The first time you realize this, it usually happens at the worst possible moment. A contractor wraps up their engagement and off-boards gracefully, except for the part where every edge case in the process they owned leaves with them. The clearest documentation of how that critical step gets done is the one sitting inside their head, and it just walked out the door.
๐ก The pattern: Undocumented processes don't fail loudly. They fail in ways that look like bad timing, communication gaps, or onboarding struggles โ and every one of those events traces back to the same root.
The Cost That Doesn't Show Up Daily
The problem with undocumented processes is that they don't announce themselves. A team can run smoothly for months on institutional memory and informal hand-offs, with senior people filling in the gaps and nothing obviously breaking. The penalty only surfaces in specific situations โ each of which feels like a separate problem until you look at the pattern underneath.
When the cost becomes visible
| Situation | What actually happens | Why it traces back to documentation |
|---|---|---|
| New hire starts | Spends first weeks interrupting colleagues for process answers | No doc to point to โ seniors lose focus time on top of it |
| Busy period hits | The one person who "knows the thing" is buried in other work | Process pauses, or someone guesses and gets it wrong |
| Contractor off-boards | Edge cases and muscle memory leave with them | Next person starts from scratch with no handoff doc |
| Team grows past ~6 people | Knowledge spreads unevenly across the team | Same process done four different ways |
| Client asks an edge case | Three people give three different answers | Inconsistent experience, credibility eroded |
None of these events get logged as documentation failures. They get absorbed as people problems, communication problems, or bad timing. But they trace back to the same root every time.
Why the Document Never Gets Written
The honest reason isn't indifference. Most teams have had this conversation at some point โ usually right after the fourth time explaining the same thing to someone new โ and they meant it when they said they'd get it written down. What stops them is something more structural.
When you sit down to document a process you've done hundreds of times, you discover how much of it is invisible. The first draft of a doc written by someone who knows a process cold usually reads like instructions for someone who already knows the process โ useful as a reminder, useless as a guide for someone coming in fresh.
The types of knowledge that almost never make it into a doc
- The shortcut learned the hard way. "Always check X before doing Y โ I learned that after three tickets went sideways." Nobody taught it; nobody wrote it down.
- The exception rules. "If the client is in situation A, do this instead. If the account is older than 90 days, skip step 3." Conditions that live entirely in a long-tenured person's head.
- The judgment calls. Knowing when to escalate versus handle it yourself, when to flag something versus quietly fix it. None of this is a step in a checklist.
- The implicit dependencies. Step 4 only works if step 2 was done in a specific way that nobody ever wrote down.
- The "just ask Sarah" knowledge. Expertise so deeply attached to one person that the team has quietly given up trying to document it at all.
Getting all of this out of someone's head and into a form a new person can actually follow is a second job on top of the real job.
So the doc gets pushed to a quieter week that never arrives.
The Documentation You've Already Almost Done

What's worth noticing is that most teams have already documented many of their processes โ just not in a form anyone can find or reuse. A lot of process knowledge gets captured in recordings and walk-throughs that get treated as one-time events rather than persistent docs.
What's already sitting in your drive right now
| Recording type | What's already inside it | What usually happens to it |
|---|---|---|
| Onboarding walkthrough call | Step-by-step flow, edge cases, live questions answered in real time | Sits in a call library, never revisited |
| Screen share during a ticket review | Exact process steps, real examples, visible decision points | Forgotten after the meeting ends |
| "Cover me" recording before a vacation | "Here's how to do X while I'm away" โ often the clearest explanation that exists | Watched once, then impossible to find |
| Product demo recording | Feature logic, use case context, how-it-actually-works explanations | Saved to someone's local drive |
| Client onboarding call | The full walkthrough of how your product/service works in practice | Locked in a video platform with no searchable transcript |
The fastest version of writing a process down is not scheduling a documentation sprint. It's capturing the moment when you're already doing the thing and converting that into something structured and findable. Some teams are starting to use tools like Stepika precisely for this: paste a video URL or upload a recording and get a hosted, step-by-step guide that the whole team can reference. The work was already done; it just needed a form that survives the person who did it.
Pick One Process. You Know Which One.
The goal isn't a documentation system. It isn't a wiki relaunch or a quarterly knowledge audit. The goal is the one doc that would have the most immediate impact, written this week.
A simple test: which process to start with
A good first process to document hits most of these:
- Someone explains it verbally more than three times a month
- New people consistently get it wrong or need correction on it
- It only goes smoothly when one specific person is available
- If that person were unavailable for a week, something would visibly break or slow down
That's the one. Write it first โ in whatever format gets it done fastest โ and move on. The second doc is easier than the first, and the habit builds from the moment the first one actually exists.
๐ The fastest start: Don't schedule a documentation sprint. Pick the one process someone explains out loud more than three times a month and capture it live โ narrating as you do it. That draft will be more complete than anything written from memory at a desk.
