Digital Onboarding: Facilitators and Barriers to Improve Worker Experience
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- the quality of support perceived by the organization,
- the quality of the relationship in the workplace,
- the perception of fairness between efforts and achievement
- the results achieved in terms of learning skills in the workplace
2. Materials and Methods
- To explore the remote onboarding experience (meanings, attitudes, emotional dimensions) and its perceived outcomes, from the newcomers’ perspective;
- To investigate the perceived barriers and facilitators for a successful digital onboarding;
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- the need to have tools that allow direct observation of the research.
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- observation and punctual detection through devices where recording one’s observations allow essential data on which to reflect.
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- involvement of researchers and subjects in the data collection process to build a more meaningful body of data.
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- the data can be the source of a joint reflection process between researcher and subject to build an interpretative hypothesis jointly on the reality under investigation.
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- To be multinational companies belonging to the service or manufacturing sector that welcome internships as a first step for thinking about hiring. In other words, we selected companies that usually put a lot of emphasis on training interns and avoided hiring companies that have a very high turnover of interns. This pre-selection ensured that we hired companies and interns who have a significant mutual investment that makes the internship highly rewarding for both parties;
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- We have selected companies in which the internship tutor plays a role of real accompaniment of the intern and not just a formal or bureaucratic role. This set-up has allowed us to meet interns who experience a significant role with their internship tutor;
- processes of role assumption in digital on-boarding;
- processes of building relationships with colleagues;
- processes of coordination with one’s supervisor;
- processes of identification with the organization;
3. Results
3.1. First Theme: Understanding My Job
“Being hired at a new company and not being able to go to the office in person comes with limitations. Being behind a screen doesn’t help. How do I know what time to start and finish? What level of formality to use in emails? How to approach different team members? Understand what is allowed and what is not? These are a lot of questions that are hard to answer if you work from home.”
“Sometimes you feel like you know all the procedures you need to work the best, but you don’t know whether to dare and make suggestions that come to you! You don’t know if you unknowingly bump someone’s sensibilities because you don’t understand the actual limits you have!”
3.2. Second Theme: The Relationship with Colleagues
“Presenting remotely, having only a few minutes to make an impression creates stress.”
“Being away from the company is not conducive to building and maintaining international (wide-ranging) relationships on a formal level.”
“In-person meetings have the advantage of being able to share a coffee, lunch or beer and get to know each other more spontaneously.”
3.3. Third Theme: The Relationship with the Supervisor
“I couldn’t stand it anymore. Being able to give feedback on myself and receive it is an important moment of self-building that becomes imperative in my developmental journey. It’s not easy to learn how to evaluate and assess yourself.”
“I have realized the added value of constant feedback. The process leads to random assignment of one person, making the relationship work even more difficult with distance. It’s preferable to have someone next to you every day and in the meantime explain the business workings and how to do it. Daily supervision is better from continuous improvement; the saying-done is significantly different from writing things down to 2 h of comparison every three months. The career counselor should be chosen in the race and not regardless” (quotes taken from two one-pages questionnaires);
3.4. Fourth Theme: Relationships with the Organization
“I believe that technology is a limitation only if we see it as such and only if we want to live it as such. Even at a distance of 600 or 800 km, you can feel close and affectionate, and you can feel 100% (if not more!) part of your team and your organization. Engagement and affection depend on us and on who we have in front of us: wanting is power!” (quote taken from ethnographic sheet);
- Two emergent ways of working
“Here as soon as they understand that you are not aligned with the requirements and the expected role and they let you know that they will not reappoint you. You’re always on the defensive for fear of being considered unsuitable for the required profile.” (Quotes taken from ethnographic sheet);
“My mentor listened to some suggestions I made concerning data management. I had developed an expertise at the university that I was allowed to put to use right away.”
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
6. Limitation and Future Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Example of Ethnographic Sheet
Event Objective reconstruction of an episode/situation experienced during the onboarding experience: | Event Interpretation Reflections, considerations, personal emotions in relation to the event described: | Ideal Event Suggestions/alternatives for structuring an ideal onboarding moment (decline in relation to the fact commented on). |
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Appendix B
Event Objective reconstruction of an episode/situation experienced during the onboarding experience: | Event Interpretation Reflections, considerations, personal emotions in relation to the event described: | Ideal Event Suggestions/alternatives for structuring an ideal onboarding moment (decline in relation to the fact commented on). |
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| |
“During the face-to-face meeting and also at a distance, I asked several times for more information about the organization of the company, the procedures, the different roles. My company tutor limited himself to superficial information and, to date, although I have a fairly clear picture of the HR function, the rest appears to me to be rather blurred and undefined; “My company periodically organizes (approximately every 3-4 months) “homeboarding weeks”, during which new employees are invited for a week of training in one of the offices in their region. This year, unfortunately, due to the Covid-19 issue, it was not possible to hold this in-person event and had to be converted to a week of virtual group training. … get to know colleagues from other European countries and create important links within the company, allowing them to have the opportunity to move around widely. A virtual event doesn’t just allow you to stop and chat during a coffee break or have a beer together in the evening, it ends at the close of the webconference”; | “Recorded virtual trainings are great for the first approaches to a new job where you need to be trained, but being recorded they don’t allow for interaction. Having four experts from different areas who took the time to help me understand them better and make me autonomous allowed me to speed up my learning process a lot, while giving me the chance to get to know my colleagues more closely and bond with them. I really appreciated this initiative, both on the technical side and on the human relations side”; “I would say traumatic: after 3 years of work, finding yourself in a completely new job where your knowledge is zero was demoralizing. In this case, the distance didn’t help because most of the time, as I didn’t know the people, I had the impression that I was disturbing them every time I looked at my notes and had further doubts. In spite of this, the network of people assigned to me by my manager was unbeatable: very attentive, interested in making me understand things and incredibly helpful. The only criticism I found was related to the huge amount of topics touched on in a very short time’; | “To support a totally digital and smart onboarding every company should create for me a small and concise handbook that can accompany the new employee in all the small activities that are encountered once seated at the desk and opened the PC. … to create that level of autonomy that is essential for a new employee to get motivated and become a little confident with the tools they use and have been given”; “Ideally HR should hold a meeting to explain in a very transparent way what the best practices are within the company, clarify expectations and answer any questions. Then the manager you report to could set up a meeting and go into detail about how the team is structured, how it moves and what is expected. It could be very helpful to go to the office one day - just the manager and the new team member - to have a tour of the office, the facilities, to pick up the laptop and to get acclimatized or at least imagine what it might be like to work there; |
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Category | Theme | Codes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Understanding my job | Training | Training was very fast; Remote Training Program ineffective; Virtual Training ineffective; learning is hindered by technical information without prior general orientation. | 3 | 11 |
Search for information | Overload of technical information; Unmet training expectations; Inconsistency and incompleteness of information; Insist on obtaining needed information | 4 | ||
Understanding Role Expectations | I did not understand the requirements of my Job | 1 | ||
requests for help | If you ask for helping you’re afraid of disturbing; You’re afraid of asking the wrong questions; I realized I shouldn’t ask too many questions | 3 | ||
Relationship with colleagues | Relationships in question | Deserted offices; Can’t find anyone if you go to work; Network would be a powerful lever to help you. | 3 | 10 |
Uncertain confidence | You can’t trust people you don’t date | 1 | ||
Fear of exposure | From remote you don’t know how much you can "dare"; Taking the floor is more difficult; Taking the floor from remote is more risky; Attendance at meetings is reduced | 4 | ||
Low perceived support | I don’t think I can trust colleagues I don’t know personally; I don’t feel I’m part of a community of workers. | 2 | ||
The relationship with the supervisor | Poor feedback | My boss only gives me feedback when he remembers; Boss tells you how it’s going but in a somewhat formal way; Giving feedback in teams is not easy; Having feedback critical to construction of one’s development path. | 4 | 14 |
Fear of judgment | I fear my boss’ judgment a lot; I only know my boss remotely; With my boss we never see each other; It’s hard to trust; Asking for help remotely is perceived as a dangerous practice | 5 | ||
Unclear engagements | Remotely, the new joiner may feel a sense of alienation; The perception of insecurity is rampant; | 3 | ||
Fatigue to ask for help | Formalizing the request for help may generate fear of judgment from one’s boss; Asking for help may be felt as a source of disturbance | 2 | ||
Relationship with the organization | Poor organizational knowledge | I can’t get a feel for the organization as a whole; I know my industry well but not others; I don’t know the people who work outside of my group; Being remote one would expect a stronger effort of involvement; | 4 | 9 |
Poor identification with the organization | I’m here today to get my cv then I’ll put myself back on the market with no problem; I don’t feel particularly engaged in this company; impossible to sniff the climate; | 3 | ||
Psychological contract | Loyalty to the organization lasts as long as it suits me; I can decide to change when I want | 2 | ||
Total codes | 44 | |||
Total themes | 15 | |||
Total categories | 4 |
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Petrilli, S.; Galuppo, L.; Ripamonti, S.C. Digital Onboarding: Facilitators and Barriers to Improve Worker Experience. Sustainability 2022, 14, 5684. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095684
Petrilli S, Galuppo L, Ripamonti SC. Digital Onboarding: Facilitators and Barriers to Improve Worker Experience. Sustainability. 2022; 14(9):5684. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095684
Chicago/Turabian StylePetrilli, Sara, Laura Galuppo, and Silvio Carlo Ripamonti. 2022. "Digital Onboarding: Facilitators and Barriers to Improve Worker Experience" Sustainability 14, no. 9: 5684. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095684
APA StylePetrilli, S., Galuppo, L., & Ripamonti, S. C. (2022). Digital Onboarding: Facilitators and Barriers to Improve Worker Experience. Sustainability, 14(9), 5684. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095684