else's job is not realistic. We’re humans, not machines.
Charlene talked about how sometimes scare tactics can also be important, what happens if there is not any documentation?
Not receiving all those benefits I just listed would be a problem for many companies.
Mainly, it will be very hard to grow a company past a certain point, hard to scale, without documentation.
One small example: At some point, it will be impossible for a manager to train new people and answer their team’s questions in real time, either through Slack or calls, because the team will be too large.
Another example is your first hires will eventually leave, and if there is no documentation, the next people hired will take a LOT longer to ramp up and figure out what was happening in order to succeed in their role and be productive sooner. Digging out from that documentation debt before they can begin to contribute more to the company.
And with the current state of people leaving jobs often (in late 2022/early 2023), you’ll constantly be in a training debt or knowledge debt and never be able to catch up to full productivity. Your current team will get burnt out from training people all the time and answering questions, instead of having enough time to get their own work done.
I read an article about that recently, how this will create a broken cycle, and you’ll never reach the point of scale, that inflection point.
Something else to keep in mind is that though we (in the audience) are ops people and we're good at solving mysteries, untangling messes, inventing solutions...that’s not the strength of every role in the company or every person. Many people would appreciate having clear answers provided to them and not have to hunt down information and ask multiple people like a detective. And even for ops people,
Solving mysteries or reinventing the wheel every day (due to no documentation) takes time, and solving the same problem more than once is the opposite of fun. And eventually even your ops people will leave the company, and the cycle will start all over again of new employees trying to figure out what was done before and why.
Charlene shared a story about a startup she was at, which had a high turnover for a few reasons. It was frustrating for all employees, especially ones there a long time, because they were spending all their time re-training new employees. Everyone was trying to move toward an OKR but felt like starting from scratch all the time just to get to baseline knowledge.
At the 20-100 person companies that a lot of our audience here works at, the responsibility for getting it started, setting up the system, and overseeing it all would be a good choice for operations people, because of our skill set and also our work that spans horizontally, cross functionally, across the business.
But one of the keys to making sure documentation is kept up-to-date is NOT having ALL documentation responsibilities for the whole company resting on one person or one team forever.
So even if ops is responsible for creating a system that makes it easy for other people to be involved. and ops may be responsible for making sure the work happens, it's important to divide the responsibilities of creating, editing, and approving documentation among the teams who hold the knowledge. Empower them with "knowledge owners" for certain categories of documentation.
There re a few different ways people may be involved in documentation, roles in documentation:
This is a journey to get these roles into place, starting with yourself and then users, which is often the biggest hurdle, getting people to use the documentation.
Don’t try to put all these roles in place at once.
There is an order I suggest to help you be more successful.
See more information in this documentation roles blog.
Chelener said the audience said this sounds like a lot, how do you get started, especially at a small company?
Start small to overcome the overwhelm, start with yourself, building that system for yourself first before involving those other roles we discussed.
First, let’s talk about what a system is.
The Oxford dictionary defines it as
By system of documentation, I don’t mean use Guru, use Notion, use Qatalog, which I know has done some nice partnerships with Operations Nation... I don't mean to use a specific tool.
I mean the people and process working together, that part of a system.
If you skip all the people and process set up, and go straight to choosing a tool and expecting the tool to work miracles all by itself, that is likely to fail. It would be nice if the tool did 100% of the work for you, but that is not realistic when we're working with humans and human behavior.
I suggest setting up this system for yourself first so you can test it to make sure it works for your company, make adjustments, and start to set a good example with proven benefits for other people to follow once you start getting them involved in documentation.
Start your system with reserving time to create, use, and improve documentation.
Consider:
Charlene mentioned that if you don't make time for documentation, urgent will eat important for breakfast every day.
This can be the biggest hurdle, making time for it. When it is urgent, like you need to train someone before your vacation, there is often not enough time to get it done. So work on it when it is not urgent.
Set up a template for the pieces of documentation and set up naming conventions.
For naming conventions, I often recommend a question format such as "What it...?" or "How to..."
Test these out when you are making version 1.0 of your own documentation.
When writing your first pieces of documentation I suggest writing about your own tasks and processes so you can better test the template, naming conventions, all the other things we’re talking about, before involving other people. It will also make it less of challenge to get started if you start documenting your own processes.
See another blog all about writing documentation.
The template (for sale) is available here. You can see it in the video below.
Set up your communication cadence, channels, and the tools for communication about new or improved documentation or documentation needs and ideas.
Exact pros and cons of specific tools may be a good conversation for the Operations Nation community to hear more voices and experiences.
My recommendations for your first stage or phase of creating version 1.0 documentation, documenting your own tasks and processes: Use the tool easiest for you. Get your documentation started, instead spending 100 hours researching a tool before you even have any documentation. Get the habit of writing, editing, and updating started for yourself first.
When you’re ready to expand your system to include other people, my #1 tip is to use a system your team is already using daily so you don't have to teach them a new tool IN ADDITION to teaching them new habits about creating, using, and updating documentation. Tool adoption is difficult, as many of you probably know from working in ops! Most of you probably have experienced this.
Consider what the team’s current “Home base” for their work.
Where do they currently spend most of their day?
Slack or a project management system may be common answers. It could be different for every company, which is why it's hard to give advice about specific tools.
Can you use that commonly used tool for documentation storage, or can you integrate the storage tool into that 'home base' system so people can access documentation in the place/tool where they already spend most of their time?
So they don’t have to switch to, or learn, a new tool to build the habit of using, creating, and updating documentation.
After you've set up, tested, and improved the system yourself for a while, you’re going to start to bring in users to test and expand your system. Testing, iterating, and expanding the system in a constant cycle.
When you bring on those other most active roles, make sure you train them and include them in all parts of the system. Give them what they need to succeed.
A question from the audience was about companies with legacy documentation and you need to overhaul it to upgrade it. A lot of the documentation is outdated. Do you have advice of what to do that project to break as little as possible along the journey?
See my other blog about improving an existing documentation system, created from notes from this event.
When you are starting to get other people involved in documentation, such as users, think of rebranding documentation as knowledge sharing or enablement. Team members can think about documentation as preventing other team members from making the same mistakes or doing the same research and testing they already did. Thinking of documentation as helping people, not thinking of it as compliance or ruling with fear.
Charlene said sometimes ops is not just about the hard skills of what you do, it's all about emotional intelligence (EQ) and communicating to the rest of your business and influence. You may not be part of the sales team, but you are always selling, you are selling the documentation, you are selling the change and why. Sounds like sticks are not the right approach, so we should use carrots? Can we give "most valuable documenter" awards, have you been able to reward people for great documentation? (See answers below in the 'Reinforce' examples.)
One of the reasons why documentation is so hard is that it combines interconnected difficult topics such as:
Most of which relate to change management.
You want yourself and other people to change from what they are currently doing, change how they are working.
My friend Marliese Bartz, a change management expert, gave this simplified 5-step framework:
Awareness: make sure everyone is aware there is a problem. Talk about the problem of not having documentation. more than once, In different formats.
Desire: Similar to marketing, you could make an internal campaign about your documentation benefits to help people desire to change
Knowledge: Give your team the information about how the system works, templates, and everything you built to make this change as easy as possible for them or for the company as a whole.
Ability: Testing out your system and adding people into it a few at a time, a team at a time, to confirm it works, and improve as needed.
Reinforce: You and managers overseeing everything, knowledge owners performing quarterly check-ins and other reinforcement built into the system, and positive reinforcement such as recognition and praise resulting from all the communication people are doing about documentation, or promotions related to documentation ownership.
Charlene said that sometimes we promote people without giving them management training (a common problem) and we should also add rules about how you can't get promoted unless you're a great documenter. "That is powerful, I hadn't thought about that," she said. She's seen core competency and skills matrixes where to get to the next level it's not just about being the subject matter expert, it's about being able to pass that knowledge and expertise onto others. Documentation would be a really important lever for that.
There are many objections people have to documentation, and they often relate to time.
Here's a common time objection from leadership, especially in startups:
Another common time objection:
“I don’t have time to create documentation or to ensure other people do it.”
Suggested responses to overcome it:
A lot of these efforts that we discussed in setting up the system will help build that culture, especially the communication part of it. All your efforts will tie together and build on each other.
What do you do first to build the culture of documentation?
Those are the first steps to get that culture started. A few more are:
Learn more about Brene Brown :)
I am grateful for my friends and family, who I’ve been trying to stay in touch with more as I am entering this entrepreneurial journey again, including my friends in communities like this.
My calendar and project management system for getting my daily work done, but I also have to say HubSpot. Though right now, the HubSpot community and HubSpot Academy education are more influential to me than the tool, for my new business.
A secret weapon for growing or scaling businesses, and for making work less stressful because you know what to do in your own job and you know your team is enabled to do what they need to do in their jobs.
Charlene had a good summary of takeaways toward the end of the video:
Ops people are secret weapons that improve the lives of others, and documentation is one way to do that.
Thank you to Charlene and Operations Nation! See upcoming ON events here.
Most of this event's content is from my documentation class below!