Vendor files should be checked before a missing document becomes an operational problem.
This DamnJobs guide is built to be used, not just read. It gives you a simple plan, a table, a visual score block, a checklist, and a copy/paste vendor worksheet so you can take action today.
Where to focus first
| Focus area | Proof or document to prepare | Best next move |
|---|---|---|
| Vendor file audit | W-9, COI, contract, contact, service area, and expiration dates | review files before an emergency or renewal season |
| Backup angle | Similar proof with a slightly different title | Search adjacent role names and compare duties |
| Risk check | Confirm the employer, requirements, and next step | Use official pages and keep a simple tracker |
Simple readiness score
Practical scorecard
Use this as a planning guide. It is not a hiring guarantee, but it helps you see what to improve first.
Use this checklist today
- ☐ List every active vendor first.
- ☐ Mark W-9 status and COI expiration date.
- ☐ Move documents into a consistent folder structure.
- ☐ Send one clear missing-document request.
- ☐ Set reminders before the next expiration.
Copy/paste vendor worksheet
Vendor name:
Missing document:
Requested date:
Due date:
Status:
Next action:
Notes: Use this line to track W-9, COI, contract, contact, service area, and expiration dates.
Helpful internal resources
If your vendor files are messy, start with a simple audit before buying another tool.
FAQ
Do small teams need software first?
Not always. A clean spreadsheet, folder system, and reminder rhythm can fix many vendor paperwork problems first.
What should be cleaned first?
Start with COI expiration dates, W-9 status, vendor contact info, and any vendors currently doing active work.