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Today we’re taking a deeper look at documentation under the CMMC framework, and what it really means when it comes to preparing for an assessment. This is one of the most misunderstood areas of CMMC readiness, and it’s also one of the most common reasons organizations struggle during audits. Before we examine how documentation is reviewed in an assessment, it’s important to understand the foundation of what CMMC auditors actually look for. CMMC requires a series of core documents that establish how an organization secures Controlled Unclassified Information, and how those safeguards are implemented across systems, practices, and processes. At minimum, organizations must have a system security plan, an accurate boundary diagram, documented policies, procedures, and an up-to-date asset inventory. These documents act as the backbone of a CMMC assessment. They demonstrate intent, outline the operational environment, and describe how security requirements are carried out on a day-to-day basis. One of the most frequent questions organizations ask is whether templates can be used, or if everything needs to be built from scratch. Templates are often a great starting point. They provide structure, formatting, and baseline coverage of the controls. But CMMC assessments do not rely solely on the presence of documents. Auditors will cross-reference your SSP implementation statements against your policies, procedures, and interviews to confirm that what’s written actually matches how your organization operates. For that reason, templates must be customized. Policies and procedures need to reflect your real environment, your actual practices, and the roles and responsibilities within your organization. And with the CMMC Final Rule solidifying the requirements around proof, evidence, and assessor expectations, accurate documentation matters more than ever. Generic statements, placeholder language, or descriptions that don’t reflect how your business functions will not stand up to scrutiny under the finalized framework. This is where experienced CMMC support creates meaningful value. Understanding a customer’s environment, tailoring industry templates found in platforms like K2 GRC, and aligning them with the organization’s structure ensures documentation isn’t just technically compliant, but also operationally realistic. We’ve proven this in the real world. Reynolds Construction, for example, was one of the first companies to achieve CMMC Level 2 through our platform. With limited internal IT resources, they started with structured documentation templates, customized them to match their environment, and built a mapped, evidence-rich ecosystem of over 1,000 artifacts. By tailoring documentation to what they actually do, not just copying boilerplate language, they cut their external costs by more than half, retained institutional knowledge, and completed their assessment in just two and a half days. Their experience reinforces the core principle: when documentation is meaningful, accurate, and aligned to operations, organizations walk into assessments prepared. Ultimately, the goal is to bring two worlds into alignment: the business itself, and the requirements of the CMMC framework. When those areas connect, organizations walk into assessments with confidence, clarity, and documentation that truly represents what they do. ►Reach out to Etactics @ https://www.k2grc.com ►Subscribe: https://rb.gy/6hqovf to learn more tips and tricks in governance, risk and compliance. ►Find us on LinkedIn: / k2-grc #CMMC #CMMCSSP