Onboarding processes set new hires up for success by building positive work relationships, making good on promises made during interviews, and providing a career roadmap.”
According to a new study from Kronos
Incorporated, onboarding is a critical weakness for a majority of organizations
that stalls new hire momentum and threatens to disengage enthusiastic employees
during their crucial first weeks on the job.
The study – New Hire Momentum: Driving the
Onboarding Experience – was conducted by Kronos and the Human Capital Institute
and included more than 350 human resources (HR) leaders at U.S. organizations
of all sizes and industries. It concludes that organizations must re-focus
onboarding programs to emphasize high-impact training and development
activities instead of administrative new-hire paperwork to better position new
employees (and the business) for long-term success.
News Facts
Critically important, fundamentally broken:
More than three-quarters (76 percent) of HR leaders say onboarding practices
are underutilized at their organization.
1. More than half (57 percent) of survey
respondents believe that the lack of bandwidth for people managers is a
significant barrier to improving the onboarding process.
2. Nearly two-thirds (60 percent) of survey
respondents say the top purpose of onboarding is to integrate employees into
the organization’s culture, such as the way business is conducted and how the
employee’s performance contributes to organizational success. However, the
focus on culture makes up an average of just 30 percent in onboarding programs.
3. Onboarding internal hires – often referred
to as trans-boarding – is even more challenging: about a quarter (24 percent)
of organizations have no strategy for trans-boarding either managerial and
non-managerial internal hires.
Orientation is not onboarding: Organizations place too much emphasis on new
hire paperwork, not enough on their long-term success.
1. Reviewing rules and regulations (75
percent), the company overview (73 percent), resource orientation – such as
technology, workstation, and building introductions (62 percent) – and
empowering employees to self-service new hire forms (62 percent) were scored by
HR leaders as the most important onboarding activities.
2. Conversely, far fewer respondents highly
rated strategic activities linked to helping the employee succeed long-term,
such as peer mentoring (32 percent), assessment of future training needs (37
percent), access to self-paced training resources (42 percent), and meetings
with key stakeholders/teams (47 percent.)
3. Organizations don’t (or won’t) dedicate
enough time to onboarding to fully maximize new hire potential: more than a
third of organizations (37 percent) say onboarding lasts from just few hours to
only one week; a quarter (24 percent) use a month-long onboarding process;
while a mere 10 percent view onboarding as a year-long or ongoing activity.
More accountability needed: Onboarding presents a critical blind-spot as HR embraces
data-driven decision-making.
1. More than half (55 percent) of
organizations say they do not measure the effectiveness of onboarding programs,
hindering accountability for success and preventing opportunities for
improvement.
2. HR believes they lack the resources to
properly handle comprehensive onboarding programs, as 39 percent say they do
not have the right technology to reduce administrative error, ensure consistency,
and improve accountability.
3. About a third (36 percent) blame
insufficient technology for their inability to automate and better organize
onboarding programs, further inhibiting their ability to train managers in
proper onboarding techniques.
4. Some HR leaders recognize the shortcomings
in this area, as 30 percent say they intend to increase their onboarding budget
for 2018, with investments targeting program consistency and new software.
Supporting Quotes
Malysa O’Connor, senior director, HR and payroll practice group, Kronos
“Starting a new job is exciting, where
possibilities are endless and enthusiasm is high. Yet it’s also a time of
apprehension and uncertainty where new hires meet colleagues, learn new
processes, and understand how to make an impact at their new organization.
Organizations that succeed in capturing that enthusiasm while minimizing other
challenges will gain a competitive advantage that is accessible to any business
willing to design and deploy a strategic onboarding experience. Modern talent
acquisition and onboarding solutions represent the first step in this
initiative, as they free up HR from the administrative work associated with
new-hire paperwork and empower HR teams to focus on building programs that
ensure the long-term success of each employee.”
Jenna N. Filipkowski, Ph.D., head of research, Human Capital Institute
“Organizations make significant investments
to source and recruit the best candidates, but often leave these same
individuals to find their own way around the organization once they start. HR
leaders need to re-evaluate how onboarding programs are structured and deployed
within their organizations. The momentum of new hires is a force to be reckoned
with, and it is possible to sustain this throughout and beyond the traditional
90-day onboarding timeline with the right programs, processes, and technologies
in place. Organizations must be sharp and agile enough to capture this
excitement and drive, leveraging it to propel the entire workforce forward.”
Sharlyn Lauby, the HR Bartender and president, ITM Group, Inc.
“We all know turnover is expensive, both in terms of direct costs and intellectual capital. Organizations can increase retention by focusing on those activities that get employees engaged from the start. One way to do that is by taking care of administrative paperwork before day one so employees can focus on their role and other things that matter to them most. Onboarding processes set new hires up for success by building positive work relationships, making good on promises made during interviews, and providing a career roadmap.”