Orient your new hire for success
by Don Andersson
If you wait until the first day your new hire comes on board, you may already be too late to orient them for success. More than likely, youve inadvertently set them up to fail.
With todays marketplace shortage of available and qualified personnel, thats especially true. You want each new hire to make a productive entrance, get some initial results, assimilate easily and contribute to both your short and long term success. But even before first casting your net, this is what you must do.
Know your target before you start your hunt
Sounds pretty basic, doesnt it? However, one can often be tempted to make a flawed assumption. Just dust off an existing job description, tweak it a little, focus on needed technical skills and start looking. Thats a common way to begin search efforts. Unfortunately, yielding to such a temptation can result in an extremely costly turnover rate averaging more than 40 percent within 18 to 24 months.
Some of your new hires may eventually be enticed by a better offer. Some may leave because of a change in direction by your organization. Rarely will the turnover of your new hires be due to a lack of technical skills. More often they will fail because they simply dont fit into your organization. That critical possibility is often overlooked in the initial steps taken to fill a position.
To be successful, one definitely needs technical capabilities but thats not enough. Your new hire must also possess a range of specific interpersonal, team and strategic attitudes and aptitudes to successfully meet your companys unique requirements. Youve got to take the initiative to clarify all the position-specific skills required. Searching before you have specifically defined your target can be disastrous.
Provide a road map
A review of benefits, a few scattered introductions and a wish for good luck these typical components of many orientation programs fall short of hiring for success. From CEO to first line supervisor, new hires need more information. Specifically, they need to know the nuances of what it takes to get things done in your organization.
You may have used trial and error to learn your companys priorities, values, how it makes decisions and where its real centers of influence are hidden. None of these elements are revealed on an organizational chart, yet this is the knowledge that enables anyone to navigate the path toward success. Its also the knowledge that is frequently assumed; though its accessible, you have probably taken it for granted over time. However, remember that its completely alien to your new hires. Without a road map, they will not quickly capture it.
The path they travel possesses multiple opportunities for them to succeed or fail so you need to explain the challenges and obstacles on that path. If you dont give them this road map, who will? And without such a guide, how long will it take them to succeed?
Identify position customers
Getting started in any new position can be overwhelming. Theres so much to learn and so many things to do. With the best of intentions, its possible for new hires to get caught up in activities and forget their real objective: to provide a service or a product for one of their customers.
Each position has several customers. Some are obvious; some are not. They include the person to whom the position reports, peers, direct reports, selected others within your organization as well as external customers. Not one of them can be successful unless supplied with what they need.
Sure, your new hires may be able to quickly spot their obvious customers and even identify some of their needs. But the dependency of other customers on them may be so subtle, it goes unnoticed. The more clearly you can describe the needs of each individual customer associated with the position, the more intentional the activities of your new hires can be.
Recognize that every customer
will expect something different
Depending on the relationship to your new hires, each customer will have different expectations. Some of their expectations will be mutually exclusive. Some will be shaped by past experience with the person who formerly held the position. Most expectations will be poorly defined.
Poorly defined or not, certain products and/or services are needed by each customer if they are to meet their critical success factors. Having those needs met will be taken for granted. Failing to have them met will be a cause of disgruntlement. But dont assume your new hires will know whats needed or that their customers will automatically define needs for them.
At least make a significant first attempt at clarification. Focus your new hires attention on the need to service their customers. Let them know what you have identified as needed. Emphasize the importance of further clarification. Encourage them to position themselves as a resource who takes great satisfaction in possessing those aptitudes and attitudes that deliver great customer service.
Its never easy to live up to everyones expectations. Its even more difficult if one doesnt know what they are.
Benefit from the ROI of fresh eyes
When one has been working a certain way over a period of time, its possible to take things for granted. A rutted routine is not questioned; it simply exists and draws others into it.
New hires may have habits of their own but at least they are not limited by your existing habits. They will see them. They will challenge what you take for granted and perhaps produce defensive resistance. Thats understandable. Challenge may indicate a need to change and, because it might lead to losing a sense of stability, it can also pose a perceived threat.
If you really want to maximize the orientation process, this challenge needs to be accepted not as a threat but as an opportunity. The perspective every new hire brings to your organization and how it works can open all kinds of new doors.
Thats particularly true throughout the first 90 days they work in your company. Gradually, however, they become acclimated and stop asking key questions. So from the very beginning, provide a vehicle for listening and responding to the issues they raise. Remember that fresh eyes can produce great insight. Benefit from what they see.
Attracting and retaining new hires is especially difficult in these days of limited and often less-than-qualified supply. It necessitates stepping beyond traditional practices. It will require you to avoid easily made assumptions. It will cost you time and effort.
Youll be tempted to avoid that challenge. Time is of the essence, but so is doing it right. Focus on providing these essential ingredients.
Either you make an initial investment to get it right from the beginning, or youll keep on repeating your investment until you do. The choice is yours.
Former CEO of a public sector corporation, Don Andersson is a noted speaker and storyteller, executive and team coach. He works with corporate and association leaders who want to attract and retain executives who fit. Visit his Web site at www.AnderssonGroup.com or contact him at .
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