onboarding-new-hires

Structured 30-60-90 day onboarding framework drawing from 14 product leaders' approaches. Covers listening tours, milestone planning, early wins, and belonging through pairing rather than isolation on day one Emphasizes defining success at 90 days, 1 year, and 2 years before onboarding begins, plus identifying golden rituals to teach by first Friday Includes relationship design conversations, documented management philosophy, and early ownership assignment to accelerate ramp-up to 30-45 days Flags common mistakes: unstructured plans, solo work, task-only focus, delayed responsibility, and overpromises made during hiring

INSTALLATION
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SKILL.md

$2a

Define success at 90 days, 1 year, and 2 years

Lauren Ipsen: "The 90-day plan is overused but necessary, and that's just the tip of the iceberg. What should this person be doing a year from now? Two years from now?" Define what "crushing it" looks like at each milestone before starting the search.

Create immediate belonging through pairing

Heidi Helfand: "Help them feel a sense of belonging by not having their first day be them sitting alone. Have someone be a 'first pair.'" Ensure new hires are not working alone on day one. Assign a buddy to work with them immediately. Encourage sharing personal stories to build connection.

Teach golden rituals by the first Friday

Shishir Mehrotra: "Great companies have a very small list of golden rituals. Every employee knows them by their first Friday." Include core company rituals in the onboarding curriculum. These rituals should be named, known, and templated.

Engineer early wins for visibility

Melissa Tan: "How do I help them secure early wins? I'll suggest 'You should do this presentation - it's a great way to get visibility early.'" Identify low-hanging fruit projects for new hires. Create opportunities for them to present to leadership in their first weeks.

Document your philosophy publicly

Brandon Chu: "People joining my team already knew how I thought because they'd Google me. It passively onboarded a lot of the PMs." Write about your management and product philosophy. New hires can ramp up before their first day.

Have a "relationship design" conversation

Kenneth Berger: "For maybe your first 10-20 employees, have a relationship design conversation when they're hired." Collaboratively figure out the best way to work together given specific roles and personalities. This prevents friction and "out of integrity" behavior later.

Don't overpromise during hiring

Molly Graham: "Do not promise things you can't control. Be honest about the ambiguity and chaos of a scaling environment." Avoid promising stability, specific titles, or career paths you can't guarantee. Overpromises become "letter bombs" that demoralize high performers when they explode.

Accelerate ownership with clear cadences

Timothy Davis: "I want to try and make onboarding 30-45 days by giving them responsibility early. Here's everything we did, here's your responsibilities, go." Use an ops cadence spreadsheet to define task frequency. Assign campaign or project ownership within the first few weeks.

Use AI for low-friction knowledge access

Scott Wu: "New engineers can ask Devin questions about the codebase. It's nice to be able to ask without social pressure." AI tools can help new hires explore internal systems and ask "dumb questions" without feeling judged.

Questions to Help Users

  • "What does success look like at 30, 60, and 90 days for this person?"
  • "Who is their 'first pair' or buddy on day one?"
  • "What are the company's golden rituals they need to know by their first Friday?"
  • "What early win can we engineer to give them visibility and credibility?"
  • "Have you documented your philosophy anywhere they can read before starting?"
  • "What did you promise them during hiring that you need to deliver on?"

Common Mistakes to Flag

  • No structured 90-day plan - New hires need clear milestones. "Figure it out" is not onboarding
  • Leaving them alone on day one - Isolation kills belonging. Assign a pair from the start
  • All tasks, no relationships - Onboarding is social, not just functional. Prioritize introductions and connection
  • Delayed ownership - Don't wait months to give responsibility. Find ways to assign ownership in weeks
  • Over-promising during hiring - Be honest about chaos and ambiguity. Broken promises demoralize

Deep Dive

For all 14 insights from 14 guests, see references/guest-insights.md

Related Skills

  • Writing Job Descriptions
  • Conducting Interviews
  • Building Team Culture
  • Running Effective 1:1s
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