Updated as of 5 July 2025
What if the first day on the job felt less like paperwork—and more like a warm welcome home? Research shows that organizations with structured onboarding see 82% better retention and 70% higher productivity. As Simon Sinek said, “Customers will never love a company until the employees love it first.” Humane Onboarding Excellence is changing how we bring people into organizations—with empathy, intention, and connection. In this expert roundup, leaders reveal how to turn the first day into a lasting impression that boosts morale, builds loyalty, and sets the stage for long-term success.
Personalized Immersion Creates Meaningful Onboarding Experience
I truly believe that the onboarding process should be a personalized and immersive experience. For example, at our organization, new hires begin their employment by attending a meeting with senior leadership, where they get to know our leadership team in-person and learn about them (and vice versa), the organization and the mission/culture. They get a tour of the office by a member of our management team. Each new hire also meets with their own team on the first day for a meet-and-greet session. In addition, all new hires go through various new hire orientation sessions with different department heads throughout their first couple of days of employment; giving them a wide array of exposure to different parts of the company. However, onboarding is more than what an employee experiences during their first couple of days or even first couple of weeks. We have check-in/engagement meetings with new hires at various intervals during their first six months of employment. They are able to provide feedback on trainings, work responsibilities, supervision, policies/procedures, etc. For our organization, it’s about ensuring that each employee is able to have a “voice” and give their viewpoint on how their employment journey is going.
Mayank Singh, Director of Human Resources, Coordinated Family Care
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Map First Two Weeks for Intentional Onboarding
It’s as simple as this: be intentional.
Before a new hire arrives, map out the first two weeks of their role. Block time for the new hire to spend with a variety of people in the organization and be clear what you’d like discussed at those meetings (if it’s relational/connection time – just say so. If it’s to share what the employee does and offer support – be clear about that). Include any online training expectations and checkpoints/timelines. Outline these meetings and training sessions in a one-page document so the new hire has a good overview of what their first few weeks will be like.
Schedule a one-month check in as well as a 60-day follow-up. I personally recommend a 60-day review that the new hire populates so a manager can see how onboarding went and if there are outstanding training needs.
Ensure technology is set up and ready for the new hire at their arrival. Don’t expect the new hire to do this themselves. Have a written note for the person either mailed to their house or at their desk on the first day, welcoming them. Consider a piece of company swag like a notebook or a shirt.
I know these are simple recommendations, but so many organizations don’t take the time to set-up well, so the new hire feels a bit lost and doesn’t know how to contribute. They were likely successful in their last role and would like to come in and hit the ground running. If they feel like they are wandering aimlessly, it doesn’t give the best first impression nor does it set them up for success.
Kerri Roberts, Founder & CEO, Salt & Light Advisors
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Field Buddy System Builds Value Beyond Skills
As a CEO in the generator set distribution and maintenance industry, I’ve learned that onboarding is the first opportunity to show new hires that they’re valued beyond their technical skills.
One thing we’ve implemented (and seen real impact from) is our “First Week Field Buddy” system. Every new hire gets paired with a senior technician or project coordinator, not just for training, but for support. The buddy personally introduces them to the team, joins them during their first site visits, and shares real stories
about how we handle clients, tough days, or unexpected breakdowns.
But the most important part was that on their third day, we hold a casual “Toolbox Talk + Lunch” where they’re invited to share something non-work related, like a hobby, something they’re proud of, or even just what kind of coffee they like. It may sound small, but I’ve seen quiet new hires light up when a colleague remembers their favorite music or asks how their weekend hike went.
Roy Adiputra, CEO, DPS Power
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Share Knowledge While Valuing New Perspectives
One thing I’ve done during onboarding that really made a new team member feel genuinely seen was when I spent an entire morning walking through a client property with them, not just to show them the ropes but to genuinely listen to how they saw the space. I asked what they noticed about the soil, the plant placement, and even the scent of the herbs we had growing in the kitchen garden. Then I shared how I might approach the job differently based on my 15 years of hands on experience and horticultural training. But instead of just teaching, I encouraged them to weigh in with their own ideas. It wasn’t just about training them to follow my methods. It was about giving them a sense of ownership and letting them know their perspective mattered right from day one.
I think what made it powerful was that I was able to break down why certain choices in plant placement or pruning timing work best, backing it up with real knowledge from my certification and years of practical experience. Because I wasn’t just telling them what to do but helping them understand the “why” behind it, they felt respected and trusted. That’s the kind of welcome that sticks.
Andrew Osborne, Owner, Ozzie Mowing & Gardening
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Travel Guides Transform Onboarding Into Personal Connection
I created personalized destination guides for new team members based on their favorite travel spots mentioned during interviews. This simple idea totally changed our onboarding process.
One recent hire casually mentioned loving Portugal during her interview. On her first day, she found a custom Lisbon and Porto itinerary with my own notes waiting at her desk.
Her eyes lit up with recognition, she realized we’d actually listened. That little moment felt way more memorable than any standard welcome packet.
This small gesture builds an immediate connection beyond paperwork and training manuals. It shows we care about their individual interests and stories.
Months later, that same hire told me the personalized guide made her feel like she’d “found her travel tribe.” She said it gave her the confidence to share unique destination insights with clients right from her first week.
Honestly, the best welcome isn’t about grand gestures. It’s about thoughtful personalization that taps into someone’s passions.
I like to call these “belonging bookmarks.” New team members can mentally reference them whenever imposter syndrome sneaks in.
Anyone can try this. Just take notes during interviews and spend half an hour crafting something that proves you see the whole person, not just another seat to fill.
Joe Hawtin, Owner, Marin County Visitor
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Personal Stories Spark Genuine Team Connections
One of the simplest but most impactful things we’ve done at Zapiy during onboarding is something I picked up from my own early career experiences — we ask every new hire to share a short “non-work” story about themselves during their first team meeting. It could be about a hobby, a travel experience, or even a favorite meal. But here’s the key — we make sure existing team members genuinely engage with that story. For example, when one of our developers shared she’s passionate about baking, within a week, someone sent her a digital gift card to a specialty baking store as a welcome gesture. It wasn’t about the gift itself, but the message behind it: we listened, we care, and you’re already part of this community.
The impact is immediate. It breaks down walls, sparks conversations beyond work, and shows that we don’t just hire skill sets — we welcome people. It may sound small, but that level of personal attention builds belonging fast, and I’ve seen it set the tone for stronger collaboration down the line.
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Welcome Snapshots Introduce New Hires Personally
One of the most meaningful things we’ve done during onboarding is sending a “Welcome Snapshot” to the team before the new hire’s first day. It’s a simple one-pager that includes their photo, preferred name, fun facts (like favorite snacks, hobbies, or a hidden talent), and what they’re most excited about in the role. We collect this info during the pre-boarding phase, and then we use it to create a warm, personal intro, not just a generic announcement. We also assign them with work buddies so they don’t feel alienated.
Abhishek Shah, Founder, Testlify
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Personal Tours Build Trust From Day One
One thing I’ve done that really made a new hire feel welcomed was personally giving them a tour of the office and introducing them to key team members, rather than just leaving them to figure it out. I also made sure to schedule a casual lunch with the team on their first day. This small gesture helped break the ice and made them feel part of the team right away. Beyond that, I also sent a personalized email with resources tailored to their role, offering any support they might need. This level of personal attention made them feel seen and appreciated, which helped build trust early on. It’s all about showing that you’re invested in their success, not just their arrival.
Nikita Sherbina, Co-Founder & CEO, AIScreen
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Team Lunch Creates Immediate Sense of Belonging
One small thing we do that makes a big impact is the first-day lunch with the team. It’s just a casual lunch where the new hire doesn’t have to make the first move. We make sure they’re not sitting in the breakroom alone with a sandwich, wondering what they’re doing here. I’ll usually join, ask about where they’re from, what led them to pest control, and share some of my own rookie mistakes to break the ice.
I recall a tech from Kansas City who later told me that lunch made him feel like he belonged right away. He had bounced around in jobs where no one remembered his name in the first week. But that first-day connection helped him feel like part of the team, not just an employee being processed. It’s simple, but it works.
Joel Miller, President, Miller Pest & Termite
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Personalized Welcome Kits Foster Immediate Connection
One of the most thoughtful onboarding practices I’ve seen is when a team creates a personalized welcome kit that reflects both the company culture and the new hire’s unique interests. This goes beyond standard company swag—it might include a favorite snack, a book related to their role or hobbies, and a handwritten note from their future teammates sharing why they’re excited to work together. It’s paired with a casual virtual coffee chat or lunch on their first day, where the focus isn’t on policies or training, but simply on getting to know the team as people. This approach makes new hires feel genuinely seen, valued, and part of the community from day one, which builds immediate connection and belonging.
Qianqian He, Founder, BOXKING GAMING
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Welcome Snapshots Turn New Hires Into People
One of the most impactful onboarding practices we’ve used is creating a “Welcome Snapshot”—a personalized intro deck that highlights the new hire’s background, interests, and even favorite snacks or hobbies, gathered from a fun pre-start survey. We share this with the team on Day 1 and encourage everyone to send a short welcome message referencing something personal from the snapshot.
This simple gesture makes new hires feel seen as people, not just professionals. It breaks the ice, sparks real conversations, and builds instant connection. One new team member later shared that it was the first time they felt truly known on day one—and that emotional connection translated into faster integration and stronger long-term engagement.
Amir Husen, Content Writer, SEO Specialist & Associate, ICS Legal
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One Question Reveals What New Hires Need
During onboarding, we ask each new hire a simple but revealing question: “What’s something you wish your previous managers had understood about you?” That one prompt opens the door to real conversation—not just company policies or job tasks.
We’ve had new hires share how they process feedback, how they like to communicate, or even why past roles burned them out. It sets the tone that we’re here to support them as people, not just employees. We also include a welcome post across our internal channels highlighting something personal they shared—like a favorite hobby or side hustle—to help the team connect on a human level from day one.
Eugene Leow Zhao Wei, Director, Marketing Agency Singapore
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Personal Introductions Show New Hires Matter
One thing I make sure of when we bring in a new hire at Achilles Roofing is this: they don’t feel like “just another guy on the crew.” Day one, I shake their hand myself. I don’t send a foreman to do it. I meet them, look them in the eye, and tell them exactly what we expect, how we run things, and more importantly—what they can expect from me.
But here’s the move that hits harder than anything corporate: I introduce them to the rest of the team by name, and I tell the crew something personal about that new guy—where he worked before, what trade he’s solid in, or even where he’s from if I know it. That small detail makes the new guy feel like someone already invested in—not some body filling a spot.
Then, we hand him a new set of gear. Not leftovers. Clean shirt, safety vest, gloves. I don’t care if it costs a little extra. When a guy shows up and gets handed hand-me-down gear or beat-up tools, he already knows where he stands. That’s not how we operate.
Last, I always pair the new guy with one of our top guys—not the loudest, not the fastest, but someone who knows how we work and respects the company. That one-on-one time builds trust, shows him the ropes, and gives him a direct line to ask questions without getting barked at.
You want someone to work hard? Make sure he knows on day one that he matters. That he’s part of something solid. Not just a name on the schedule.
Ahmad Faiz, Owner, Achilles Roofing and Exteriors
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Welcome Workbooks Create Valued First Impressions
The most effective onboarding structure I have seen is going beyond basic orientation with a “welcome workbook” experience. It starts with a short video introduction of the team they are joining and leaving the new hire with some questions about what they would like to learn about the new hire.
Next, a small joining gift like a journal, a snack, or something that feels welcoming. Also, assign a buddy to them not to evaluate them or show them around, but to let them get included in social activities from day 1, as many new hires take a while, sometimes even more than a month, to start learning about each other.
These small gestures were not expensive but worked like magic. The new hire felt valued from the beginning, reflecting it in their work and never getting upset about not getting included in viral coffee sessions and team lunches.
Ansh Arora, CEO, Inspiringlads
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Buddy System Turns Companies Into Crews
We began assigning a buddy to every new hire for their first two weeks. But it’s not just a trainer, it’s someone we match based on background or interests. For example, if they’re former military personnel or avid fishermen, we’ll pair them with someone who shares a similar background. That way, they’ve got a familiar face from day one and a natural connection, not just a checklist trainer.
I remember one tech telling me, “It didn’t feel like I was joining a company—it felt like I was joining a crew.” That stuck with me. People remember how you made them feel, especially in unfamiliar surroundings. That simple pairing system helped break the ice and made the first days less about procedures and more about forming a sense of belonging.
Tony Ragan, President, Absolute Pest Management
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Team Welcome Documents Provide Social Cheat Sheets
What worked well was providing new hires with a “Welcome Document” that had been filled out by their future teammates before their first day. We started doing this a few years back. It’s a simple one-pager where each team member answers prompts like “What’s one thing you should know about me?” or “If you need help with X, I’m your person.” It also includes fun stuff like favorite lunch spots, music preferences, or Slack emojis we overuse.
Instead of walking into a room of strangers, new hires get a preview of who they’ll be working with and where they fit. One designer told me, “It felt like I had a cheat sheet to the team’s vibe—I didn’t have to guess how to connect.” It’s a low-effort, high-return approach, and it’s become one of our most consistently praised onboarding practices.
Jonathan Anderson, Co-Founder, Green Home Pest Control
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Personal Preference Documents Show We See You
At one agency I worked with, we asked new hires to fill out a simple doc with questions like “How do you like to receive feedback?” and “What makes you feel appreciated at work?” It wasn’t mandatory, but nearly everyone filled it out. What made it special was that their manager would bring it into early 1:1s and reference it. It sent a clear message: we hired you, not just your skills.
One teammate mentioned in their snapshot that they loved handwritten notes. On her first Friday, the team lead gave her a card with a small message saying what they already appreciated about her energy in meetings. It took two minutes, but she kept that card pinned to her monitor for months. That kind of personal touch sticks. It said, “We see you already,” and that set the tone better than any formal HR process could.
Samantha Stuart, Co-Founder, Magic City Pest Control
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Trust New Hires With Real Client Work
We shocked a new driver, with a full schedule on his first week — all from clients who specifically asked for him after his first ride.
When I onboard a new private driver, I don’t begin with paperwork — I begin with trust. One of the most powerful things I’ve done is let a new hire take a real client booking on their first day, no observing. Just the driver, the keys, and responsibility. But, I checked in with that client first, asked for their honest opinion, and even offered a small gift if they would re-book him.
And what happened next, was that within the first 10 days, he had four repeat bookings. He chalked it up to pure serendipity. Only later did I tell him, that I had handpicked clients that I knew to be generally warm, polite and generous with their feedback — just the kind of people that help new drivers flourish.
That moment brought him into the feeling of validation and support — not simply hired, but cared about. That driver is now one of our highest rated. We don’t do welcome kits. We give them what matters: the opportunity for immediate success.
Martin Weidemann, Owner, Mexico-City-Private-Driver.com
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