<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=416020905483495&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Let's get you to the right place. Click here to visit the US site. USA Flag

Onboarding is a stressful time. Not only for the company representative who is hard at work ensuring all the housekeeping is done, but for the new hire. They may have a lot racing through their minds, such as worrying about whether they arrive on time, or perhaps concern around how they’ll connect with their colleagues that first day.

But another thing on the minds of new employees is whether they made the right decision leaving their previous employer and starting with a new company. One great way to ease their concern and counter any second thoughts is to bring recognition into the onboarding process.

Bringing the power of recognition to new hires to create a positive onboarding experience

creating a positive onboarding experienceUp to 17% of new hires never last past their 90 days. With the substantial price tag tied to employee turnover that includes calculating the expense of recruitment cost, onboarding costs, training costs and lost productivity from an unfilled position, investing a little more to include recognition with your onboarding will have a huge ROI in just a short time.

By adding best practice recognition within onboarding processes, you can see results that have a long-lasting impact on your business.

 

Let's walk through some ways that recognition can create a more positive onboarding experience for new hires:

Builds belonging

When new hires first start with a company, they may suffer from outsider syndrome. They don’t know anyone. They don’t fully understand the company culture, the norms, the inside jokes. They are on the outside, looking in. With recognition, they are instantly introduced to the company and its people and brought up to speed quickly. They will not only learn 'cultural norms,' but also what matters most to the business in relation to the projects people are working on and what success looks like from the get-go.

happy employeesBuilds community and teamwork

By recognising new hires in their early days, you’ll immediately remove the barrier standing between a new person joining and becoming a contributing member to the team or standing in the background to see how things will go.

The earlier the new hire feels appreciated for signing up for the job, the quicker they will become part of the community and contribute to the team.

Try also asking new hires what ideas they have for recognising others. New hires will likely have an interest – but may lack the confidence – to recognise those that are helping them. Getting them recognising others as a means to build early connection will help you build a stronger recognition culture one new hire at a time. 

Improves the overall employee experience

Because many new hires come into orientation with the expectations that the start of any new job will be hard at first, they begin their time with the company with a level of apprehension and anxiety. Building an onboarding process that has positive recognition not only alleviates the first day’s stress, but also creates an excitement and anticipation for things to come.

Discover how an employee recognition platform can help you build a continuous  culture of recognition Learn More

How to show recognition during onboarding

There are multiple ways to show recognition during the start of an employee journey with the company that can be done at different phases of the onboarding process.

Reach out before day one

One of the first things that companies can do to show recognition during onboarding is to send a welcome note before the new employee even starts. Onboarding is all about getting a person situated with success, and cards, letters and inviting emails to show the new employee that the company is glad they chose to join the organisation.

Keep recognition preferences top of mind

People are diverse and have different preferences. When thinking about employee rewards for your new hire, ask what they view as important, what hobbies they enjoy, or what things they are passionate about and develop recognition rewards that reflect them as individuals. For example, the person who enjoys amusement parks would enjoy discount tickets as a reward or a person with a favourite charity can be rewarded with the ability to donate to that cause. Giving employees choice in what they receive when they’re rewarded will start you off on the right foot!

Reward Marketplace

Also, listen to what they say in terms of their preferences for recognition – this is where private versus public social recognition can be helpful in understanding the ways people give and receive recognition.

Gift them your time

Set up regular times to touch base with department stakeholders or peers in advance so your new hire will know they have a set time to ask those simple but important early questions. Knowing that someone on the team is focussed on them throughout the early days will ensure the person understands the value they add and feels welcomed. 

Serve up a free meal

keep employees happy

Another way would be to provide lunch or dinner at the workstation or delivered during working hours. This recognises and celebrates the new employee's first day and presents another means for staff to meet and greet. If an in-person lunch isn’t possible, you could send them a meal voucher through a rewards programme to get the lunch or coffee break they would typically most enjoy. 

Special services for remote workers

For remote workers, showing recognition during onboarding especially important because of the lack of interaction remote work can bring. Consider having group virtual meetings to congratulate and encourage the new hire during orientation to boost connections during remote onboarding. Share a virtual meal and encourage others to join in on welcoming the new hire.


Key takeaway

With all the stress associated with so many 'firsts,' making the first recognition for the new employee meaningful and during orientation will take a lot of that anxiety away. Feeling instantly accepted and included not only improves the employee experience, but also creates bonds that are going to likely last a long time. Get in touch with us to learn more about how you too can combine a recognition programme with your onboarding process for new hire success.

Request a conversation »

Dawn Saxby-Willis

Dawn is a Senior Talent Acquisition Partner at Reward Gateway with more than 18 years of experience within the recruitment industry. When she's not scoping out the next great fit for RG, she's likely hanging out with her four-legged friends. As an animal lover, she once spent her lunch break saving a bull - mud and all!

Senior Talent Acquisition Partner

Subscribe here!

Subscribe to our Blog Updates!

Receive our most popular articles in your inbox every other week for employee engagement best practice and inspiration