What Should Be Included in a Company Handbook?

3 min read | Mar 11, 2026
 Marta Gongos- Ad Culture By Marta Gongos

Your handbook is the backbone of your organization’s policies. It should explain your mission and vision statements, role expectations, code of conduct, availability hours, remote work policies, and dispute resolution.

Your company handbook is one of the first documents new hires see during onboarding. It outlines both their privileges and responsibilities. Many organizations struggle to zero in on messages that actually influence employee behavior, often recycling generic guidelines that merely create loopholes.

Your handbook should evolve as your team grows. Modern, future-proof companies need to align their house rules, workflows, and clear expectations with the systems they follow. Here’s what you should include (or revisit) when drafting your guidelines.

1. Company’s Mission, Values, and Decision Principles 

Start with your mission and vision statements. Keep the legal jargon out for now and focus on giving your new employees an overview of your company culture. The goal is to convey the “why” of your organization.

2. Employment Relationship 

With strict provincial regulations around unfair treatment and discrimination, it’s critical to clearly define the employment relationship from day one. Outline role expectations, reporting structure, and scope of work upfront to prevent confusion, authority issues, and situations where employees claim certain tasks “aren’t their job.”

Providing employee feedback in a straightforward language

Source: Pexels

3. Code of Conduct and Professional Standards 

Several employment laws dictate ethical employee engagement. As an employer, you’re responsible for defining and executing guidelines on appropriate behavior. To ensure compliance and avoid legal issues, clarify consequences for misconduct.

4. Work Hours, Availability, and Performance Expectations 

As your company grows, it’s easy to overwork your employees even by accident. Increased workload can blur boundaries and force mid-level managers to work their teams overtime.

Define work hours, response-time expectations, and performance standards early on. This not only keeps your productivity on track but also shows you respect your employees’ time and protects them from burnout.

5. Hybrid Work Rules 

For employees working remotely or in hybrid setups, clearly outline expectations around availability and communication. Agree on fair response windows, especially if your team spans multiple time zones, to avoid unnecessary delays.

Instead of micromanaging, set clear guardrails that support autonomy, accountability, and smooth, collaborative workflows.

6. User Privacy and Cybersecurity 

Endpoint security starts with an informed, careful team. Train employees on the proper use of company devices, software, and networks. Implement role-specific access controls, including password management, permission levels, and offboarding procedures.

With clear guidelines in place, you safeguard your trade secrets and ensure every team member handles sensitive information responsibly.

7. Issue Resolution, Discipline, and Handbook Updates 

Raising workplace concerns should have a clear, documented process. Collaborate with Human Resources (HR) to outline the following in your company handbook for a thorough procedure:

  • reporting channels
  • investigation steps
  • employee rights
  • disciplinary actions

Having these procedures in writing ensures consistency, transparency, and fairness across your organization. Your employees will rest assured that your handbook can back them up in case of workplace issues.

 Two male employees shaking hands

Source: Unsplash

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    FAQs About How to Write a Company Handbook 

    Organizations would have different guidelines and expectations, but at a basic level, here’s what a comprehensive employee handbook should outline:

    • A clear statement of your company’s policies, mission, values, and decision-making principles
    • Employment relationship (full-time, part-time, contract, or probation)
    • Role expectations, reporting hierarchy, and accountability boundaries
    • Code of conduct for in-person, remote, and digital work setups
    • Work hours, availability standards, and performance expectations
    • Time-off, leave, and employee benefits packages compliant with relevant local laws
    • Performance reviews, disciplinary procedures, and growth pathways
    • Technology use, data security, workplace safety, and IP ownership
    • Compensation framework and review cadence (without fixed salary promises)
    • Complaint handling, discipline process, and handbook update procedures

    In most countries, there’s no federal law that requires employers to have a written handbook. However, there are baseline rules to protect the workforce. In Canada, British Columbia’s Employment Standards Act and Ontario’s Employment Standards Act (ESA) set minimum standards for wages, hours of work, overtime, leaves, public holidays, and termination rights.

    To create a custom employee handbook, align it with your workflows and internal systems. Avoid copying templates because they’re not made for your operations. Also, while a company handbook isn’t legally required, the policies you include still carry legal implications. It’s best to have the final version reviewed by legal counsel.

    In Summary 

    • A company handbook sets clear expectations around behavior, performance, and accountability.
    • Well-defined roles and work hours reduce ambiguity and prevent disputes.
    • Hybrid and remote guidelines help teams align on availability, communication, and ownership without micromanagement.
    • Documented standards for data security and technology help protect company assets.
    • Clear issue resolution SOPs safeguard employee rights while reducing employer risk.
    • Regularly updating the handbook keeps policies aligned with how your company actually operates as it scales.

    Set Your Team Up for Consistent Growth With Ad Culture 

    A well-crafted company handbook reduces ambiguity in team expectations and performance. However, documentation alone isn’t enough. Even with the right guidelines in place, your organization won’t grow unless you have competent employees who respect them.

    To hire the right people from the start, work with Ad Culture. We’re a specialized digital marketing recruitment agency that connects companies with top talent in their industries.

    Call our team for an initial consultation. Share your hiring criteria with us so we can tap into our talent pool and suggest qualified prospects.

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