New employee onboarding is the process of introducing new employees to your company and its culture, as well as giving new hires the tools to be effective in their new positions.
Onboarding should be utilized by your organization to ensure that all of your new hires are up to speed with the goals of the organization. We’ve discussed in the past the importance of onboarding and how devising an effective strategy can be planned, but we only touched on some onboarding strategies in that post.
This week we wanted to introduce you to three different onboarding strategies that follow a new employee over a year of their employment with your company. These strategies are meant to serve as a basis for your own strategies that you choose to implement in your own business, but you are welcome to use them as–is if you would like to.
Onboarding Strategies
Any successful onboarding strategy begins on the first day of employment for a new hire. This is the first impression an employee has to the company culture and is often conducted through an employee orientation. Most businesses begin and end their onboarding process with just the first day introductions, but this is a common mistake as the process should last up until the first year that an employee is hired!
We’ve put together three different onboarding strategies that you can use that follow the employee over their first year with the company. These approaches aim to help you bring new employees into the fold of your company and ensure that your recruitment efforts aren’t in vain.
First Day, First Month, and First Year
A yearlong analysis of a new hire is the best approach that a business can take with onboarding new hires, as SHRM reports that it takes about 90 days for an employee to begin to prove themselves at a new job. By following an employee’s development over a year, you can begin to see how they are acclimating to the work environment. The FFF strategy can be broken up into three parts:
30/60/90
While the FFF method is excellent for seeing how an employee develops in their new role over a year, perhaps not every new hire needs such scrutiny. This is where the 30/60/90 method comes in for a streamlined onboarding approach that follows a new employee over a quarter of the year that they’re with the company.
The First 6 Months
The first 180 days that a new employee is with your company can tell you a lot about how they’re going to perform in their position. This strategy takes inspiration from the first two, but isn’t as short as the 30/60/90 strategy and not as long as the FFF strategy.
The first 180–day mark of a new employee’s time with the company should be spent expanding the responsibilities of the new hire. Now that they’re comfortable enough with their job, expanding and changing their projects is a great way to help your new employee grow.
Setting 6–month goals and reviewing their performance from the previous 6 months allows them to fully utilize everything that they’ve learned, fully cementing their place in your business or organization.
Goals of Onboarding
It is also helpful to begin to think about what exactly you want your new hires to know about your organization. This is where the process extends into a discussion with your current employees. When fine-tuning your onboarding strategy, it is helpful to gain this insight from veteran employees as it turns the process into a community effort. Some helpful points to think about when designing a strategy are:
No matter what strategy you choose to implement, or how you choose to mix up each of the strategies, onboarding is a powerful tool for your business to utilize. Every step of each of these onboarding strategies is focused on growing your employee’s potential and building their confidence in their new roles. Take these strategies and refine, tweak, and utilize them to grow your employees’ and organization’s goals.
If you need help developing your own onboarding strategy, contact solveHR today to get expert HR help. Our HR experts offer services and guidance that will make your strategic HR easy, so you can focus on what matters—growing your business!
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Written by: Matthew Muriel
Meet Matthew! Matthew is our content writer and has been working with us for a year. He enjoys working for SolveHR because it allows him to practice his copywriting and allows him to build experience in his fledgling career. Matthew studied at the University of Texas at San Antonio and earned his degree in English with a concentration in Professional Writing. He values learning new processes in the HR industry and then conveying those ideas to the company’s clients. When he isn’t working, he enjoys reading nonfiction, with his favorite book that he recently read being The Gene by Siddhartha Mukherjee. If he could go anywhere in the world he would travel across the United States and visit all of the national parks.
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