We have all worked in an office where training and historical context were not provided, where the exception is always the rule, or things were done differently depending on the person or how the wind blew that day. Maybe you’ve spent too many hours in one day solving one problem. That problem required a great deal of detective work across multiple offices to determine how it was handled in the past and how to avoid this in the future. If this sounds familiar, you are not alone. Taking the initiative to create a graduate enrollment management policy manual can be a significant contribution to your office, team, and personal growth, regardless of where your career takes you.
To start, ask your team during a slower period to record the procedural work they do in detail and the policies that guide them. Starting in this way immediately makes the task less overwhelming and the information will be more accurate because it comes directly from the staff members that do the work. It is perfectly acceptable to start with a light version of your manual and build it up over time. This will happen anyway by nature of efficiency building, but you can intentionally tackle the process in this way. To do so, first meet to discuss the process and agree on your top procedural duties and policies. Then have teammates record those in the manual document on a shared drive.
Perhaps you are an office of one or few and this manual is the job of one individual. If so, the least time-consuming way to begin this project is to record your common procedures/policies as you do them or as issues arise. You can simply track a list of tasks and then designate time on your calendar to record detailed steps or you can record each process in detail as you come across it.
As process and policy changes are made throughout the year, you should record them in the manual right away. Next, you'll schedule a calendar invite for your team, preferably during the slowest period (usually summer for graduate admissions, though slow periods are rare nowadays). Roughly two weeks before the meeting, distribute the manual and request a thorough review, encouraging them to note any edits or suggestions. During the scheduled session, address the comments and clarify any queries, aiming to finalize the changes by the end of that week. Giving yourself a due date will ensure the updating happens and sharing the load with your team ensures the manual is accurate.
Be sure to include a table of contents and update that as well with each change. Over the years, your manual will become quite long, and it is most user-friendly to be able to click on a section from the contents.
Also, it is important to use screenshots and videos with your directions. Visual details are particularly helpful when using this document to train new employees.
To craft a truly beneficial manual, envision it as a guide for someone completely new to your office or the field. Keeping this mindset leads to the level of detail you need to make a strong manual.
The office manual can include as little or as much as you would like. Thorough manuals include sections on both admissions policies and procedures. They capture the steps it takes to run a successful graduate admissions office from inquiry to enrollment and beyond.
While thinking about everything that goes into running your graduate admissions office may cause stress, recording your team’s work has significant benefits. The most important thing to do is to at least begin. As a first step, you may decide to brainstorm with your team about what could be included in your office manual. After all, there is no right way to do this. But when you hire that next teammate, or your colleague is out on leave, you will be thanking yourself and your team for taking the time to make the manual.