Employee Engagement, Executive Coaching, Leadership
Onboarding as a retention strategy
We were asked by a client to conduct a follow-up survey focused specifically on how changes were being communicated across the organization. It had shown up as a low-scoring area, and senior leaders were genuinely puzzled. They had communicated the mission, vision, and goals clearly, consistently, and regularly. They felt that everyone should be clear on those. They also had a solid review process in place. By every measure they could see, communication was being handled well. When the data came back, we were surprised by what we found, and so were they.
The communication gap employees were experiencing had nothing to do with strategy or direction. It was the small, everyday things that were falling through the cracks. Employees wrote about finding out a colleague had transferred to another department only after going to their desk and finding it empty. They described new hires showing up on their first day to a team that had no idea anyone had been hired. Staffing changes, the kind that leaders often treat as administrative details, were landing on teams as disruptions that affected their work, their relationships, and their sense of being kept in the loop. The leaders had been communicating the big things. They had missed the human ones.
This is where onboarding breaks down in most organizations. It is treated as a process rather than a leadership responsibility. The paperwork gets completed, the system access gets arranged, and the new employee is pointed in the right direction and expected to find their footing. What is missing is the deliberate, consistent attention from their leader and their team that tells a new employee, in every small interaction, that they made the right decision accepting this offer. That signal, or the absence of it, shapes whether a new hire becomes a long-term contributor or starts quietly reconsidering their choice within the first few months.
The research on this is consistent with what we see in our survey work. Employees decide remarkably quickly whether they belong. The relationships they form, the clarity they receive about expectations, and the degree to which they feel seen and supported in their first weeks set the tone for everything that follows. A new employee who arrives to find their team unprepared for them, their workspace unready, and their manager too busy to check in does not conclude that their leader is simply having a hectic week. They conclude that this is what the culture feels like, and they begin measuring the gap between what they were told in the interview and what they are experiencing on the ground.
Well-executed onboarding does not require elaborate programs or significant resources. It requires some preparation of the leader and the team to welcome a new colleague. Before a new employee arrives, the team should know they are coming, understand their role they will fill, and be ready to welcome them. That preparation costs very little and signals a great deal.
From there, the leader’s role is to stay actively engaged through the first ninety days, not to hover, but to check in with intention at regular intervals. A structured approach to those early months makes a consistent difference.
Before the employee starts, the leader should meet with them to review the job responsibilities in detail, set clear expectations for the role, and outline what success looks like in the first 30, 60, and 90 days. This conversation should happen on day one, if possible. Some companies have day one as an orientation process, which is great, but the first day in their department should include a sit-down with the employee. A new employee who arrives with clarity about what is expected of them is far better positioned to contribute quickly and feel confident in their new environment. Without it, even the most talented hire is left guessing. They should also be assigned a buddy. Someone they can go to for questions, work-related and culture-related.
At thirty days, meet with the new employee to revisit those expectations and assess progress. Are they clear on their priorities, know the resources available to them? Is there anything creating friction that could be addressed quickly? This conversation is also the moment to check in with the broader team. Is the addition working well? Is the new employee integrating into the culture, and is there anything the leader or team can do to support that process more effectively?
At sixty days, the focus shifts slightly. The new employee should be finding their footing by now, and the conversation can go deeper. Revisit the job responsibilities and expectations set at the outset. Are there gaps between what was outlined and what the role actually requires day-to-day? Are they engaged with the work and feeling connected to their colleagues and the team’s goals? Are there development needs surfacing that the leader should be aware of? This is also a good moment to acknowledge early contributions specifically and publicly, reinforcing that the employee’s presence is noticed and valued.
At ninety days, the onboarding period is drawing to a close. Continue to review expectations and the employee’s performance. This check-in is an opportunity to discuss longer-term goals, clarify the path forward, and signal that the leader’s commitment to the employee’s success did not end when the orientation paperwork was filed. Employees who feel supported and clear about their direction during their first 90 days are significantly more likely to stay through their first year and beyond.
The onboarding experiences don’t need to become more elaborate. Retention does not begin at the six-month mark when a leader notices someone pulling away. It begins on the first day, in the first conversation, and in the preparation that happened before the employee ever walked through the door. The organizations that understand this do not just hire good people. They keep them.
Dusty Tockstein is a senior consultant at Peter Barron Stark Companies. Dusty works with clients to improve their corporate culture through a variety of tools, including Employee Engagement Surveys, 360 Leadership Development Assessments, Leadership Coaching, and Organizational Assessments.







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