Onboarding is an integral part to any new hire’s experience—for both the new hire and the organization. It’s important for the new hire, so as to ease them into the company and their role; and it’s equally important for the team they’re joining, so as to introduce them to the new hire and the new structure of the team with an additional member. At its most basic reasoning, onboarding is a way to get everyone on the team—new and tenured—accustomed to a new setup.
If we place so much importance on the idea of getting teams accustomed to a new member, why do we let the ball drop so frequently when a team member is hitting the road for new horizons?
When employees leave a company, they create as much of a ripple effect of change as adding new employees does—if not more.
Offboarding is the process of easing employees out of their role, the same as onboarding is easing employees into a role. As tempted as you might be to give your employee best wishes and send them on their way, your employees are ingrained into your company. They are a part of your processes and ingrained into your company. Offboarding offers you the chance to not only wrap up any loose ends, but to make sure the pieces of your company they had their hands in don’t begin to crumble in their absence.
You may already know the importance of offboarding, but you just aren’t sure of how to begin this process; or you’re just so overwhelmed by the idea of formally offboarding that you figure all the issues will iron themselves out in the end. But when you leave the issues to iron themselves out, you risk a few bigger problems: your employees leaving on bad terms that aren’t addressed, employees taking important information with them and not leaving it behind, leaving your current employees feeling frustrated, or tasks that simply just don’t get done any longer because no one else knew the departing employee was performing it to begin with.
So, how do you avoid running into any of these speed bumps without pulling driving yourself crazy trying to cut ties with employees? Here’s a quick rundown of must-haves for offboarding processes:
Of course, rules might be different if employees leave on bad terms, but for the most part an offboarding process isn’t just recommended, but should be an integral part of how you say goodbye to employees. You’re laying the groundwork for a good post-employer/employee relationship by walking through these steps, and, most importantly, you’re making sure the change of an employee leaving doesn’t rock the world of your team.