The first 90 days of any employee's job is critical to
success, for them, as well as for your team. What
are typical considerations when welcoming a new member to the team?
Consider these items:
1. Schedule time to welcome them to your team. Introduce
them to all team members, as well as other influencers and connectors in the
department/organization.
2. Create a series of meetings to:
Set expectations What do they expect from you as a
leader? What do you expect from them? How do these align? You may also want to have dialogue about expectations on the team level, depending on their role.
Review the job description. Spend time reviewing the
person’s job duties and responsibilities. What are the performance expectations? What does good performance look like? Time spent at the start of a person’s
placement is well spent in clarifying behaviorally what is expected of them.
Discuss how their role fits into the work of the entire
team, unit and organization. The more you can share about the bigger picture,
the easier it is for many employees to see the connections, and know what can happen to others when work is not completed on time or in a complete manner.
Discover their preferences and share yours. Discuss what they can expect with
communication, feedback, performance discussions.
Many HR departments will have a
pre-established on-boarding program. As a leader or manager the time spent up
front building relationships, clarifying expectations, and providing clear
information abou the role and priorities can be invaluable.
Questions:
What do you want to communicate
about yourself as a leader. The direction they will receive?
What are he goals and
priorities of the team?
How does their work will fit into the bigger picture of the
team and the organization?
What can they expect in terms of
feedback and support?
What should they know about your
style? What should they know about yours? (Learn more about styles through the Everything DiSC profile).
Have a great week,
Jennifer
Jennifer Britton, MES, CPT, PCC
Potentials Realized
Author of Effective Group Coaching and From One to Many: Best Practices of Team and Group Coaching (Jossey-Bass, 2013)
Phone: (416)996-TEAM
Read more about our coaching, retreat and leadership development offerings and support
As an author Jennifer Britton is known for her thought leadership in the area of group and team coaching. She is also a former leader and team builder who spent the first 13 years of her career working within the United Nations as well as the international aid sector. From Boardroom to jungle, beach and forest to mountains, Jennifer has worked to develop teams and leaders in more than 18 countries, and virtually many more. She founded Potentials Realized in 2004 and focuses on leadership, teamwork and coaching skills training
Potentials Realized
Author of Effective Group Coaching and From One to Many: Best Practices of Team and Group Coaching (Jossey-Bass, 2013)
Phone: (416)996-TEAM
Read more about our coaching, retreat and leadership development offerings and support
As an author Jennifer Britton is known for her thought leadership in the area of group and team coaching. She is also a former leader and team builder who spent the first 13 years of her career working within the United Nations as well as the international aid sector. From Boardroom to jungle, beach and forest to mountains, Jennifer has worked to develop teams and leaders in more than 18 countries, and virtually many more. She founded Potentials Realized in 2004 and focuses on leadership, teamwork and coaching skills training
2 comments:
welcoming a new member to the team means we have to consider some important points. those are the
1. allocate some time to introduce to team.
2. tell the roles and responsibilities
3. company expectations.
onboarding process
Give a feel welcome for a new employee is most important one.And give some time for them to introduce our self ans explain the roles and responsibilities for the employee in our company.
employee onboarding
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