Employee Onboarding
What is employee onboarding?
Employee onboarding is
the process in which new hires get familiar with the organization, the people,
and the culture of the company they’ve just joined. It’s a key stage of
the employee life
cycle.
New hires are
introduced to an organization and integrated into their new role and
responsibilities. They are shown their workspace, given the equipment and
resources they need, meet colleagues and managers, get to know work processes,
and familiarize themselves with the company’s mission and values. By the
end of the onboarding process, they’re able to do their job independently and
effectively.
The purpose
of an onboarding period is two-fold. On the one hand, the
traditional goal of employee onboarding is to get new hires
operational as quickly as possible. On the other hand, the more
recent role of onboarding has been to shape the critical first
impressions new employees have of the company.
After a successful onboarding, the employee:
- Is excited about their role and the
company
- Has met their colleagues
- Has a relationship with their
direct manager
- Has access to all the resources to
do their work well
- Has received the necessary training
- Will understand their role and work
and feel equipped to succeed
- Will feel at home in the
organization
- Has made a couple of meaningful
connections
- Has clear goals to work toward and
has achieved these goals
- Clearly understands their appraisal
criteria
In 89% of organizations, employee onboarding is short, lasting
less than 3 months. However, truly effective onboarding is a continuous process
that can take up to a year until an employee reaches their full performance potential.
What is the Importance of Employee Onboarding?
Companies hire employees easily. They welcome the
new hires by answering their questions, so employees get excited to join the
company. Have you ever thought about the importance of boarding and why it is
so important?
1. Increases Teamwork
People's ideas are different in teamwork; unique and
new ideas come when people start talking with each other. When the relationship
between new hires and
their colleagues strengthens, they indirectly promote their work environment.
2. Enhance Office Culture
Onboarding is the process that allows you to show
your work culture that joins your staff. Culture is on the priority list of any
employee.
3. Improve Productivity
After crossing
everything in the employee's onboarding checklist, the new hires get all the
rights in the company to work, which will increase the company's productivity.
Who Does Onboarding?
Onboarding is done by the employer,
a member of the HR staff, or a supervisor. Sometimes all of these people will
contribute to onboarding by introducing the new employee to different aspects
of the company.
It is common for the new hire to be assigned a peer mentor during
the onboarding process. This can ease the learning process for new hires by
providing them with a sense of comfort in their new work environment.
How Is Onboarding
Different from Orientation?
Employers will
generally provide their new hires with a few details about their position and
the workplace during orientation.
However,
the primary purpose of new hire orientation is to get the start date,
necessary paperwork, and other routine tasks out of the way, such as assigning
the new hire a desk. Orientation is typically over within a few hours or a few
days at most.
Employee
Onboarding, on the other hand, is an extensive process that can
last up to 12 months. During this time, new employees are
provided with training, knowledge, and resources to succeed in their new
position fostering better employee engagement, job satisfaction, and greater new hire retention.
(Technical, 2023)
The 5 Phases of Employee Onboarding
In today’s job
market, one in every
three employees will leave a new job in the first three months.
An effective onboarding program is crucial to retaining talent and setting
employees up for long-term success in their roles. The five phases of employee onboarding are as below.
1. Pre-onboarding
2. Initial onboarding and orientation
3. Training
In the training phase, the employee should also learn more about their colleagues’ roles, how they work together, and who they can ask for support. Some companies use team-building exercises during the training phase to facilitate collaboration and relationship-building with new employees.
4. Growth, mentoring, and initial performance feedback
5. Ongoing employee development
At this point, the new
employee is likely fulfilling their daily tasks, working towards performance
goals, and integrating feedback from their mentors. As an employer, your employee
onboarding effort doesn’t stop there. New hires still need
ongoing support and development, which can last several months to a year or
more. If you are dedicated to employee satisfaction and retention, you’ll
probably invest in employee development opportunities as long as they work for
you.
Example for Employee Onboarding
Apple is a multinational technology
company based out of the United States of America specializing in software,
consumer electronics, and various online services.
What Is Their Onboarding Strategy?
The standout of Apple's onboarding strategy is its I
Buddy system. The goal here is to connect the new employees with people who are
deeply aware of the company culture. When a new employee joins Apple, they are
immediately paired with an existing employee (generally from a different team
but of the same process). This paired acquaintance is called onboarding buddy
or I Buddy. They will be tasked with bringing the new hire up-to-date and
answering all questions of the new employee regarding the roles,
responsibilities, and the company culture.
Employee onboarding best practices
Here are a few
practical tips you can add to the onboarding process in your organization
today:
1. Align the job
description and the onboarding plan
This is why it’s essential to integrate HR practices, do a great vacancy intake, and align your job description with your job posting and 30-60-90-day plan.
2. Create effective
onboarding workflows
It’s likely that your
organization already has an onboarding workflow and different systems and
processes applicable to your organization’s size. Implement new, suitable ways
of working into those existing workflows. For example, what steps
mentioned above in this article is your process missing? How can you bring them
in?
3. Use onboarding
checklists
Onboarding checklists
help keep your employee onboarding process consistent. An HR professional or
the employee’s manager can physically or digitally check the boxes as they
onboard the new hires. It provides structure and ensures that necessary steps
are completed methodically.
You can utilize various types of checklists for
different aspects of onboarding:
- Onboarding checklist for HR
- Onboarding IT checklist
- Onboarding checklist for managers
- New hire training checklist
You can find all of these onboarding checklist
templates in our free Excel document
4. Ensure consistency
Your checklist is only as good as you are. If your onboarding team or managers have a checklist but don’t use it, items will likely be forgotten or missed, and the onboarding process will lack structure and.
5. Communicate
Communicate clearly and
frequently with employees throughout the onboarding process. This should start
when they sign their acceptance letter and continue throughout their full first
year of employment.
Set clear expectations from the start, conduct progress check-ins, and ensure there is a point of contact for every new hire to go to with any queries or concerns
6. Bring in
organizational culture & values
As mentioned earlier in
the example of Google, it’s important to weave your culture and values into the
onboarding process and beyond. Provide your new hires with a strong
understanding and examples of what these values mean at your organization so
they can adopt them and strengthen your organizational
culture.
7. Evaluate
As you receive feedback
from your new hires, you can improve and optimize your onboarding process and
tailor it to convey your unique company culture, values, and mission.
Use employee onboarding metrics such
as new hire turnover, onboarding satisfaction, and training completion rate to
track the effectiveness of your onboarding, uncover issues, and prevent
unwanted turnover.
Conclusion
All new employees are
onboarded but the quality of the onboarding makes a difference. Too often,
onboarding consists of handing a new employee a pile of forms and having a
supervisor or HR professional walk the employee around the premises, making
introductions on an ad-hoc basis. When onboarding is done well, however, it
lays a foundation for long-term success for the employee and the employer. It
can improve productivity, build loyalty and engagement, and help employees
become successful early in their careers with the new organization.
- One-on-one meetings
- Independent learning and
development modules
- Team-building exercises
- Employee handbooks or task-specific
guides
orientation and
onboarding are two separate processes. A simple orientation is not enough in
today’s competitive climate.
The purpose of
onboarding is much more than policies and paperwork. It’s about acclimating and
integrating new hires, so they feel prepared, supported, and connected within the organization.
Commit to a positive onboarding experience that sets up new team members for
long-term success.
References
Jones, R., 2022. The 5 Phases of Employee
Onboarding. [Online]
Available at: https://www.trainingfolks.com/blog/the-5-phases-of-employee-onboarding
[Accessed 16 Oct 2023].
Jones, R.,
2022 OCT 26. Training Folks. The 5 Phases of Employee Onboarding.
PURCELL, N.,
AUG. 2, 2023. Understanding the importance of a positive onboarding
experience. [Online]
[Accessed 21 Oct 2023].
SHRM, 2017 -
Present. Understanding Employee Onboarding.
Tanna, D.,
2021. The Definitive Guide to Employee Onboarding Process. [Online]
Available at: https://www.ismartrecruit.com/blog-guide-employee-onboarding-plan
[Accessed 15 Oct 2023].
Technical,
A., 2023. WHY ONBOARDING IS IMPORTANT AND A KEY TO SUCCESS (2023). 16
February.
Verlinden,
N., 2023. AIHR. Employee Onboarding: All You Need To Know, pp.
https://www.aihr.com/blog/employee-onboarding/.


Your post on employee onboarding is insightful, highlighting the crucial aspects of integrating new hires effectively into a company. Also i particularly appreciated the breakdown of the onboarding phases and the emphasis on continuous development beyond the initial orientation. This is a well researched post. Good Work!
ReplyDeleteThe Most critical and crucial part along with predictions...
ReplyDeleteYou have given some great points.
Weldone
Above post Highlights onboarding process with good example. Benefits of above process for the employees are given .
ReplyDeleteYour blog on employee onboarding is spot on! The human resource management perspective shines through, offering valuable insights for creating a seamless and engaging onboarding experience. Great job!
ReplyDelete