Don’t Underestimate Onboarding
Brad Voorhees
I Help CEO’s of 30-300 Employee Businesses Solve Their People Problems When They Don’t Have An HR Lead | Founder @ ScaleTx
I have heard it before, people don’t leave companies, they leave their managers. If someone isn’t performing, don’t look at them, look at their manager. What this line of thinking tells us is that when something is wrong, don’t just go with your first reaction, look deeper in and find the root cause. This line of thinking is really pragmatic, actually. While it may not bring you the instant gratification that a first-reaction decision can bring, it does usually lead you to the truth. So when I think about issues around culture assimilation, training and development, and performance - why don’t we look deeper at onboarding as the driver behind these issues?
When I look at some of the most successful performance organizations I’ve been a part of, one thing they had in common was a well-crafted and thought-through employee onboarding process. Now, onboarding shouldn’t be a closed book but rather, fluid. Something that is constantly changing, making it better for the next hire. Onboarding is about decreasing time to productivity, among other things. So, with that in mind, here is what I advise clients to do when crafting an onboarding program:
领英推荐
Employers have an opportunity during onboarding to make a lasting impact on your new hire, even to the point where you won’t be asking the question, should we be looking at onboarding??