I work in a shop that has only two or sometimes three production drafters / technicians. Each of us are more under pressure from the engineer to get his deadline met without giving a rat's behind about any standards. The "prime directive" boils down to "do it as fast as you can and make it look like Steve did it" (me).
So what do I tell them? I am not really into controlling exactly how a person performs every task and prefer to focus on the finished product. I tell them to make their notes clear enough for a moron to understand what is required and give them a print that shows a sample of about everything we will ever draw along with lettering styles and the methodolgy for their adjustment to any scale, a set of layers to start out with and my own directive - EVERYTHING MUST BE DRAWN ACCURATELY AND TO SCALE. There is no grey area here, it is either drawn correctly or it is wrong. If it is correct all is well and any changes go smoothly. If not, it will fall upon me to fix their mess and NO ONE wants to travel that road more than once.