Internal investigations sound like the sort of thing that should belong to giant companies with glass offices, a proper HR department, and somebody whose full-time job is looking concerned in meetings. Like that company in the show Succession, it’s a giant company on that scale (and there was an investigation in that show, too). So on that scale, maybe there’s more to keep in mind when it comes to meeting compliance requirements, right?
Something that small businesses should have a much easier time with. Well, any small business, regardless of industry, can intentionally or unintentionally not meet requirements, and depending on the citation, there can always be a chance of an internal investigation. And that’s probably why a lot of small business owners don’t think too hard about them until they’re already in one. Smaller teams tend to assume problems can be handled with a quick chat, a bit of common sense, and everyone moving on. Sometimes that works.
Sometimes it absolutely doesn’t. What makes it harder in a small business is how close everything usually is. People know each other, roles overlap, communication is informal, and half the important stuff may have been said in a message thread with a joke in the middle of it. See the problem here?
It Usually Starts with Complaints
So, a workplace can feel normal right up until someone makes a complaint that can’t just be brushed off with “there was probably a misunderstanding”. That’s usually when the temperature changes. Now, of course, the situation can vary; maybe it’s a bullying concern, maybe it’s harassment, maybe it’s discrimination, maybe it’s somebody saying a manager crossed a line.
Informal Work Culture Can be a Problem
But once that kind of issue gets raised seriously, the business has to stop treating it like general workplace friction and start treating it like something that needs facts. Just keep in mind here that informal cultures often like to think they’re easier, friendlier, and more straightforward. But when someone feels uncomfortable enough to raise a formal concern, all that casual energy stops being very useful.
Digital Messages Have a Very Long Memory
One of the reasons internal investigations get messier now is that so much of business communication lives in digital spaces, and people barely think about day-to-day. Which, of course, makes sense. Usually, it’s emails, Slack, Teams, text messages, cloud folders, shared docs, all of which can instantly matter during an investigation.
For example, maybe someone said an offhand comment two weeks ago on a Friday afternoon. Well, guess what, it’s relevant now. The same goes for a random file that didn’t get organized either. And this is usually the point where businesses discover how bad their digital habits actually are. If records are scattered, names are inconsistent, and nobody knows where the right version of anything lives, this, of course, makes the business look bad because finding the truth becomes a lot harder.
Which is why you need to have a system in place here, and it’s going to be in your best interest to look into eDiscovery software, since this at least helps prevent people from looking for files and chats manually, because everything is instead collected and organized, meaning no guesswork.
No, Small Business Doesn’t Mean Small Risk
And that’s really the part worth remembering. Internal investigations aren’t reserved for huge companies with newsworthy office politics; it honestly doesn’t take that much for an investigation to happen.
