
Your organizational policies sit at the heart of your operations, highlighting the importance of policy management. Their scope both reflects your business's goals and priorities, and underpins your values.
Your policies provide the framework your operations need, and a structure on which you can build governance, risk and compliance programs.
Setting policies, though, is not enough to ensure that best practices are adopted ' unfortunately, life's not that simple! Having a handbook of carefully-crafted procedures is only the first step. Policy management demands the ongoing review and monitoring of the policies you set.
Here, we look at why policy management is so important, what it entails, and how organizations can ensure the effective management of their policies.
The importance of policy management lies in its definition: rather than being a one-off event, it is a continuous managing process that requires regular adjustments to accommodate new technologies, updated legislation and advances in best practice. Setting your policies and procedures is the necessary first step.
But as we noted above, creating policies is not the be-all-and-end-all of policy management. Putting them in place and communicating them across the organization is equally important.
What lies at the heart of effective policy management is making sure that the policies you have worked hard on are adopted. The most perfectly-designed policies are nothing more than words on paper if they are not implemented and acted upon. Enforcing their take-up and ongoing compliance is the real nucleus of policy management; the key stage that will take your policies from aspirational to in-built.
Although effective policy management might seem like a no-brainer, the many conflicting priorities faced by business leaders can see it fall to the bottom of an extensive list.
The risks of not managing your policies effectively should provide sufficient incentive to prioritize and recognise the importance of policy management, though. There's the risk of health and safety breaches. The potential for regulatory fines. The reputational damage that results from publicity around legislative breaches. The possibility of lawsuits.
Writing a policy handbook is not enough — and neither is a one-off communication of policy and procedure. Good policy management demands the buy-in and understanding of your policies (perhaps through having your people on the ground input to them). It might mean training and testing the teams responsible for implementing the policies to ensure they fully appreciate what they need to do.
Whatever your policy management style is, consider the following best practices when creating your policies:
When communicating your policies, think about:
When enforcing your policies, remember:
A continuous loop:
When it comes to governance, risk and compliance, a robust approach to policy management is the foundation on which your success is built. Whether you're defining, ratifying, communicating or enforcing your procedures, you need to deliver best practice in policy management.
Not only this, but when it comes to compliance reporting and auditing, a well-run policy management approach ensures you can easily access and share the data you need to evidence a conscientious and thorough approach to regulatory compliance.
Digitalizing policy management can simplify, speed-up and strengthen your strategy, making it easier to create, communicate, enforce and update the policies that underpin your business operations. Read more about the legal, compliance and software tools Diligent offers that can support your digital policy management.