
Onboarding isn’t just an HR tick box. It’s an opportunity to bring your bright new talent up to speed quickly, effectively, and in a way that engages them from the get-go.
If you do it right, that is.
In the old days, new employees were welcomed with a welcome video (complete with awkward acting by the executive team) or a stack of printouts—or, worse, with no real onboarding process at all.
That won’t cut it these days. A lousy process is bad news for the employee, and when you scale it up across a workforce, it could be disastrous for the company. That’s because while great onboarding is about maximizing employee experience, it’s also about optimizing for business outcomes—things like productivity, performance, and, ultimately, profit.
Gallup’s State of the American Workforce report states that actively disengaged employees are almost twice as likely as engaged employees to seek new jobs. On the other hand, companies with highly engaged workforces outperform their peers by 147% in earnings per share.