For most small businesses, trouble doesn’t start with big conflicts. It starts with small, everyday frictions: a discussion about working from home, a disagreement over sick leave, a laptop used a bit too freely, an invoice delayed because “I thought that was allowed.” These moments drain time, strain trust, and quietly, cost money. Written house rules sit right at that intersection of cash flow, responsibility, and calm.
In Dutch, we call them huisregels: internal rules about how work is done day to day. Not the employment contract itself, but the practical framework around it. When they’re only spoken, they rely on memory, mood, and goodwill. When they’re written, they become neutral. No emotion, no personal interpretation, just a shared reference point. That alone reduces the admin load that eats into evenings and weekends for many owners.
I often see this play out in a familiar way. An employee assumes flexibility means “whenever works for me.” The employer assumes flexibility means “within reason.” Nobody is being difficult, but suddenly there’s tension, a correction feels personal, and productivity drops. Written rules turn that moment into something simple: “This is how we agreed to work.” The conversation becomes shorter, calmer, and cheaper, in every sense.
There’s also a legal and financial layer that’s easy to underestimate. Issues around sickness reporting, data protection, expense claims, use of company property, or working hours don’t feel urgent, until they are. If something goes wrong, the question is not whether you were reasonable, but whether expectations were clear. Written rules don’t make you rigid; they make you predictable. Predictability is what keeps small risks from turning into expensive ones.
For micro-entrepreneurs especially, this isn’t about control. It’s about energy. Every unwritten rule lives in your head, waiting to be explained again. Putting them on paper is a small investment that pays back in fewer interruptions, fewer grey areas, and fewer moments where trust is tested unnecessarily.
Good house rules don’t need legal poetry or corporate tone. They need to reflect how your business actually works, and to be readable by a tired human at the end of a workday. Done well, they don’t create distance. They create clarity. And in a small business, clarity is often the difference between constant firefighting and steady, quiet progress.