All you need to know to get your employees off to a flying start
What is onboarding?
Onboarding is becoming increasingly important in today’s organisations, and for good reason. But what does it actually mean? How do you set up a good process, and above all: why is it important for businesses to focus on this?
SHRM, the Society for Human Resource Management, researches workplace evolution and its implications for HR professionals and business leaders. They define onboarding as the process of integrating a new employee with a company and its culture. Making sure the new starter has all the tools and information they need to become a productive member of the team is part of this.
As an employer, making new employees feel welcome is a top priority. Onboarding is mostly controlled by you, but is by no means a one-way street. Part of the process is always asking for feedback. This allows you to continue to optimise the process, and improve as you learn from that valuable feedback.
The growing importance of rock solid onboarding
One of the biggest pain points for growing businesses, is recruiting and retaining new talent. More than four in five employers agree this is a problem, which only reinforces the importance of positive differentiation from your competitors. At the end of the day, you want to enter into a relationship that both sides see as successful. So good onboarding is extremely important here.
A healthy onboarding process has remained a stable concept over the years, until the pandemic. In 2020, businesses worldwide were forced to enable their employees to work from home. For many of these organisations, even occasional teleworking had been unimaginable up until that point. By now of course, we’re all completely used to juggling working from home with our everyday lives.
Although hybrid working is becoming more and more common, we’re still searching for ways to stay connected to each other. Office dynamics are disappearing and aren’t something that can be simply translated into a digital story. Eating virtual lunches together also wasn’t a big success.
This all makes it hard for new starters in a new environment to deduce the unwritten rules and casually join in with informal conversations. You need to pay extra attention to this, right from the start of their onboarding. Bringing the team atmosphere into a video call is a challenge, but not impossible. Regular, short check-ins to discuss weekend plans or share virtual updates also help team members bond.
Don’t forget to include your current employees – in addition to newcomers – in this new normal. This way of working might also take them a bit of getting used to. An interesting approach might be ‘reboarding’, where you revisit the hybrid working rules for your team.
The HR Digest made it clear that the coronavirus pandemic also shone a light on some other attention points in addition to hybrid working, with their article predicting several trends for 2022. For example, it’s even more important for businesses to focus on the general well-being of their employees. This is an element that needs to be running through the entire employee journey, starting from onboarding.
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