Hiring is expensive. Finding the right candidate takes time, energy, and money. So when someone accepts your offer, it feels like a win.
Then they leave within months. Back to square one.
If this keeps happening, you are not alone. And the problem is probably not who you are hiring. It is what happens after they start.
The Pattern Behind Early Departures
New employees arrive with expectations. They have just made a significant decision, leaving their previous role for something they hope will be better. They want to contribute, prove themselves, and feel part of something.
What happens next matters enormously.
When someone shows up, and nobody seems prepared for their arrival, it sends a message. Missing login credentials, no clear schedule, vague instructions to “shadow someone for a bit.” These details might seem minor, but they add up quickly.
Research from the Society for Human Resource Management shows that employees who experience poor onboarding are twice as likely to seek new jobs within their first year. The enthusiasm they had when accepting the offer erodes week by week until they quietly start looking elsewhere.
The Financial Reality
Replacing an employee costs between 50% and 200% of their annual salary. For a £45,000 role, that translates to £22,500 to £90,000 in recruitment, training, and lost productivity every time someone walks out.
For growing businesses, these losses compound. Each departure disrupts team dynamics, delays projects, and drains management attention away from strategic priorities.
What Changes the Outcome
Brandon Hall Group found that structured onboarding improves retention by 82% and productivity by over 70%. These are not marginal improvements. They represent a fundamental shift in how new hires experience your organisation.
The good news is that effective onboarding does not require a large HR team. It requires intention.
Start before day one. Send a welcome message after someone accepts. Let them know what to expect. Handle paperwork digitally so their first morning focuses on real conversations rather than forms.
Prepare their workspace. Desk, equipment, logins. Have everything ready. Small details communicate that they matter.
Set clear expectations from the start. New hires cannot succeed against undefined targets. Spell out what you expect in week one, month one, and the first 90 days.
Check in regularly. Quick daily conversations during the first week catch small issues before they grow. Ask what is confusing. Ask what support they need. These five-minute chats cost nothing but make a significant difference.
Making It Consistent
The challenge is doing this reliably. When workloads increase, onboarding tasks slip. Each new hire receives a different experience depending on how busy things happen to be.
HR platforms like FirstHR address this by automating the repetitive elements: welcome messages, document collection, task checklists. Everything stays on track regardless of what else is happening. Setup takes an afternoon, and pricing works for businesses without dedicated HR staff.
What It Comes Down To
Good hires leave disorganised onboarding. The pattern is predictable, and so is the solution.
The businesses that prepare for new employees keep them. The ones that improvise keep recruiting.