There's still a version of People Ops in a lot of companies that is basically HR paperwork plus a vibe. Benefits administration, compliance, the occasional virtual team event, and a strong intuition about whether someone is a "culture fit."
That's not people operations. That's people administration.
People Ops, done properly, is one of the most process-intensive functions in the whole company. Hiring has a funnel. Onboarding has stages. Performance reviews have a cadence. Offboarding has a checklist that, if skipped, creates real legal and operational risk. Every one of those things is a process that can be documented, owned, and improved over time.
I ended up in operations partly because I'm the kind of person who, when faced with a recurring task, immediately wants to write down the steps. It drives some people crazy. In People Ops, it's the whole job.
The People Ops playbook is being built for operators who own the people systems — usually as one part of a broader ops role — and need a starting point that isn't just "copy what we did at the last company and hope it fits."
It covers hiring process from intake to offer, onboarding from day one through 90 days, the performance review cycle, and offboarding — including the parts nobody wants to think about until they absolutely have to.
Good people processes make a company feel like a place worth working at. That's not soft. That's strategic.