On hearing the words ‘orientation’ and ‘onboarding’, we might find ourselves wondering what the difference is. After all, don’t both terms refer to a process new hires go through when being welcomed into a business: to its culture, policies, and processes? The short answer is no.
A key difference is that the onboarding process typically occurs over a few months and requires analysis, discussions, and meetings, while the orientation process typically takes anywhere from a day up to a week. Both employee onboarding and employee orientation are necessary steps towards helping employees on their way to success. We define the two practices in more detail below:
Orientation
Orientation refers to a single event welcoming a new hire into a company. This means introducing the new hire to team members, showing them around the workspace and giving them the tools and technology required to do their job. It also provides HR with the information they need to do their job of making the new hire an official member of the organisation – to collect all relevant personal, payroll, and benefits details.
Onboarding
Onboarding refers to the process through which new employees are professionally introduced to a company’s policies & procedures, operations, and culture. Starting during the recruitment and hiring phase, it can continue over the course of the employee’s first year.
An epic, successful onboarding plan will incorporate these three components:
- Organisational: Company structure, processes, values, culture, and mission
- Technical: What is expected of the employee, defining goals and measures of success
- Social: Building a sense of team camaraderie, interpersonal interactions, e.g., the assignation of a ‘buddy’
- Lower productivity (16%)
- Greater inefficiencies (14%)
- Higher employee turnover (12%)
- Lower employee morale (11%)
- Lower level of employee engagement (10%)
- Lower confidence among employees (10%)
- Lack of trust within the organisation (7%)
- Missed revenue targets (6%)
- Ensures an efficient onboarding experience that employees can complete at their own pace, in their own time
- Boosts the EX and therefore retention!
- Helps to avoid knowledge gaps and uncertainty around job roles by offering a standardised onboarding process for all employees, while still allowing for some personalisation for individual job roles
- Allows onboarding modules to have input from a range of stakeholders, who can seamlessly collaborate and keep track of onboarding tasks in real time
- Helps employers meet compliance obligations by allowing onboarding data to interact with recruitment and payroll solutions