April 17
1. Onboarding determines whether a great hire stays.
Hiring creates momentum—onboarding either builds it or breaks it.
2. Most companies get onboarding wrong.
Only 12% of employees report a strong onboarding experience.
3. Structured onboarding drives retention and performance.
Clear plans, early engagement, and support dramatically improve outcomes.
Read the full blog here:
Why Onboarding Is the Second Half of Retention
Retention doesn’t begin after someone is hired. It starts the moment you begin the search.
Hiring with intention, aligning with culture, and setting clear expectations lay the groundwork.
But finding the right person is only half the equation. What happens next determines whether they stay.
Onboarding isn’t a separate strategy from hiring; it’s the direct continuation of it.
The momentum, trust, and excitement you built during the recruiting process either carries forward or gets lost in the first few weeks on the job.
Many organizations unintentionally break that momentum by:
Hiring isn’t the finish line. It’s the starting block.
You’ve done the hard work:
Now what? Too often, companies stop there.
The transition from candidate → employee should feel seamless.
When onboarding lacks the same energy as hiring, it creates early friction.
The reality…Only 12% of employees say they’ve had a great onboarding experience. That means most new hires start their journey feeling… underwhelmed.
When onboarding doesn’t match expectations, employees notice and act quickly.
The Data
| Insights | Impact |
| Decision timeline | 86% decide within 6 months if they’ll stay |
| Retention driver | 80% would stay longer with better onboarding |
| Cost to hire | ~$4,425 per employee |
| Cost to replace | ~21% of annual salary |
A poor onboarding experience doesn’t just cost you an employee. It costs your entire hiring investment.
When onboarding reflects the same intention as hiring, results improve dramatically.
The Impact
Employees who feel supported, trained, and confident in their first 90 days are far more likely to stay long-term.
1. Start Before Day One (Preboarding)
Preboarding, the period between offer acceptance and the start date, turns anticipation into attachment. Employees who engage in preboarding are more than 80% more likely to show up on day one and 60% more likely to stay beyond year one.
Stay engaged between offer acceptance and start date.
2. Deliver on What You Promised
Overselling a position is a fast track to early turnover. Be upfront about the realities of the job, the challenges, the environment, and the career path. If your recruiting process emphasizes culture, growth, and team connection, make sure those things are tangible from the very first day.
The right candidates value transparency and stay because of it.
3. Use a Structured 30-60-90 Day Plan
Onboarding should be strategic, not rushed. A strong plan includes clear milestones, defined expectations, regular 1:1 check-ins, measurable performance goals.
This builds clarity, confidence, and momentum.
4. Assign a Buddy or Mentor
Human connection matters. 65% feel more connected to culture and 56% become more productive after just one interaction.
A buddy extends the relationship built during hiring.
5. Don’t End Onboarding Too Soon
49% of companies only include onboarding for two weeks. Only 43% of employees have an onboarding experience that consists of more than a one-day orientation and a packet of information on benefits.
Onboarding should extend beyond the first few weeks. Continuous check-ins during the first year help new hires integrate and adapt to new projects and challenges.
Retention is a continuous thread. It runs through:
These stages don’t work in isolation. Onboarding is where the foundation is either strengthened… or lost.
Retention isn’t a reaction to turnover. It’s intentional.
The companies that win:
Recruiting, hiring, and onboarding should feel like one seamless experience. At Dawson & Dawson, we support that full journey. Helping our clients not only find the right talent but set them up for long-term success from day one.
Onboarding sets expectations, builds trust, and establishes early engagement. Without it, even great hires can quickly disengage and leave.
Onboarding should extend beyond the first few weeks. The most effective programs continue through the first 90 days and include ongoing check-ins throughout the first year.
Preboarding, clear expectations, structured 30-60-90 plans, mentorship, and continuous support are all essential for long-term success.