The Guide to Community Preventive Services (the Community Guide) provides an arsenal of evidence-based intervention strategies to improve cancer screening. 1 Task Force on Community Preventive ServicesRecommendations for client- and provider-directed interventions to increase breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer screening. Am J Prev Med. 2008; 35: S21-S25 PubMed Scopus (68) Google Scholar The challenge for health promotion practitioners using the Community Guide is to (1) transform these intervention strategies into specific intervention programs and (2) implement these programs in settings that may or may not match the settings in which the interventions were originally tested. Several resources are available to help practitioners find and adapt specific intervention programs, such as the National Cancer Institute's Research Tested Intervention Programs (RTIPs) 2 National Cancer InstituteResearch Tested Intervention Programs. http://rtips.cancer.gov/rtips/index.do Google Scholar and Using What Works. 3 Boyle L. Homer M. Using what works: adapting evidence-based programs to fit your needs National Cancer Institute. http://cancercontrol.cancer.gov/use_what_works/start.htm Google Scholar However, fewer resources are available to help practitioners think broadly about the various settings in which these programs could be implemented. This commentary offers guidance on implementing the Community Guide's new cancer screening recommendations in the workplace. 1 Task Force on Community Preventive ServicesRecommendations for client- and provider-directed interventions to increase breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer screening. Am J Prev Med. 2008; 35: S21-S25 PubMed Scopus (68) Google Scholar