From Hiring to Thriving: The Missing Step in Onboarding Success
Dafne Tsakiris
Improve, Streamline & Document Your Business Processes | Process Nerd | Systems Specialist | Efficiency Expert
We’ve all seen it happen. A new hire joins the team, and within weeks, they’re struggling. Maybe they weren’t properly trained, or they don’t quite understand how things work. Leadership starts wondering: “Did we make a bad hire?”
More often than not, the issue isn’t the hire—it’s the onboarding process (or lack thereof).?
Too many companies rely on informal onboarding. They assume a new employee will just “figure it out” by watching others or picking things up along the way. But that approach leads to frustration, inefficiency, and too often—early turnover (read: costing the organization unnecessary time, energy and money).?
Here’s where companies trip themselves up:
1. No Structured Onboarding Plan
The first few weeks are critical for setting expectations and equipping employees with what they need to be successful. Yet many companies have no structured plan in place. New hires get dumped into a whirlwind of emails, meetings, and tasks without a clear roadmap.
A well-structured onboarding plan should cover:
2. Training Is Either Too Overwhelming or Too Sparse
Some companies overwhelm new hires with a firehose of information in their first few days, endless documents, back-to-back meetings, and complex workflows. Others provide little to no formal training, expecting employees to “learn as they go.”
Neither approach works. The key is balance:
The goal isn’t to teach them everything at once; it’s to set them up for success at each stage of their journey.
3. Processes Are Unclear or Inconsistent
Ever heard a new hire say: “Everyone seems to do it differently”?
When processes aren’t documented and standardized, employees end up reinventing the wheel—or worse, doing things incorrectly. Lack of clarity leads to inefficiencies, mistakes, and frustration.
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Instead, provide:
Even a simple, high-level process guide can make a world of difference in helping employees ramp up faster.
4. No Feedback or Check-Ins
Onboarding doesn’t end after the first week - it should be an ongoing process. Yet oftentimes companies stop checking in after the initial orientation. Employees are left to fend for themselves, unclear if they’re meeting expectations or progressing effectively.
Regular check-ins (weekly in the first month, then monthly) help:?
Want to know the fastest way to improve your onboarding? Ask your newest employees what they wish they had known sooner. Their feedback is a goldmine for refining your process.
The Cost of Poor Onboarding
When companies neglect onboarding, they pay the price:
Most hiring mistakes aren’t because “there were no good candidates.” They happen because companies fail to properly integrate new employees into their roles.
A Process-Driven Approach to Onboarding
Just like hiring, onboarding isn’t about gut feelings—it’s about having a structured process that sets every new employee up for success. The best companies don’t leave it to chance; they design an experience that ensures new hires thrive.
So before assuming a new hire isn’t the right fit, ask yourself: Do they have the process and support they need to succeed? If not, that’s the real problem and it's time to fix it.
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2 周Such great timing for this article as we are currently working to improve our new employee onboarding process. Great advice!
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3 周This is great. I definitely have some work to do here. What this made me think about is identifying the key needs of ideal clients, building out your process to deliver that, and then hiring and onboarding employees with that in mind. Onboarding is a very important piece of a larger picture of building a business.
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3 周Some great advice... There's nothing here that's difficult or magic yet so many organisations fail to get the basics right. Onboarding for new employees is no difference to a customer journey. Those first interactions are likely to set the tone for the relationship. It's essential to get them right for both staff retention and improved productivity.
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3 周This is great! I've been guilty of throwing my people in the deep-end and it is disastrous for everyone. So much better to have resources in place to guide them.
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3 周This is great Dafne! The onboarding process is a lost art in business andd then people wonder why it never works out.