A small business owner hires their fifth employee, panics about HR compliance, and downloads a template handbook from a payroll vendor. They customize it lightly, hand it out, and feel covered. What they’ve actually done is sign their company up for dozens of policy commitments โ some legally binding, some just risky โ that they don’t follow, can’t enforce, and didn’t really mean. Plaintiff’s attorneys love this pattern. It turns the handbook into a roadmap for litigation against the employer who thought they were protecting themselves.
The handbook becomes a contract you didn’t mean to sign
In most jurisdictions, employee handbooks can be construed as creating contractual obligations, especially when the language is specific and the document lacks careful disclaimers. A template that says “we will conduct a fair investigation of all complaints” or “discipline follows a progressive process” can be cited later as a promise the company made and then broke. Even the boilerplate “this is not a contract” disclaimer, if buried or contradicted by detailed promises elsewhere, doesn’t always hold. The more procedural detail the handbook contains, the more opportunities exist for an employer to deviate from its own stated process and create an actionable claim. Many small employers would be better off with a much shorter document that sets expectations without committing to procedures the business doesn’t actually run.
Stale policies are worse than no policy
Template handbooks tend to include broad protected-class language, accommodation procedures, leave entitlements, and complaint mechanisms drawn from federal law. The problem is that these obligations vary significantly by state, by local ordinance, and by employer size. A handbook that promises FMLA leave to a company too small to be covered by FMLA has just voluntarily extended a federal entitlement to its workforce. A handbook that lists outdated minimum wage figures or references repealed regulations creates a paper trail of non-compliance. Employers who copy templates rarely revisit them, and the gap between the document and current law widens every year. By the time a dispute arises, the handbook is often the strongest piece of evidence against the company.
Enforcement asymmetry
Even when policies are technically correct, the handbook gets selectively enforced โ discipline is applied to one employee for an offense that’s been overlooked in others, or a stated complaint procedure is bypassed when it’s inconvenient. Each instance of selective enforcement creates discrimination exposure, because the deviation can be characterized as differential treatment. A company without a written progressive discipline policy can fire an at-will employee for almost any non-protected reason. A company that wrote one and didn’t follow it has handed the employee’s lawyer a clean argument. The same logic applies across the document: the more rules you write down, the more chances there are for inconsistent application to become a legal problem.
Bottom line
A short, accurate, jurisdiction-appropriate handbook reviewed by an actual employment lawyer is a useful tool. A long, downloaded template that no one in the company has read carefully is a liability. If you’re a small employer with a generic handbook in a drawer, the highest-leverage thing you can do is shorten it.
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