Jobvite’s annual Job Seeker Nation survey found that 34% of employees have left a job in the first 90 days at some point in their careers. Contact center attrition is painful as it is. But to lose a new hire 3 months in, you’re left looking for a replacement way too soon. You spend more time searching for and hiring new agents than taking time to actually manage your contact center and improve your team’s performance.
And for many who leave a new job early, a poor onboarding experience is the catalyst. In fact, a negative onboarding experience means your new hires are up to 2x more likely to look for other job opportunities rather than stick around.
In an SHRM article, Amy Hirsh Robinson, principal of the consulting firm The Interchange Group describes how important onboarding is to help new employees feel engaged. Here’s how Amy describes onboarding:
“Onboarding is a magic moment when new employees decide to stay engaged or become disengaged. It offers an imprinting window when you can make an impression that stays with new employees for the duration of their careers.”
Amy Hirsh Robinson, Principal, The Interchange Group
To ensure your new call center employees get a good first impression of your team, we’ve put together an employee onboarding checklist for a smooth start.
Concentrate on Culture and Connection
It may not matter how much your new hire enjoys their new role. If your new agents can’t build a bond with your company culture and community, it’s going to be hard to hold onto them. From day one, it’s important for your new hire to feel like they’re part of a team and a mission.
Here’s a culture & connection checklist for the first few weeks of onboarding a new employee:
Set Up New Hires on All Technology
Back in college, I took a summer job that made me use Slack, email, a call center platform, and an internal documentation system simultaneously. I was so overwhelmed by the new technology in the first week, I couldn’t even begin to think about the other aspects of my role.
Every company has its own IT setup and a unique set of communication channels and processes. As you create an onboarding checklist for each new call center employee, link up your agents and your IT team.
Use these tasks to get your new hires familiar with your call center tech:
Set Clear Goals and Guidelines
Being the new guy or gal at a company is disorienting. You’re learning a whole new product, system, service, technology, culture… the list goes on. It’s so hard to gauge how you measure up against expectations without a clear sense of benchmarks and goals.
Set goals and development plans for your agents early on, so they know performance expectations and get a clear view of how they can progress with your company.
Here’s a checklist of goal-setting guidelines for onboarding every new employee:
Provide Space for Learning, Discussion, Questions, and Feedback
During employee onboarding, it’s important your new agents don’t feel isolated as they learn. New hires should know right away how to get help, ask questions, and give feedback. As you onboard, set up specific times during the first 30-days for your new employees to process their experience, and share thoughts on how it’s going.
Carve out time in your new employee onboarding for these feedback & discussion checklist items:
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