Onboarding Training Focused on Performance Improvement

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Summary

Onboarding training focused on performance improvement is a strategy that helps new employees not just learn about their roles, but start contributing meaningful results quickly, with clear milestones and hands-on practice. Instead of simply sharing information, this approach centers around helping recruits make an impact and build confidence from day one.

  • Set clear milestones: Define specific and achievable goals for new hires so they understand what success looks like in their first weeks and months on the job.
  • Prioritize real-world practice: Give recruits the opportunity to apply their skills early through practical tasks, projects, or scenarios that mirror their actual work.
  • Connect training to impact: Align onboarding activities with company goals and show new hires how their contributions matter, boosting motivation and long-term engagement.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Elizabeth Zandstra

    Senior Instructional Designer | Learning Experience Designer | Articulate Storyline & Rise | Job Aids | Vyond | I craft meaningful learning experiences that are visually engaging.

    14,089 followers

    šŸ”“ Knowledge isn’t the goal — performance is. If training doesn’t change what learners do, it’s useless information. To design learning that drives real behavioral change, focus on performance-based outcomes. Here’s how: 1ļøāƒ£ Define the desired behavior. Before you create content, ask: "What should learners be able to DO after this training?" āœ… Instead of ā€œUnderstand conflict resolutionā€ → ā€œDe-escalate workplace conflicts using a 3-step framework.ā€ āœ… Instead of ā€œKnow safety proceduresā€ → ā€œComplete a safety check before each shift without missing a step.ā€ 2ļøāƒ£ Align content to real-world tasks. Cut anything that doesn’t directly impact performance. āœ… Teach skills, not just concepts. āœ… Show learners how to apply the information. āœ… Use realistic examples, not just definitions. 3ļøāƒ£ Make practice the priority. If learners only consume content passively, they won’t be ready to act. āœ… Use scenario-based activities. āœ… Have them make decisions and see consequences. āœ… Design realistic practice opportunities. Example: Instead of listing customer service principles, let learners handle a simulated customer complaint -- and refine their approach. 4ļøāƒ£ Measure success by actions, not completion. āœ… Set clear, observable performance goals. āœ… Assess what learners can do, not just what they remember. āœ… Provide feedback that helps them improve. Learning should change behavior, not just transfer knowledge. šŸ¤” How do you design training with performance in mind? ----------------------- šŸ‘‹ Hi! I'm Elizabeth! ā™»ļø Share this post if you found it helpful. šŸ‘† Follow me for more tips! šŸ¤ Reach out if you need a high-quality learning solution designed to engage learners and drive real change. #InstructionalDesign #PerformanceBasedLearning #BehavioralChange #LearningAndDevelopment

  • View profile for Richard Milligan
    Richard Milligan Richard Milligan is an Influencer

    Top Recruiting Coach | Helping Leaders Build Teams that Scale | Podcast Host | LinkedIn Top Voice

    34,425 followers

    How do I build a 12-month roadmap for a recruit using their production and my company playbook? Let me share a quick story. One of the leaders I coached was struggling to onboard a new hire effectively. They had great potential but didn’t quite understand how they fit into the big picture. As they dove into the role, the rookie felt lost and overwhelmed, leading to a few early missteps. We worked together on a solution. Instead of just assigning tasks based on numbers and quotas, we flipped the script. We created a detailed 12-month roadmap aligning their production goals with our company playbook. This wasn’t just about selling; it was about grasping our vision and understanding how their contributions would make an impact. Here’s how you can do the same: Start by identifying key production milestones for the recruit, breaking them down into manageable quarterly goals. For each quarter, align these objectives with specific elements of your playbook — training modules, key projects, or team collaboration opportunities. Ensure that each milestone has clear, actionable steps and reasons behind them, so the recruit knows not just what to do but why it matters. Also, keep communication open. Regular check-ins will help you both stay aligned and pivot if necessary. This framework works because it transforms the onboarding experience from a transactional series of tasks into a collaborative journey. When recruits see how their efforts support a greater vision, they’re not just going through the motions; they’re genuinely invested in the success of the team and the company. A meaningful onboarding process can set the stage for long-term engagement and high performance. Let’s make sure our new hires feel they belong and can see the roadmap to their success right from the start.

  • View profile for Praveen Das

    Co-founder at factors.ai | Signal-based marketing for high-growth B2B companies | I write about my founder journey, GTM growth tactics & tech trends

    13,102 followers

    Stop ā€œwelcomingā€ new hires. Give them a win in 30 days instead. When I first hired 8 years back, I thought the best onboarding was all about making new hires feel at home. I was wrong. New hires actually struggle with: → Understanding the business and their role. → Aligning with company culture and expectations. → Getting that first ā€œwinā€ to build momentum. → Building relationships with colleagues. I’ve now completely changed our onboarding process. The only goal is to get new hires to their ā€œfirst winā€ fast. Instead of generic training, we work backward from their first big achievement. Here’s the framework: Step 1: Define the ā€œfirst winā€ (within 30 days) Every new hire gets a specific, meaningful milestone. 1. It should be important enough that not doing it has a business impact. 2. Something that pushes them but is achievable with team collaboration. 3. It should give them real insight into how we operate. Our new Demand Gen Marketer’s first win was securing Market Development Funds (MDF) from a partner. To do this, they had to: - Work with our internal team. - Engage with a partner manager. - Propose a campaign relevant to both companies. This wasn’t just a task (it was a meaningful contribution). Step 2: Provide context (without overloading them) Most onboarding programs drown new hires in endless presentations. We limit training to what they need for their first win. 1. A 45-minute deep dive on the company’s journey, priorities, and challenges. 2. Targeted learning on only what’s relevant for their milestone. 3. Hands-on guidance instead of passive training. For the Demand Gen hire, we focused on: - Who the partner manager was and their priorities. - How the partnership worked. - What MDF campaigns typically get approved. Step 3: Align them with our work culture Culture isn't learned in a handbook. It’s experienced. Every new hire is paired with a mentor to guide them through: → Quality Standards → What "good" looks like in our company. → Processes & Tools → How we work and collaborate. → Feedback Loops → How we review, iterate, and improve. The result? New hires achieve something meaningful within their first month. They feel pride, momentum, and confidence (not just onboarding fatigue). Great onboarding isn’t about information. It’s about impact. šŸ’” How do you set up new hires for success?

  • View profile for Mark Siciliano

    GTM Advisor & Speaker, Enablement leader, Board Member, Coach, Dad - Track record of proven success

    5,996 followers

    My two cents… I had an enablement colleague ask me a question about onboarding and how it’s changed, how we tailor it, what reps should know and when, how much selling vs. product vs. industry training should be done, and when they should start selling. My peers in the business know this line of questioning well. In my opinion, onboarding programs need to shift away from focusing on content and move toward sequence and intent. Stop prioritizing information completeness and instead design around progressive capability. New hires should start doing real things earlier. Do small things first, then bigger ones. The training doesn’t disappear; it gets reorganized around the doing rather than the knowing. Here’s a reframe that changes how I think about onboarding entirely: new hires should be selling from day one. What they’re selling evolves. Day 1–10 – Selling themselves internally. Learning the business, earning trust, building relationships. Understanding how the organization actually operates and not just what the org chart says. (And ideally not asking where the coffee machine is for the fifth time.) Day 10–30 – Selling curiosity externally. Joining calls, asking smart questions, observing experienced reps navigate conversations. Not pitching like a caffeinated product brochure. Listening. Reading the room. Developing instincts. Day 30–60 – Selling pieces of the deal. Running discovery. Owning the recap. Setting next steps. Still supervised, still supported. Think of it as a learner’s permit where you have real driving in controlled conditions. Day 60–90 – Selling full-cycle. Pipeline, deals, forecasts; basically the whole beautiful, complicated mess. Accountable for outcomes, supported by the system, coached by the manager. Actually in the game. Designed this way, onboarding isn’t a waiting room before the job starts. It is the job, at progressively increasing altitudes. The new hire is never a spectator. They’re always a participant. The only question is what role they’re playing this week.

  • View profile for Amy Wang, PMP, SHRM-SCP

    Senior HR & People Operations Executive | Talent, Leadership & Organizational Effectiveness | Human-Centered Governance in the Age of AI

    8,345 followers

    I once worked with a team that was proud of their onboarding process. New hires got swag bags, welcome lunches, and long orientation decks. But here’s what no one was tracking: How long it took those new hires to make a real impact. In one case, it was 90+ days before someone delivered their first key result. Not because they weren’t capable—because we hadn’t built a runway for them to land on. So we reworked onboarding completely. Not as an HR checklist. As a business acceleration strategy. We asked questions like: • What does success look like in the first 30, 60, 90 days • What’s their first deliverable that actually moves the needle • Who are the people they need to build trust with quickly • What tools, data, or decisions are they missing to get started • How do we shorten the time from ā€œwelcomeā€ to ā€œimpactā€ The result? Time to productivity was cut in half. Confidence went up. Retention improved. So did results. Because when onboarding is done right, it’s not about orientation. It’s about acceleration. #HRRealTalk #OnboardingMatters #EmployeeExperience #TalentDevelopment #NewHireSuccess #HRLeadership #PeopleStrategy #TimeToProductivity #WorkforceEnablement #FutureOfWork

  • View profile for David Osborne

    CRO, Auditoria

    5,675 followers

    Sales onboarding horror stories I’m sure most of us have a few.... ā€œFamiliarize yourself with our product through this one-pager and sales deck." ā€œMeet John, our top-performing rep. Despite his busy schedule, he’ll show you the ropes.ā€ ā€œHere’s your login to our CRM and Gong. Play around and let us know if you have any questions.ā€ Overlooked and overtly lazy onboarding is (unfortunately) still too common. It’s unstructured Too broad (rather than role-specific) Lacks clear learning objectives Or, even worse, it’s non-existent You can’t expect new hires to perform if you don’t lay a solid foundation for them to perform off of. This is even more heightened when you run a fully-remote sales org. What would you say is most helpful when you’re onboarding? Here’s our approach at Insightly: Balance of training types:Ā  • Self-paced learning (ex. customer stories, webinars, Gong calls) • Live instructor-led trainingĀ  • Shadowing colleagues • Collaborative group activities within the cohort Deep dives into: • Industry, market, and competitive landscape • Personas and ICPĀ  • Identifying problems and communicating value props • Products (feature, function, use case) • Sales processĀ  • Tech stack Learning by doing: • Elevator pitch delivery (EOW 1) • Mock CRM demo presentation (EOW 2) • Call & email cadence creation (EOW 3) • Discovery call and sales deck roleplay (EOW 4) We employ an onboarding scorecard to evaluate and gauge new hires' progress toward objectives, including a monthly bonus tied to successfully achieving training and on-the-job performance goals. Really this just scratches the surface... Every onboarding program is different. Effective onboarding cultivates confident salespeople. If you want your salespeople to be confident, you need to provide them with effective onboarding.Ā 

  • View profile for Tony DiSilvestro

    Keynote Speaker | Business Scaling Strategist | Author of Business Scaling Blueprint | Builder of 30+ Companies

    5,463 followers

    I used to think a few weeks of onboarding was enough. Shadow a few shifts. Learn the ropes. Then sink or swim. But that’s not training. That’s just hoping people figure it out. And hope isn’t a system. So we changed the way we build our teams. We created a 52-week training program that delivers real development every single week. One core focus → One habit → One value → Week after week. It gave our team structure.Ā  It gave them clarity. And it gave them confidence to lead without waiting for permission. Turnover dropped.Ā  Performance jumped.Ā  People started solving problems without being told. We didn’t change who we hired. We changed how we equipped them. If someone on your team feels lost after onboarding, that’s not their fault. It’s the system’s fault. A strong team isn’t built in the first two weeks. It’s built through consistent investment over time. Keep training.Ā  Keep sharpening.Ā  That’s how you scale a business that lasts.

  • View profile for Lisa Rigoli, MBA, PCC

    We’re the Transition Experts Organizations Trust for All High-Impact Leadership Changes. AI OPERATIONALIZATION | REORGS & RIGHTSIZING | MERGERS & ACQUISITIONS | LONG-TENURE LEADER TRANSITION

    6,164 followers

    It only took 5- weeks to diagnose a problem that had been costing this org over half a million dollars a year. šŸ‘‡šŸ¾ Ā  This healthcare organization had been stuck in the same pattern for years: hire medical assistants, watch them struggle, watch them leave, repeat. Ā  Leadership was doing everything they thought they should do: posting jobs, screening candidates, making offers, trying to train people fast so they could get to work. Ā  But 67 out of 95 new hires still failed. Ā  This is why when our Element of Change team came in, we didn't look at resumĆ©s or audit their job descriptions. Ā  Instead, we took our 3D Discovery Framework to examine what actually happened after someone said yes. Ā  Here's what we found: Ā  >> No standardized onboarding (every site did it differently) >> Provider-driven training (what you learned depended on who you got)Ā  >> Zero role clarity (nobody knew their boundaries) >> No feedback loops (problems weren't caught until exit interviews)Ā  >> No growth pathways (high performers had nowhere to go) Ā  The system was designed to confuse new hires! Ā  The fix: A systematic onboarding lab with peer-led training, a 7-week phased curriculum, and a manager toolkit with early warning indicators. Ā  The impact: >> Up to $400K in annual savingsĀ  >> Turnover projected to drop from 48% to 25%Ā  >> 20-30% more managerial bandwidthĀ  >> Faster ramp-up and improved cross-site productivity Ā  This is why we're obsessed with proper diagnosis before prescription. Ā  When you understand the root cause, the solution becomes obvious. Ā  Curious how this approach could work for your organization?Ā Send me a message. I’d love to hear what you're working on. Ā  #lisarigoli #elementofchange #healthcareonboarding #discoveryframework

  • 70% of people are ā€œactive learnersā€. They learn by DOING. Yet many managers drown new hires in hours of training videos, onboarding SOPs, and endless guideline docs. But the highest performers? They'll learn more in 1 hour of REAL WORK than 10 hours of passive training. Here's how to onboard the right way: 1. Give them a small, real project on day 1 ↳ Nothing builds confidence like early wins 2. Set short 15-min daily check-ins ↳ Quick course corrections > long delayed feedback 3. Embrace mistakes early ↳ Better to fail fast in month 1 than catastrophically in month 6 4. Pair them with top performers ↳ People learn faster by watching excellence in action 5. Create containment systems ↳ Build guardrails that limit potential damage while allowing autonomy 6. Gamify their early goals ↳ Set achievable targets that stretch but don't break 7. Work alongside them initially ↳ Micromanage for context, not control 8. Give them decision-making frameworks ↳ Teach them how to think, not just what to do 9. Set clear KPIs from day one ↳ People perform better when they know how they're measured 10. Make it safe to ask questions ↳ The best learners are the ones who admit what they don't know Remember: Your best people don't need perfect training. They need: āœ… Clear objectives āœ… Quick feedback loops āœ… Room to experiment āœ… Real stakes Great managers don't create dependence through endless documentation. They build confidence through guided action. ā™»ļø Repost to share with your network and follow Alvin Huang for more like this.Ā 

  • View profile for John Koome

    Senior Sales & Commercial Leader | National Growth & Market Expansion | Telecom & FMCG

    7,752 followers

    #Coaching and #Accompaniment? Onboarding a new sales agent doesn’t end with #training theory. The magic happens in the field. Here’s how we do it: 1. Lead by Example We start by demonstrating. I’ll engage a customer while the trainee watches, listens, and takes notes. It's about showing how the #theory works in the real world. 2. Step back, observe and Let Them Shine. Next, it's their turn. The agent takes the lead — no interruptions, no stepping in. Just pure observation. This part is crucial. It builds confidence and gives room for authentic growth. 3. Pause, Reflect, Sharpen. Right after the customer engagement, we review together. What went well? What can improve? It's a safe space to learn, sharpen the pitch, and grow stronger. One common mistake? Leaders jumping in too soon to ā€œ#saveā€ the #sale. While well-meaning, it disrupts the learning journey. Great coaching requires trust — trust in the process, and trust in your people. Coaching and accompaniment isn’t about #perfection; it’s about #progress. And every field moment is a chance to turn #potential into #performance. #SalesCoaching #OnboardingWithImpact #SalesLeadership #CoachingAndAccompaniment

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