First-Day Experience Optimization

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Summary

First-day experience optimization is the process of carefully designing a new hire’s initial day to make them feel welcomed, supported, and ready to contribute. This approach focuses on meaningful interactions, clear communication, and thoughtful touches that help new employees feel confident as they start their journey.

  • Plan ahead: Arrange everything from equipment setup to welcome agendas before your new team member arrives, so their first day runs smoothly.
  • Create connections: Use warm greetings, introduce a “day one buddy,” or schedule a team lunch to help new hires feel valued and part of the group right away.
  • Make it memorable: Add personal touches—such as a handwritten note, a fun induction game, or a shout-out during meetings—to turn the first day into a standout experience.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Kevin Goedeke

    Senior living and skilled nursing strategy, operations, and culture

    22,190 followers

    Want your new hires to stay longer? Start with a first day they’ll actually remember. One community used this approach and boosted 90-day retention from 52% to 83%. Same staff. Same market. Same budget. The only change? They stopped winging Day One. Here’s the exact playbook: 1. Name on the schedule. Name at the front entrance. Before they walk in, they already feel expected and welcomed. 2. Start with coffee, not compliance. Block time with the ED or DON for a warm, informal welcome. No paperwork—just connection. 3. Assign a “Day One Buddy.” This isn’t a trainer. It’s someone who meets them at the door, checks in throughout the shift, and helps them feel at home. 4. Set them up with a clean locker, working login, and clear agenda for the day. No new hire should be chasing passwords or guessing where to go. 5. End the day with a personal check-in. Either a live call or an in-person touchpoint from their supervisor. Ask how it really went. Listen. Pro tip: Celebrate their arrival visibly. A photo at orientation. A short intro in your group chat. A shout-out during stand-up. People stay where they feel seen. How do you design Day One? Drop your best onboarding move in the comments

  • View profile for Bulbul Ahmmed (He/Him)

    Strategic HR Business Partner, Talent Managment, Talent Development and HR data analyst, Wellbeing, Mentor, MBA (HRM). Working with WFP but opinion doesn’t reflect my organisational view.

    5,540 followers

    Why Should You, as a Supervisor, Personally Welcome Your New Team Members? The Importance of Welcoming and Onboarding New Staff Why: To build a motivated, connected, and high-performing team. First impressions matter—welcoming new staff warmly creates an immediate sense of belonging and sets the tone for a respectful, inclusive workplace culture. When: Day 1 – from the very first moment they step in. Where: Ideally in-person at the office, or virtually with equal energy and creativity if remote. Who: You – the supervisor. Your involvement makes the difference. How: Use a creative and thoughtful approach—such as a personalized welcome placard, fresh flowers, a small welcome kit, or even a handwritten note. The goal is to make them feel: "Yes, this is the place I dreamed of working." Your Role as a Supervisor: ✅ Be Prepared: Know their name, role, background, and arrival time. ✅ Be Proactive: Plan and personalize their onboarding experience. ✅ Create a Positive Experience: Your effort on Day 1 is an investment that builds trust and long-term engagement. Make Day One Memorable: Personally greet your new team member. Give your full attention—be present, avoid distractions. Spend quality time introducing them to the team and workspace. Plan a small surprise: coffee, lunch, cake, or a fun team welcome session. Do something that reflects your team’s culture and the new member’s preferences. You’ll be surprised at the long-term benefits. A genuine, warm welcome builds trust, loyalty, and faster integration. It also lays the foundation for strong team bonding—starting from the very first interaction. What Not To Do: 🚫 Don’t delegate the welcome to someone else. 🚫 Don’t appear too busy or distracted with meetings. 🚫 Don’t ask overly personal questions or make negative comments about others. A Final Thought: A successful onboarding starts with YOU. A motivated team begins with meaningful moments—especially the first one. Lead with warmth and authenticity—you'll inspire the same in return.

  • View profile for Florin Buduroi

    Managing Director & Co-owner | Building international, diverse and multilingual teams

    10,539 followers

    The candidate accepted your offer weeks ago. They handed in their notice, possibly relocated to the Netherlands too, and spent the time between then and now imagining what their first day would look like. Then they arrive at the office. They find their way in with no one at the door to welcome them. The hiring manager is in back-to-back meetings until noon. Someone eventually points them to a desk — but there is no laptop, no phone, no access to the systems they need. Nobody is quite sure who is supposed to be training them or when they were meant to start. By lunchtime, if anyone even remembers to mention where people eat, doubt has already set in. This is the part that is hardest to see, because every single one of these moments was preventable. A great first day requires someone sitting down weeks in advance to think it through: equipment ordered and tested, system access ready, and a schedule sent to the new hire so they are not walking in blind. It means having invitations already in their calendar for the week's important calls and someone assigned to be at the door when they arrive. A warm welcome and a slow cup of coffee to get the day started and calm the nerves of a new beginning. It also requires thinking about the things that never make it onto an official checklist. What is the dress code? Do people bring their own lunch, or does the team eat together? These feel like small things, but for someone new, having to guess at all of them at once is exhausting. Then there is the question of what they actually do. The worst first days are the ones where the new hire sits with nothing meaningful in front of them because everyone around them is too busy to stop. A simple onboarding plan, even if it only covers the first week, with something real to get started on and a genuine check-in before they leave for the day, makes an enormous difference. The candidates you (or we 😃) worked hardest to find are also the ones with the most options. How you treat day one tells them everything about what comes next.

  • View profile for Manish Khanolkar

    HR Consultant | HR Leader | Career Strategy for HR Professionals

    8,644 followers

    What if your first day at work felt like a game… not a lecture? Most induction days are the same. Long presentations. Endless policies. A stack of forms. By the end of it, you barely remember a thing—except how boring it felt. When I was leading inductions at MakeMyTrip, we asked ourselves a simple question: Why can’t onboarding be as exciting as the journey ahead? So, we gamified the entire induction experience. New joiners didn’t sit through dull PPTs. They were handed an iPad, headphones, and dropped straight into an interactive induction game. They learned about the company, its culture, and policies while playing quizzes and unlocking levels. We even turned a part of the office into a gaming zone with beanbags and a fun, casual vibe. Just when they thought it was over… We took it offline with a real-life office scavenger hunt. Teams raced around the workspace finding the coffee machine, meeting rooms, and key departments—learning by doing, not just listening. The result? - First-day nerves turned into laughter. - People actually retained what they learned. - Years later, employees still talked about their onboarding experience. This approach was such a hit, it even won a People Matters award for Best Onboarding Program. The biggest lesson? Induction isn’t about information. It’s about emotion. How you make people feel on Day 1 sets the tone for their entire journey with your organization. So, HR leaders— Is your induction program an experience worth remembering? #onboardingexperience #gamification #hrinnovation #culturematters #manishkhanolkar

  • View profile for Joseph Lee

    CEO @ Supademo, G2’s #5 fastest growing. Forbes 30u30, Techstars, 2x founder

    17,407 followers

    90% of founders obsess over MORE: more signups, more features, more channels But one of the biggest growth unlocks isn’t adding more stuff. It’s iterating, refining, and treating your “day 1” onboarding experience as a standalone product of its own. This means giving it the appropriate level of attention, resources, and constant iteration to ensure it’s intentional and memorable for users. Ultimately, if your onboarding experience isn’t evolving and improving alongside user/market expectations, it won’t matter how good your core product is. Folks won’t even get around to experiencing it. Your first-time experience should do three things (nothing more, nothing less): → Communicate why your product matters (ideally differently from your marketing copy) → Show value or get users to experience it immediately → Drive a clear next step At Supademo, we run monthly experiments around these objectives and aim to revisit them monthly. It’s never “set it and forget it”. It’s a product we refine, again and again. So the next time you think about growth, don’t look outward. Revisit existing experiences instead. It could be your most powerful unlock. When was the last time you revamped your onboarding, and what came out of it?

  • View profile for Adrian Kuleszo

    Founder @DesignMe | Design & Development partner for B2B and tech startups | Seamless.AI, GoHighLevel, Ethena Labs, LSE | designme.agency

    85,624 followers

    Most apps lose 80% of users in the first 3 days. Users decide to stay or delete faster than you think. One of the main reasons is your onboarding. Here are 8 onboarding tips we use to boost apps retention to 40%+ 👇 1/ Show value before asking for anything TikTok starts playing videos immediately - no sign-up required. Users experience the core value (entertainment) within 3 seconds. Only after they're hooked does TikTok ask for an account. Lead with value, follow with commitment. 2/ Use progressive onboarding, not feature tours Slack doesn't explain every feature upfront. Instead, it guides users through sending their first message. Advanced features appear contextually when users need them. Teach through doing, not through talking. 3/ Personalize from the first interaction Spotify asks for music preferences during signup. This data immediately customizes the experience. Users see relevant playlists instead of generic recommendations. Personalization makes users feel understood from day one. 4/ Create quick wins early Duolingo lets users complete their first lesson in under 2 minutes. The immediate success builds confidence and momentum. Users experience achievement before encountering difficulty. Early wins create psychological investment in continuing. 5/ Ask for permissions at the right moment WhatsApp doesn't request contacts access during installation. It waits until users try to message someone for the first time. Context makes permission requests feel helpful, not invasive. 6/ Set expectations with progress indicators LinkedIn shows profile completion percentages. Users see exactly what's needed to finish setup. The progress bar creates a clear goal and path forward. Gamify completion to increase follow-through rates. 7/ End with a clear next step Notion's onboarding concludes with creating your first page. Users don't finish setup wondering "what now?" The final action becomes the bridge to regular app usage. Great onboarding transitions into the core experience seamlessly. 8/ The best onboarding should feel invisible. Users accomplish something meaningful without realizing they're being "onboarded." When first-time experience creates immediate value, retention follows naturally. As always, I hope this was helpful. Appreciate all the likes and comments. Enjoy your day! 👋

  • View profile for Pallavi Singh

    Strategic Talent Acquisition Advisor APAC, Tech & Engineering Hiring, Employer Branding, HR Mosaic

    35,403 followers

    ✨ Day 1 Done Right: Creating Impactful First Impressions ✨ At #RockwellAutomation, we believe Day 1 is more than just a formality — it’s the foundation of a meaningful journey. A well-crafted onboarding experience sets the tone for engagement, belonging, and long-term success. Here’s how we make Day 1 memorable: ✅ Warm Welcome: A personalized greeting and a thoughtfully prepared workspace ✅ Culture Connect: Intro sessions that go beyond policies — we talk values, vision, and purpose ✅ Buddy System: A friendly face to guide through the first week ✅ Tech & Tools Ready: No waiting around — everything is set up and ready to go ✅ Coffee Chats: Informal meetups to build connections early ✅ Feedback Loop: We listen, learn, and continuously improve the onboarding experience 💡 HR Tip: The first day isn’t just about orientation — it’s about integration. Make it human, make it warm, and make it count. Here’s to building great beginnings, one Day 1 at a time. #OnboardingMatters #HRBestPractices #EmployeeExperience #LifeAtRockwell #PeopleFirst #DayOneDoneRight

  • View profile for Junaid Ahmed

    People & Culture | Talent Management | Organizational Development | HR Business Partner | Employee Experience | Digital HR Transformation | HR Consultant

    11,426 followers

    Employee Experience is triggered from the first point of contact between the applicant and the organization and blooms starting from their 𝗳𝗶𝗿𝘀𝘁 𝗱𝗮𝘆 𝗮𝘁 𝗼𝗳𝗳𝗶𝗰𝗲. 10 years back, we were never sure of what to expect on our first day and occasionally spent the entire day stuck in a meeting room getting hoarded by multiple presentations! By the time it was 5pm, we’d be returning home with a headache and pondering over what to expect the next day or hey did I forget something?! But this can be done differently today, and is done differently in many organizations. Because today we are more efficient, equipped and are extremely cautious about providing 𝗮 𝗽𝗼𝘀𝗶𝘁𝗶𝘃𝗲 𝗲𝗺𝗽𝗹𝗼𝘆𝗲𝗲 𝗲𝘅𝗽𝗲𝗿𝗶𝗲𝗻𝗰𝗲 𝗳𝗿𝗼𝗺 𝗱𝗮𝘆 𝟬! Recently, I’ve recently worked with an FMCG organization who wanted to prioritize exactly that and also improve their 𝗻𝗲𝘄 𝗷𝗼𝗶𝗻𝗲𝗿’𝘀 𝗼𝗻𝗯𝗼𝗮𝗿𝗱𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗽𝗿𝗼𝗰𝗲𝘀𝘀. After having an initial round of discussion with recent new joiners and evaluating their experiences, I found most of them to be clueless for a better part of 3-4 days in getting the hang of things and they didn’t know where to go or whom to reach. HR kept referring to the orientation day and like I said, hoarding so much info in 1 day isn’t an easy job. I started working on key problem areas affecting experience: ·Bring a ton of documents to submit to HR --> Get it done digitally beforehand ·Not knowing the plan --> Sharing an outline of the onboarding program ·Too much information to remember on the first day --> Provide contents for each knowledge segment ·Don’t know whom to reach --> Share relevant POCs ·HR not following up on progress --> Create a touch base plan with HR and Functional manager All this requires is basic planning now and needs to be tracked and checked without dropping the ball at any end; feels like a lot of ground work? This is where 𝘁𝗲𝗰𝗵𝗻𝗼𝗹𝗼𝗴𝘆 changes the game and helps HR. So, I used https://studio.softr.io/ to develop a platform that does all of the above and more: ·Create a process flow and timeline for the employee to follow ·Add notes and upload relevant contents at each step ·Assign relevant participants where applicable ·Simply invite the employee over a custom email to initiate the process ·Track progress and status of each new joiner and intervene where necessary. ·Add an NPS survey for feedback New joiners can now know what to expect from day 1, whom to reach out to, what to do, get done with their homework and check back for anything they may have missed out.  The same feedback group gave an awesome thumbs up to the new process, the HR team is now adapting to this and I am waiting for their new employee feedback 😊 The platform is free when you are planning to test but will cost you when deploying for a large group. Considering the wide range of possibilities it offers, it may be worth investing. Never stop exploring! #EmployeeExperience #DigitalHR #Onboarding

  • View profile for Becky Turner Assoc CIPD

    Lead in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion | Talent Leader | People Partner | People Experience expert | Ex-Google

    5,879 followers

    Why spend a fortune on recruiting someone just to lose them on day 1? 🤯 From what I've observed, an onboarding experience can make or break employee success. Let's explore! 👇 💭 Imagine you've spent weeks interviewing for your dream job. You've had a fantastic experience, met some great people and are raring to go! Then on day 1 - no one is expecting you, your technology hasn't arrived, your new boss is in meetings all day, there's no plan to help you ramp up..... How do you feel? 😑 This is an extreme example but I have seen the importance of a magical onboarding experience be overlooked. It almost gets lost somewhere in the middle of functions - does it land with Recruiting, Hiring Managers, L&D, HR? The first days and weeks shape how an employee views your company, their ability to ramp up quickly and the likelihood that they'll stay and succeed. 💡 Here are some simple tips I've seen work: 🔹 Remind them of the company mission and values 🔸 Spend time to create tailored onboarding for each role type. 🔹 Establish a checklist of action items, tips and training for the first 4 weeks. 🔸 Have all relevant resources in one place and easily accessible. 🔹 Allocate a buddy/mentor to be accountable for supporting ramp up. 🔸 Make sure the team know someone is starting and make a fuss on day 1! 🔹 Pop a welcome sign and some stationery on their desk or send remotely. 🔸 Make sure you have technology and access ready to go. 🔹 For relocation, share tips on the local areas, logistics, bank accounts etc. In summary - Make sure your new starters feel welcome and appreciated. Taking care of the little details of onboarding is one of the most important steps in a successful employee life cycle! 🤗 #onboardingexperience #employeelifecycle #attentiontodetail

  • View profile for Pravash Rai

    Chief Strategy & HR Officer | Leading Bank, Nepal | Educator | Certified Leadership and Soft Skills Trainer | Developing Future-Ready Leaders & Inclusive Cultures

    12,489 followers

    I’ll never forget my first day at a new job. I was nervous, excited, and ready to get started. But instead of a warm welcome, I was handed a stack of forms and left to figure things out alone. I spent the first few hours wandering around, not sure where to go or who to talk to. That day, I learned just how important the first impression is. Here’s the thing: Many people believe that onboarding is only HR’s job. But the truth is, the first-line supervisor plays the biggest role. They’re the ones who make the new hire feel comfortable and part of the team. HR can handle the paperwork, but it’s the supervisor who makes sure the new employee feels supported and ready to dive in. First days matter. They set the tone for everything that comes after. Here’s a simple checklist to get it right: ✓ Legal Requirements Paperwork isn’t fun, but it’s necessary. Have all the forms ready for the new hire to sign, so they can start their role without stress. ✓ Tour A quick walk-around is important. Show them the restrooms, break rooms, and their work area. Make sure they meet the key people — it’s not just about finding the bathroom, it’s about feeling welcomed. ✓ Social Activity Nobody wants to feel like an outsider. Organize a simple social event to help them meet the team — a lunch, a coffee break, or a casual hangout. Make them feel like they belong. Remember, the first day isn’t just about paperwork — it’s about welcoming someone into your culture. Do it right, and you’ll set them up for success. Do it wrong, and you risk losing their excitement before they even get started. As a leader, your role is huge. You are the one who creates the environment where new hires feel valued and ready to contribute. Don’t leave this to HR alone — make it personal. 👉If you’re in a leadership role (not just HR), comment "I’m interested" and I’ll send you a sample first-day checklist to make sure you're getting it right. Happy onboarding! #Leadership #Onboarding #EmployeeExperience #WorkCulture #FirstDaySuccess #TeamBuilding

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