Process Documentation Matters!

Why Process Documentation Matters More Than You Think

When I was in college, I didn’t learn much about process efficiency. It just wasn’t a focus.

But I did learn something else that stuck with me.

While I was at Massachusetts Maritime Academy, I spent time aboard the TS Patriot State, our training ship. As cadets, we had to do real work, including changing out boiler fuel burners while underway.

It wasn’t simple work. It requires coordination, timing, and attention to detail. And like a lot of things back then, the process depended heavily on who was involved.

Looking back, one thing is clear.

It would have been a lot more efficient and a lot less stressful if we had a simple, shared process that everyone followed the same way every time.

That lesson didn’t fully click until later.

In the late 1990s, when I joined Caterpillar, I was introduced to process efficiency in a whole new way. I remember learning from Ben Graham and others that how you do something matters just as much as what you do.

And there was another lesson that showed up again and again.

We could not rely on a system to fix a broken process.

At Caterpillar, and later working with dealers, we had to spend the time getting the process right first. We had to understand the best way to do the work, document it, train it, and prove that it worked.

Only then did it make sense to bring in a system to support it.

If you skip that step, the system doesn’t solve the problem. It just makes a bad process run faster.

From there, I spent most of my career helping teams document, train, and follow better processes. And I kept seeing the same pattern.

When processes are clear, teams move faster.
When processes are followed, mistakes go down.
When processes are taught, people gain confidence.

But when processes live only in someone’s head, everything slows down.

Why Documentation Matters

If you want to grow, you need to be consistent. And consistency comes from documented processes.

Without documentation:

  • Every person does things their own way
  • Training takes longer
  • Mistakes happen more often
  • Growth becomes harder

With documentation:

  • Work gets done the same way every time
  • New people ramp up faster
  • Leaders can step away without things breaking
  • The business can scale

Keep It Simple. The 20/80 Rule

One mistake I see a lot is overcomplicating process documentation.

You don’t need a 50-page manual. You need clarity.

In EOS, we focus on the core processes that drive your business. This is where the 20/80 rule comes in.

Document the 20 percent of steps that drive 80 percent of your results.

At an entrepreneurial level, that usually means:

  • A few key processes
  • Clear, simple steps
  • Easy to follow by anyone on the team

If it’s too complex, people won’t use it. And if people don’t use it, it doesn’t work.

How This Connects to EOS

In EOS, the Process Component is all about getting your “way” of doing things out of your head and into a system.

We call them your core processes. They are the handful of things your business must do well every time.

When those processes are:

  • Documented
  • Simple
  • Followed by all

That’s when you start to see real traction.

Final Thought

I didn’t learn this in a classroom.

I learned it on a ship, in the field, and by working with teams who had to get it right.

If you want your business to grow without chaos, start with your processes.

Get them right first.
Then use systems to support them.
Keep them simple.
Teach them to your team.

And most importantly, follow them.

The Ultimate Core Value

Why Your Legacy is the Ultimate Core Value.

I just ordered a copy of “Legacy Letters” by Chris Hodges, and I’m struck by a powerful realization before I’ve even turned the first page.

Chris is the Founding Pastor of Church of the Highlands and Chancellor at Highlands College, where my daughter is currently studying Pastoral Ministry. Through her eyes, I’ve seen the impact of his leadership…a relentless passion for faith, ministry, and the success of every student.

As an EOS Implementer, I spend my days helping leadership teams define their Core Values and their Vision. What I’ve learned is this: You cannot lead a purposeful company if you aren’t living a purposeful life.

The principles Chris writes about, things like putting first things first and investing in relationships, are the spiritual and personal versions of what we call Traction.

In life, we call it a “Legacy.”

In business, we call it a “Vision.”

Both require the same thing: Discipline and Accountability. I’m excited to dive into these “Legacy Letters” to see how these timeless principles can help the entrepreneurs I work with move from just running a business to building something that lasts.

Success is great, but Significance is the goal.

Watch Out!

The Most Dangerous Time for Your Business is Right After a Record Month.

I recently saw a client hit the best month in their company’s history. They are flying high, and they should be; they’ve done the hard work of Focus Day and Vision Building.

But as an EOS Implementer, this is where I enter the danger.

When things are going well, the temptation is to let up. You think, “We’ve got this figured out. Maybe we can skip the L10 meeting this week. We don’t need to obsess over the scorecard right now.”

That is exactly how companies hit the ceiling.

Success isn’t a reason to abandon the process; it’s proof that the process works. The magic isn’t in the record-breaking numbers, it’s in the meeting pulse and the accountability that created those numbers.

If you want to turn a great month into a great company, stay obsessed with the fundamentals:

1. Keep your pulse: Don’t cancel your L10s because you’re too busy being successful.
2. Watch the data: Your scorecard tells you why you succeeded so you can repeat it.
3. Focus on Rocks: Don’t let a big win distract you from your 90-day priorities.

Celebrate the wins, then get back to the work. That’s how you build traction.

The Windshield View: Leading Indicators

Are you driving your business by looking in the rearview mirror?

Most leadership teams spend their meetings reviewing Lagging Indicators – revenue, profit, and items that happened 30 days ago. While important, these numbers are history. You can’t change them.

To gain a true Pulse on your business, you need Leading Indicators.

Leading indicators are the activity-based metrics that predict your future:

✅ Outbound calls made this week (predicts next month’s sales).
✅ Units produced today (predicts next week’s revenue).
✅ Error rates in operations (predicts next quarter’s churn).

When you have a weekly Scorecard of 5 to 15 leading indicators, you stop reacting to the past and start predicting the future. If a number is off-track on Tuesday, you can solve the issue during your Level 10 Meeting on Wednesday…long before it hits your P&L.

Stop guessing. Start predicting.

Effectiveness > Efficiency

Is your efficiency killing your customer loyalty?

We’ve all been there. You have a problem, you open a chat window, and you spend 20 minutes proving to a bot that you aren’t a robot, only to be told it can’t help you.

In the race to automate everything, we’ve accidentally created a massive barrier between us and our customers.

Here’s the hard truth: you don’t have to be “extraordinary” at customer service to win anymore. You just have to be good.

Being good in 2026 means:

1. A human answers the phone (or the chat) when the logic tree fails.
2. The person on the other end has the authority to actually solve the problem.
3. Efficiency is measured by resolution, not just speed.

The EOS perspective for those of us running on EOS, customer service is one of your core processes. If your process is 100% automated, you’ve removed the LMA (leading, managing, and accountability) from the human experience.
Your documented process should ensure consistency, but it should never override the core value of helping the person who pays your bills.

If you want to set yourself apart from the competition this year, don’t look for a new AI plugin. Look for a way to let your customers talk to a human being.

Efficiency is great. Effectiveness is better.

Construction Chaos?

Why your construction business feels like a 24/7 fire drill.

In the construction industry, you may have been taught that hard work is the only way to grow. But if you’re working 70 hours a week and your projects still feel chaotic, hard work isn’t the problem.

The problem is a lack of documented, core processes.

Most owners avoid documenting processes because they think it means writing a 300-page manual that no one will ever read. In the EOS world, we do things differently. We use the 20/80 rule: document the 20% of the steps that get you 80% of the results.

When you identify and document your Core Processes, you gain three things:

Consistency: Every project is run your way, every time.
Scalability: You can grow without having to be at every job site.
Freedom: You stop fighting fires and start leading your business.

Stop trying to manage the chaos. Simplify your business, document your core processes, and follow them to the letter.

That’s how you gain Traction.

Firm Foundation

I picked up my son, a college senior, from the airport this weekend. During the drive he asked what I actually do for my clients.

I walked him through the EOS framework. I explained the five leadership abilities (Simplify, Predict, Delegate, Systemize, Structure), the Accountability Chart, and the Weekly Meeting Pulse.

He listened quietly. I assumed he was bored. Finally, he asked, “Isn’t that all just basic stuff everyone should be doing?”

I was taken aback. He told me he’d learned those exact concepts in his project management class.

Then he hit me with the real question: “So if it’s that simple, why do they need you?”

He got me. I had to stop and really think about the “why.”

The truth is, most entrepreneurs are successful because of a great product, not because of their business acumen. They spend their days fighting fires, leaving no time to build a solid foundation. They know what to do, they just don’t have the discipline or the outside perspective to do it consistently.

I think of it like this: I go in, jack up the house, and pour a new, solid foundation. Then I set the house back down on level ground and get out of the way.

EOS isn’t about complex theory. It’s about simple tools that, when applied with discipline, stop the fires and let you get back to doing what you love.

If your foundation feels a little shaky, let’s talk about what implementation looks like.

Was 2025 your best year yet?

Was 2025 the year you planned? Whether you crushed it or fell short, the real question is: Are you positioned to make 2026 better on purpose?

Hope alone will not cut it. A weekly Scorecard plus IDS meetings will.

Why Hope Fails

Hoping for a better 2026 often leads to disappointing results, as many leaders have experienced. A proven operating system like EOS®provides the structure needed for clarity and execution.

Essential Plan Checks

Assess your 2026 strategy with these key questions:

  • Is it fully documented?
  • Does everyone understand and own it?
  • Do employees feel valued and clear on expectations?
  • Are they challenged, developed, and held accountable?

People crave clarity, the chance to win, and ways to contribute to the score.

Path to Your Best Year

Great leadership adopts a real operating system like EOS®, then aligns the team for the journey. At GYST Organizational Health, we specialize in EOS®Implementation to make this happen. Led by Professional EOS®Implementer Ted Williamson.

What’s one step you are taking now for a stronger 2026? Share below, and let us know how we can support you.