Being onboarded into a nonprofit isn’t always pleasant. Usually it means a gauntlet of briefings, a pile of forms, a bunch of reading. And lunch.
If the onboarding was unpleasant but useful, then you could consider it a necessary evil. But all too often, it fails the utility test as well. How could providing so much information not be useful? When it’s not in service of accomplishing clear objectives. The path to better onboarding starts by asking what you are hoping for the new employee to accomplish through it.
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