Employee On-Boarding Checklist1

Employee On-Boarding Checklist

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Here's what a Process Document might look like for a manager's on-boarding Checklist.

☐ 1. Contact the Candidate

☐ 2. Contact References

☐ 3. Offer Job to Candidate

☐ 4. Prepare Offer Letter

☐ 5. Request Information

☐ 6. Arrange Drug Screening

☐ 7. Contact SSA

☐ 8. Untitled Task

☐ 9. Create Employee File

☐ 10. Prepare for Employee's First Day

☐ 11. Schedule Orientation for Employee

☐ 12. Confirm Orientation and Deliver Schedule

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☐ 1. Contact the Candidate

You have identified the candidate whose skills meet the job requirements after conferringwith others involved in the hiring process.

Contact the selected candidate to indicate thecompany’s interest in moving forward in the interview process.

Schedule a time for the candidate to come in and make sure to mark the date and time on the Company's Google Calendar.

☐ 2. Contact References

Obtain/verify two to threebusiness references with contact information. You will find them in the application below.

Contact the references provided to determineif the information regarding previous employment is accurate.

Try to obtain informationabout the overall performance, final salary, and reason for termination.Do the bestyou can to engage the former employer in dialog about this person, but don’t bediscouraged if you still obtain only limited information.

/ Telephone Reference Check.pdf
5126b903-7b9b-427f-a965-928e77d6dff9.pdf
/ Reference checks tips

☐ 3. Offer Job to Candidate

Contact selected candidate to make a verbal offer of employment.

If requested bycandidate, allow time to review offer and a date to respond back verbally.

NOTE: If the candidate turns down your offer or is considering other opportunities, talk to HR / your manager. Also consider the below points.

Stop. Don’t panic.

Closing candidates who are considering other offers can be very complicated.

Unfortunately, many job offers are ultimately declined. This may be a direct result of delays or indecision by the hiring manager; providing an offer that isn’t quite attractive enough; or not providing consistency during the hiring process.

While the numbers may be against you, it is possible to turn it around in your favor and secure the person you want for your role – even if they do have other offers on the table.

Here are some tactics to help you close candidates who may be considering other offers. You’ll note that closing the right candidate starts well before you give them the offer.

The Golden Rule: ABC

You’ve heard it before. ABC – Always Be Closing. The key to winning the war for the best candidate is to continuously work on closing them right from the outset.

The time to begin working on closing the candidate is not when you’re at offer stage; it’s when you first meet them. If you’re running around looking for a way to sweeten the deal after you’ve already made your offer – sorry, but it’s too late. Unless the candidate has been lying to you, you should have a fair idea of whether they will accept your offer when you make it.

It’s your job to find out during the very first interview what other roles they may have applied for directly; what positions they may have been represented for by a recruiter; or even just any other role they might be considered for within their current company.

Shorten the Hiring Cycle

Schedule interviews quickly after advertising or presenting the initial job description. Ask for samples of their work prior to or during the interview so that you can make a good decision in less time. When you are considering multiple candidates, schedule multiple interviews in a single day.

The more time you take to make your decision, the more time the candidate has to explore other opportunities.

Listen to What the Candidate Wants

It’s easy to assume you know what will make a candidate interested in the position and ultimately accept it. But do you actually know? How often do you ask questions about what is important to them? When they mentioned that they needed more detail about the benefits package, did you ask what was most important to them or did you simply launch into a list of all your benefits? Listen, listen, listen.

Ask your candidate to create a wish list for their next role. Get them to talk through it right there in front of you and to write it all down.

Ask them to think about everything from what type of manager they want to work for; what hours they want to work; whether they may want any more flexible working arrangements; what additional training they may be expecting etc.

Don’t Try to Lowball

Trying to undercut an employee by saving a few dollars on their salary is pathetic. If you want the good employee, pay them what they’re worth.

If you are making these hires for yourself, a rookie mistake is to assume the salary you made the person before them is good enough for the future employee. Salaries are primarily dependent on the market; what else can they get? Remember that last year’s market prices or what you feel the market prices should be are irrelevant. Do some market research to ensure the salary you offer is competitive.

Make the Offer Quickly

Make your offer promptly. For example, it’s 5:05pm and you just got word that your client, hiring manager or team definitely wants the employee. Do you leave it until tomorrow? No! Call the candidate now. Give them an evening to mull over your offer so that when they receive your email the next day, confirming that you would appreciate an answer by the end of the business day they won’t feel rushed.

Get Details of any Other Offers

If you have already made an offer to a candidate and they mention that they are considering another offer as well, ask them for details about the other offer. Ask for the salary, benefits, work environment, and what they like and dislike about the job opportunity. Ask what their deciding factors are.

Don’t make any new offers at this stage – you simply want to garner as much information as you can. Watch that you’re not grilling them, though. Ask questions simply and respectfully, letting them know you want to understand what the competition is and how your role competes.

Create Meaning and Dignity

Often a meaningful job with a lower salary will be chosen over a less meaningful job with a higher salary.

But what makes a job meaningful? Career progression, challenge, and wider impact. Outline how the role can progress through the company (but only if you know it actually can). What challenges will the role be tackling? How does the company as a whole, and that role in particular, make a difference in the world? These are all aspects of the role that will convince a candidate to choose yours over others.

Give Them the Royal Treatment

Invite the candidate to lunch and give them another tour of the office they will be working in. Believe it or not, many candidates aren’t even shown their future office or desk before they start! Introduce them to other key people. Show them the great areas for staff relaxation or the noisy production floor where the fantastic products are being created right there on the spot.

Give them a taste of the energy of the place and make them want to be there.

Have a Backup Plan

Nothing makes you more confident in a negotiation than a strong backup plan. You know if it all goes awry, things will be okay. This confidence is apparent to the candidate and it subtly weakens their negotiating position. If their other offer is genuinely better and you know you cannot match it, you are empowered to cut off the negotiations and move onto the next person without wasting any time.

Getting a candidate across the line requires nearly as much luck as it does skill. Employing the right skills at the right time, though, may just turn luck’s beneficial eye in your direction when it really counts.

Source:

☐ 4. Prepare Offer Letter

Prepare offer letter and send to candidate. An initial copy can be e-mailed for the purposeof receiving a signature as soon as possible. A hard copy should be sent by certified mailand can then be btained from the candidate when they arrive on their scheduled first day.

(See samples of offer letters provided.)

*Don't forget to inlcude Agreement Forms.

/ Sample Offer Letter 1
d2a2d0eb-5370-4c4c-b98b-4b641d0985bb.pdf
/ Sample Offer Letter 2
77c59e0e-fd53-4e7a-9427-688602acbe65.pdf
/ Non-Complete Agreement
9bc295de-09e0-46e3-8855-cecd92de7e3a.pdf
/ At Will Employment Agreement
32488d0b-1e8d-4637-85eb-da902613fa0c.pdf

After letter is signed and accepted, contact othercandidates (via e-mail or letter) to thank them for their time and to let them know anothercandidate has been selected for the position. Put a reminder in Google Calendar tosende-mails to other interviewees if you decide to do it later.

☐ 5. Request Information

Request information such as:

  • date of birth
  • social security number
  • completed form for pre-employment drug testing

/ Pre-Employment Drug Consent.doc
ccee6ecd-12ca-450b-9e67-ae37ed518883.doc

☐ 6. Arrange Drug Screening

Arrange the drug screening so that it isscheduled as soon as possible (usually within 24-48 hours from job offer.

Add to Company's Google Calendar as well.

Make sure you obtain results from drug screening before candidate’s start date.

Put a reminder in Google Calendarto follow up on drug screening. Very important to have thiscompleted before the candidate’s start date!

☐ 7. Contact SSA

Contact SSA (Social Security Administration)to verify social security number.

See link forSSA.1

Put a reminder for yourself in Google Calendarto make sure you do this

☐ 8. Untitled Task

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☐ 9. Create Employee File

Create employment file with all the required paperwork for the employee to complete onhis/her first day of employment.

See checklist of basic forms that should be completed by employee.

/ Employee File Checklist.pdf
2e1f3b19-66bc-4e6e-bcf6-1536563f64aa.pdf

☐ 10. Prepare for Employee's First Day

Identify equipment, keys, passwords, etc. that will be required for use by the employee. Save to Google Doc with passwords:

drive.google.com

Arrange to have all of these available and functional upon employee’s arrival on his/herfirst day of employment. Ensure that workspace is clean and functional and has awelcoming appearance.

☐ 11. Schedule Orientation for Employee

Prepare an Orientation schedule for employee. This should begin with a list of people theemployee is scheduled to meet with as well as the time and location of the meeting.

/ New Employee Orientation Schedule Example
1aca4aba-d3c2-4947-bb00-a9294928445a.pdf

Includea list of all of the employees in the company that they will need to interact with, their titles,and contact information. If possible, you should plan to escort the employee to the firstmeeting with each person on the orientation schedule, to make a formal introduction. Put areminder in Outlook to call each person you want to include as part of the Orientation.

Confirm a time they will be available.

Put areminder in Google Calendar to call each person you want to include as part of theOrientation.Confirm a time they will be available.

☐ 12. Confirm Orientation and Deliver Schedule

Confirm orientation times with everyone on the list.

Prepare and deliver a copy of theschedule to all who are participating in the orientation. This should be done the day beforeto minimize last minute schedule changes. Put a reminder in Google Calendar!

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Created with Jan 2014