• HR Documentation: How Can HR Professionals and Supervisors Create Litigation-Proof Decisions in 2026
  • HR Documentation: How Can HR Professionals and Supervisors Create Litigation-Proof Decisions in 2026

    • Speaker : Margie Faulk
    • Session Code : MKMAR3126
    • Date : 31st March 2026
    • Time : 1:00 PM Eastern Time / 10:00 AM Pacific Time
    • Duration : 90 Mins

Overview:

 

Employee documentation continues to be one of the most sensitive and mishandled areas of HR management. In many workplaces, supervisors know they need to address poor performance, misconduct, attendance problems, or policy violations, but they often struggle with how to document those issues clearly, consistently, and appropriately. Some delay the process because they want to avoid conflict. Others document too little, use vague language, mix facts with conclusions, or fail to connect the issue back to policy. In 2026, those mistakes can leave employers exposed at the very moment they need documentation to support a disciplinary decision.

 

For HR professionals, the problem is rarely just the absence of paperwork. The real issue is whether the documentation is complete, objective, properly placed, aligned with internal policies, and strong enough to support later action. When documentation is inconsistent, when managers treat similar situations differently, or when personnel files contain the wrong information in the wrong place, employers can create unnecessary risk for themselves. A weak documentation trail can undermine performance management, complicate terminations, and increase the likelihood of complaints, disputes, and legal scrutiny.

 

This webinar will address the practical realities behind workplace documentation and disciplinary action. It will help attendees understand what belongs in the personnel file, what should be kept separate, how many files employers may need to maintain, and why proper record handling matters. It will also examine the fundamentals of effective written documentation, including how to address negative behavior, how to structure warnings and corrective action, how to handle employee disagreement or explanation, and how to avoid writing that sounds emotional, inconsistent, or legally damaging.

 

Attendees will also gain guidance on progressive discipline, performance improvement plans, written warnings, and the role of the employee handbook in supporting documentation decisions. The session is designed to help HR professionals and supervisors create documentation that is factual, policy-based, and defensible—so that when corrective action becomes necessary, the employer has a clear, credible, and well-supported record to stand behind.

 

Areas covered in the session:


  • What documents should be in the personnel file, and what should be out
  • How many files should an Employers have for employees
  • Written Documentation Myths and Facts
  • Why is documentation one of the most difficult aspects of employee relations?
  • What are the elements of effective documentation?
  • What policies and procedures must be included in an Employee Handbook to support decisions to document any disciplinary action?
  • What key issues must be addressed when documenting negative behavior?
  • Should you include different incidents in an employee write up?
  • What can an employee do if they do not agree or they want to explain their side of the situation?
  • Instructions for Establishing a Performance Improvement Plan (PIP) PIP Template
  • How can supervisors increase their success when writing corrective actions?
  • Learn to create a written warning and disciplinary actions that withstand legal scrutiny;
  • Review the elements that have to be included in a written warning/disciplinary action;
  • What fines and penalties can be levied if no one documents performance?
  • Dos and Don’ts of documentation;
  • The importance of the Employee Handbook and the consistency of tracking behaviors.

 

Why should you attend?

 

Effective documentation is one of the most important tools HR professionals and supervisors have when managing performance problems, misconduct, and disciplinary action. Yet it is often one of the most uncomfortable and misunderstood parts of employee relations. Attending this webinar will help you understand how to document workplace issues in a way that is clear, factual, consistent, and better able to support sound employment decisions.

 

You should attend if you want to reduce the risk that weak, vague, or inconsistent documentation will undermine your organization’s position during employee disputes, investigations, or termination decisions. This session will help you better understand what should be documented, where documentation should be kept, how to handle employee pushback, and how to ensure written warnings and corrective actions are tied to policy and practice.

 

This webinar is especially valuable for employers that want to strengthen manager execution, improve documentation habits, and create a more defensible employee relations process. Whether you are dealing with ongoing performance issues, repeated misconduct, or the need for more consistent disciplinary practices, this program will give you practical guidance to help protect the organization while supporting fair and effective workplace management.

 

Handouts:

 

Attendees will gain access to exclusive handouts, including presentation materials provided by the speaker and additional resources developed by Amorit Education to aid your teams in post-session implementation.

 

Who will benefit?

 

This webinar will benefit the professionals who are directly responsible for employee relations, performance management, disciplinary action, personnel records, and documentation practices.

It is especially relevant for those who must ensure that workplace documentation is factual, consistent, policy-based, and able to withstand scrutiny—those include:

 

  • Human Resources Directors/HR Managers
  • Employee Relations Managers/Employee Relations Specialists
  • Human Resources Business Partners (HRBPs)/Labor Relations Managers
  • Compliance Managers/Workplace Investigations Managers
  • Employee Relations Consultants/HR Compliance Specialists
  • Personnel Managers/people Operations Managers
  • Talent Operations Managers/Performance Management Managers
  • Training and Development Managers with supervisory compliance responsibilities
  • Operations Managers with direct employee discipline authority
  • Department Managers/Supervisors/Front-Line Managers/General Managers
  • Small Business Owners/Business Owners
  • Executive Directors
  • Chief Human Resources Officers (CHROs)
  • In-house Employment Counsel
  • Corporate Counsel handling HR and employment matters


 

Margie Faulk is a senior-level human resources professional with over 18 years of workplace compliance experience and HR consulting experience. A current Compliance Advisor for HR Compliance Solutions, LLC. Margie has worked as an HR Compliance advisor for major corporations and small businesses in the small, large, private, public, and Non-profit sectors.  Margie’s new focus is to provide Employers and Professionals with risk management strategies to develop risk management strategies to mitigate workplace violations.

 

Margie has provided small to large businesses with risk management strategies that protect companies and reduce potential workplace fines and penalties from violations of employment regulations. Margie is bilingual (Spanish) fluent and Bi-cultural. Margie holds a professional human resources certification (PHR) from the HR Certification Institute (HRCI) and SHRM-CP certification from the Society for Human Resources Management.  Margie is a member of the Society of Corporate Compliance & Ethics (SCCE). Margie is also a SHRM Credit Provider offering SHRM-CP and SHRM-SPC credits for her training which major HR individuals need to maintain their certification credits.


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Tags: HR Documentation, Employee Relations, Disciplinary Action, Performance Management, Personnel Files, Written Warnings, PIP, Employee Handbook, HR Compliance, Supervisor Training, Workplace Documentation, Corrective Action, Margie Faulk, March 2026,