Documenting employee discussions is a very tricky and at times painful activity for organizations. While it is crucial for HR for a number of reasons, it is a difficult habit for the other employees to imbibe. Documenting employee discussions is important from a legal perspective because this makes the case strong and defensible. Documentation is both the bane and the blessing for HR. It is difficult to get people to do it, but it is preferred by attorneys and believed by judges and juries.
WHY SHOULD YOU ATTEND?
Annually hundreds of thousands of lawsuits and hearings occur across the country. Each of these is a "legal" proceeding that requires evidence of events that actually occurred. Documentation is what wins, or in some cases loses these lawsuits and hearings. The result of lack of documentation results in the loss of millions of dollars each year that might be prevented by a good documentation program.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
At this session, which will provide participants with the information needed to be better able to document employee discussions and defend the organization from losses incurred due to poor documentation practices; Michael will cover the following areas:
1. How and why documentation is good?
- Meets the legal requirements of Federal statutes
- Provides a record of interactions with employees in order to provide better recall of what was said and done
- Helps knowledge retention. You do not need to have the original parties have a recollection of the event or conversation
- Provides the legal documentation needed to defend the company in a lawsuit
2. We will talk about how documentation will get you in trouble
3. What is necessary for good documentation?
4. We will talk about what tools can be used
With this information, you will be better able to defend the organization from losses incurred due to poor documentation practices.
WHO WILL BENEFIT?
- Office Managers
- HR Managers
- Supervisors
- Business Owners
Annually hundreds of thousands of lawsuits and hearings occur across the country. Each of these is a "legal" proceeding that requires evidence of events that actually occurred. Documentation is what wins, or in some cases loses these lawsuits and hearings. The result of lack of documentation results in the loss of millions of dollars each year that might be prevented by a good documentation program.
At this session, which will provide participants with the information needed to be better able to document employee discussions and defend the organization from losses incurred due to poor documentation practices; Michael will cover the following areas:
1. How and why documentation is good?
- Meets the legal requirements of Federal statutes
- Provides a record of interactions with employees in order to provide better recall of what was said and done
- Helps knowledge retention. You do not need to have the original parties have a recollection of the event or conversation
- Provides the legal documentation needed to defend the company in a lawsuit
2. We will talk about how documentation will get you in trouble
3. What is necessary for good documentation?
4. We will talk about what tools can be used
With this information, you will be better able to defend the organization from losses incurred due to poor documentation practices.
- Office Managers
- HR Managers
- Supervisors
- Business Owners
Speaker Profile
Michael D Haberman
Michael D. Haberman is a consultant, speaker, writer and teacher. He is President of Omega HR Consulting, a consulting and services company offering complete human resources solutions. Mike brings 35+ years of experience in dealing with the challenges of Human Resources in the 21st century. He has a Master's in HR and is certified as a Senior HR professional. He has over 18 years’ experience in the class room teaching human resources fundamentals and certification preparation.Mike is the author of the Human Resources blog found at OmegaHRConsulting.com , which has been recognized as a top human resources related blogs. He …
Upcoming Webinars
Excel Power Skills: Master Functions, Formulas, and Macros …
The FMLA - An Employer's Guide to Compliance and Employee A…
Internal Controls in Accounts Payable
Handbook Overhaul 2026: Compliance, OBBB Act & Beyond
ChatGPT and Project Management: Leveraging AI for Project M…
Navigating 2025 Employment Laws: What Every Employer Needs …
Managing Difficult Employee Conversations
Future Of Forecasting And Budgeting With Rolling Forecast
AI in Everyday Work – help with Microsoft products
How to Document Employee Discussions and Why it is Important
The Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Your Workforce
Develop People Intelligence: Is Your Communication Style as…
The Anti-Kickback Statute: Enforcement and Recent Updates
2-Hour Virtual Seminar on DeepSeek R1 for Business and Mark…
Navigating FDA Inspections: From SOP to 483
2025 EEOC & Employers: Investigating Claims of Harassment …
Risk Analysis in the Medical Device Design Process
How To Get Control of Your Day, Life & Career - Time Manage…
Introduction to Microsoft Power BI Dashboards
AI Across the Business: Practical Use Cases for Founders an…
6-Hour Virtual Seminar on Learning the Highlights of Excel …
FDA Recommendations for Artificial Intelligence/Machine Lea…
Female to Female Hostility @Workplace: All you Need to Know
Writing Effective 483 and Warning Letter Responses
Gossip-Free: Leadership Techniques to Quell Office Chatter
Writing Techniques for Auditors and Risk Management Profess…
Retention Starts Here: Stop Losing Your Critical Talent and…
Do's and Don'ts of Giving Effective Feedback for Performanc…
Language is Code - Intro to AI - Generative AI - ChatGPT an…
Understanding EBITDA – Definition, Formula & Calculation
Construction Lending And Real Credit Administration: Evalua…