New Hire Onboarding Checklist: The 30-60-90 Day Plan
Twenty percent of employee turnover happens in the first 45 days. The most common reason is not compensation or job fit - it is a poor onboarding experience that leaves new hires feeling confused, disconnected, and unsupported. Companies with structured onboarding programs retain 82% of new hires past the first year, compared to 49% without.
This checklist covers every phase from pre-boarding through the 90-day mark, organized into actionable items that HR teams and hiring managers can implement immediately.
Pre-Boarding: Before Day One
Onboarding starts the moment the offer is accepted, not on the first day. The gap between acceptance and start date is when buyer's remorse sets in, other offers arrive, and enthusiasm fades. Fill that gap with purposeful communication.
- Send a welcome email within 24 hours of acceptance with start date, dress code, parking info, and what to bring
- Mail a welcome kit (company swag, handwritten note from the hiring manager, team photo)
- Set up all accounts: email, Slack/Teams, HRIS, project management tools, VPN credentials
- Prepare their workstation - laptop configured, monitors set up, peripherals ready
- Assign an onboarding buddy from the same team (not the manager)
- Schedule first-week meetings: manager 1:1, team lunch, skip-level intro, buddy check-in
- Share pre-reading: company handbook, team wiki, recent project overviews
Day One: First Impressions
Day one sets the emotional tone for the entire tenure. The goal is for the new hire to leave feeling welcomed, oriented, and excited - not overwhelmed with paperwork and compliance videos.
- Greet them at the door (or on the video call for remote hires). Do not make them wander.
- Complete essential paperwork first and get it out of the way
- Office tour (or virtual workspace walkthrough) including kitchen, restrooms, meeting rooms
- Team introduction - brief, name + role + fun fact, keep it light
- Manager 1:1: share 30-60-90 day expectations, communication preferences, and how success is measured
- Lunch with the team (company-paid, no business talk required)
- End the day early - information overload is real, let them process
Week One: Foundation Building
The first week balances orientation with getting the new hire into real work. People want to contribute early, so give them a small, completable task by day three.
- Complete all compliance and security training
- Shadow a team member on a real task or meeting
- Assign a "quick win" project - something achievable in 2-3 days that ships
- Walk through the team's current projects, priorities, and roadmap
- Introduce key stakeholders from other departments they will interact with
- Daily 15-minute check-in with the onboarding buddy
- End-of-week 1:1 with manager: "What questions do you have? What is unclear?"
Days 8-30: Building Competence
The new hire should transition from observer to contributor. By day 30, they should be completing tasks independently with decreasing supervision.
- Own a real project or workstream (with a safety net)
- Attend all recurring team meetings and ceremonies
- Complete role-specific training (product knowledge, tools, processes)
- Have 1:1s with manager at least twice per week
- Buddy check-ins reduce to 2-3 times per week
- Document what they learned - this helps both the new hire and improves onboarding for the next person
- 30-day check-in: formal conversation about progress, surprises, and concerns
Days 31-60: Building Confidence
By the second month, the new hire should be operating at 60-70% of a fully ramped team member. The focus shifts from learning to executing.
- Take ownership of deliverables without daily check-ins
- Begin contributing to team decisions and planning
- Present work to the broader team or stakeholders
- Identify one process improvement and propose a solution
- Build relationships cross-functionally
- Manager 1:1s reduce to weekly
- 60-day check-in: discuss long-term goals, growth areas, and any role adjustments
Days 61-90: Full Contribution
The final phase marks the transition to full team member. By day 90, the new hire should be operating independently and beginning to shape their development path.
- Fully independent on core responsibilities
- Contributing to team strategy and roadmap discussions
- Mentoring newer team members or documenting processes
- First formal performance review with documented feedback
- Set goals for the next quarter collaboratively with the manager
- Onboarding buddy relationship transitions to peer relationship
- Solicit structured feedback from the new hire about the onboarding experience
Common Onboarding Mistakes
- Information overload on day one - spread training across the first two weeks
- No assigned buddy - managers are too busy; buddies handle the daily questions
- No quick win - people need to feel productive fast, not just read docs
- Forgetting remote hires - remote onboarding requires double the intentionality
- Treating onboarding as an HR task - the hiring manager owns onboarding success
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