Guides May 30, 2026

How to Create a Simple Employee Handbook for Your Cafe

An employee handbook doesn't have to be thick and formal. What matters: clear expectations, written rules, and new hires who can onboard without you explaining everything from scratch each time.

C
CrescendPOS Team

Why You Need This

Every time a new hire starts, you explain everything from scratch: working hours, dress code, how to handle payments, what's allowed and what isn't. It takes time, and the results aren't consistent — because you might forget to mention something important.

An employee handbook solves this. Not a 50-page legal document — but a concise reference containing everything a new hire needs to know to work properly from day one.

What Should Be In It

1. About the Business (1 page)

Brief: what you sell, who your customers are, and what values you hold. This isn't a company profile — it's context so staff know where they work and for whom.

2. Working Hours and Shifts (1 page)

  • Store operating hours
  • Shift times (start-end for each shift)
  • Tardiness policy
  • How to request days off or swap shifts
  • Procedure if sick and can't come in

3. Appearance Rules (half page)

What's the dress code? Apron required? Closed-toe shoes? Hair tied back? Write specifics — "dress neatly" is subjective; "black or white polo shirt, black pants, closed-toe shoes" is clear.

4. Basic Operational SOPs (2-3 pages)

  • Opening procedure (checklist)
  • Closing procedure (checklist)
  • How to operate the POS (basics: login, enter orders, payments, voids)
  • How to handle cash and digital payments
  • Shift opening and closing procedures

5. Service Standards (1 page)

  • How to greet customers
  • How to handle complaints
  • What's allowed and what isn't (e.g., no discounts without manager approval)
  • Language style to use (formal or casual?)

6. Key Policies (1 page)

  • Phone usage during work
  • Food and drink policy (free? Limits?)
  • Policy on friends/family visiting
  • Rules about taking items/food without permission

7. Important Contacts (half page)

Owner's number, manager's number, emergency contacts. Who to call if there's a problem outside the owner's working hours.

Tips for Writing It

  • Write in everyday language. Not contract language — but language your staff will actually read and understand.
  • Keep it under 10 pages. Beyond that, nobody reads it. Short and to the point.
  • Use checklists and bullet points. Easier to scan than long paragraphs.
  • Print and give to every new hire. Don't just share a PDF — a physical copy they can carry and re-read.
  • Update every 6 months. Rules change, procedures evolve. Make sure the handbook stays current.

Benefits You Might Not See Coming

Reduces conflicts. When rules are written, there's no "who said so" debate — there's a clear reference.

Speeds up onboarding. New hires can read it before their first day, so they arrive with basic context already.

Increases professionalism. A small cafe with a handbook signals that this business is managed seriously — and staff tend to respond with more seriousness too.

This isn't a big project. Sit down for 2-3 hours and write down what you've been explaining verbally to every new hire. That's your handbook.