Knowledge Transfer Checklist for Insurance
A structured checklist for capturing and transferring the departing employee's knowledge, ensuring critical information and expertise are retained within the business.
Aligns with ASIC regulatory requirements, General Insurance Code of Practice, and AFSL obligations. Includes audit trail provisions.
Complete Checklist
- 1Identify all areas of knowledge unique to the departing employeeCritical
- 2List all claims the employee is currently involved in and their statusCritical
- 3Document all recurring tasks and their frequency, deadlines, and processes
- 4Record key customer and supplier relationships and contact details
- 5Document all system logins, processes, and workarounds the employee uses
- 6Create or update standard operating procedures for the employee's key tasksCritical
- 7Record the location of important files, documents, and resources
- 8Capture any undocumented processes or institutional knowledge
- 9Identify and document any pending issues or upcoming deadlines
- 10Schedule training sessions between the departing employee and their replacementCritical
- 11Transfer key customer relationships through introduction meetings
- 12Document the employee's role in any regular meetings or committees
- 13Record the details of any ongoing negotiations or disputes
- 14Verify the knowledge transfer is complete with the receiving team members
- 15Store all transfer documentation in an accessible central location
Frequently Asked Questions
How do we motivate a departing employee to participate in knowledge transfer?
Most employees are willing to transfer knowledge if asked respectfully. Make the process structured and time-bound so it does not feel burdensome. Acknowledge their contribution and express gratitude for their help in ensuring continuity. In some cases, a departing employee may be asked to be available for questions after their last day, which can be compensated if necessary.
What knowledge is most critical to capture during offboarding?
Prioritise knowledge that is unique to the individual and not documented elsewhere: key customer relationships, workarounds for system issues, the context behind ongoing claims, contact details for critical external parties, and any processes that only the departing employee performs. Focus on information the business cannot easily reconstruct on its own.
How can we reduce the risk of knowledge loss from employee departures?
The best defence is proactive documentation. Ensure all roles have documented processes and SOPs as a standard practice, not just during offboarding. Cross-train team members so knowledge is shared rather than siloed. Use shared systems for contacts, documents, and claim information rather than individual storage. Regular knowledge sharing sessions also help.
Need help implementing these checks into your daily operations?
Our team can build custom checklists integrated into your daily operations workflow.