If you're trying to start a culture of documentation at your company, you'll likely face objections from people who've never experienced the benefits of written, updated standard operating procedures.
Most objections can be grouped into one or more of these four categories:
Though many objections fall into more than one category, this article will focus on cost-related objections to process documentation.
In part one of this series, I discussed the #1 tip for overcoming objections:
Learn what the objecting person cares about, and explain how this change relates to what they care about.
For example, leaders care about achieving their department goals or company goals, so frame the documentation benefits to explain how it can help achieve those goals more quickly, reliably, and predictably.
In this article, May Busch outlines five types of team members and what each of them cares about. This resource can be helpful for personalizing the objection response.
Discussing the cost of NOT having documentation can be effective in overcoming cost objections. Talk about the team's lost productivity and efficiency, which is clearly seen when employees leave the company and all their knowledge goes with them. The employee's replacements have to restart the same projects or solve the previously solved problems from scratch, losing a lot of time and money.
The Good Words and Knowledge Owl teams do a good job of describing the return on investment (ROI) of doing (and not doing) documentation in this webinar. Though some of this webinar focuses on customer-facing product documentation, many tactics apply to internal process documentation.
Speaking of products, similar to treating culture like a product, treating internal documentation as a product can also help overcome cost objections to documentation because a product's creation and maintenance processes are often more easily understood. Remember that most companies do not have a practice of regular documentation, so many leaders and team members may not be familiar with the processes surrounding the work.
In general, the profitability generated by documentation, in the long run, outweighs the cost of the time involved in the initial creation and maintenance if you set up smart systems of continuous improvement.
Scroll down to find specific scripts for overcoming common cost objections:
These objections were split to frame the responses differently due to many agency employees' hourly billing responsibilities. The "time=money" thinking is often more literal for agencies compared to non-agencies.
Learn more about starting, writing, creating a system for maintenance, and more in this documentation guide.
Objection Example 1
Though cost-related objections are often very similar to time objections (since the cost IS the time involved for employees, their salary as an hourly rate), you'll want to frame your responses to emphasize cost savings and money-related words, not just time-savings.
Before we get into the scripts, the underlying objection may be a misconception that there is a huge upfront time effort involved to document ALL the processes at once and then redo them every year or two. Explain the iterative process of starting small, working on the documentation gradually, and improving it over time. This is a much lower lift and a smaller initial time/cost investment than the objecting person may realize. Perhaps this person had a bad past experience with a poorly planned documentation initiative, or they have no experience with documentation.
Here are some scripts you can use to overcome this objection, educating people on the long-term benefits of documentation. Depending on the objecting person's interests, there are several to choose from.
The internal work that generates revenue can be completed more quickly because:“Documentation will help us do the revenue-generating work faster (efficiency), enabling us to earn more revenue.”
“Documentation helps us do value-add work with fewer errors, reducing re-work time & complaints from customers and internal teams. All these benefts save us money.”
“Having documentation will help train new team members faster, so they can start earning revenue faster."
“Documentation allows us to cross-train employees so anyone can solve customer or internal problems faster when certain team members are unavailable (such as people in other time zones)."
"Documentation reduces internal meeting time because there is less need to meet if people can self-serve answers. That will give us more time for value-add or revenue activities."
Objection Example 2
If you hear this objection, it may help to make a case for client documentation first, similar to technical product documentation. Have your agency team deliver process documentation to the client when they complete work for the client.
This additional billable work may be an easier first step towards a documentation culture than trying to change the agency leaders’ beliefs about employees needing 25%+ of their time to be non-billable to create a good workplace culture without burnout.
You could say:
“What if we included documentation time and deliverables into our service offering, similar to technical product documentation? We could include time in our service/billable hours every time we launch something for them. Once we complete a doc for one client we could reuse it for the next clients and customize it for them, saving time each time we make a doc. This would give us somedocumentation for our team to follow while delivering a competitive advantage of value to the client.”
Here are a few more phrases you could use to educate agencies on the long-term benefits of internal documentation:
“Documentation will helps us do the client work faster, which makes the client happier and more likely to upsell or renew.”
“Using documentation will give us more consistency in client work we deliver, which makes the time estimates and scoping more accurate or more profitable.”
“Documentation will help our team do the client work with fewer errors, increasing client satisfaction and upsells/renewals.”
“Documentation will help us train new team members faster, either new team members for our agency or new teams for the client.
“Documentation assists with team cross-training which allows us to solve client problems faster, when certain team members are unavailable because of their working days or working hours and time zones."
I hope these scripts and tactics are helpful in addressing cost-related objections to documentation.
Continue to part three of this series, where we'll discuss overcoming your team's objections related to not understanding the benefits for themselves.