Home  >  Posts  >

Revamping Our Onboarding Process for Product Designers

New team members deserve the best we can offer them right from the start.

Article • Feb 2017 • 9 min read

As a design manager, I spend a good chunk of time finding and recruiting new talent to join our desigsn team. With so many talented folks available to talk to, it can hard to find the best fit that matches the needs of our product teams and aligns with our unique culture at Creative Market.

Recently, it took me six months to find and hire a great product designer to join our conversion product team. As their start date approached, I went digging for the onboarding document that I had used in the past. I was disappointed by what I found. My document was just a list of tools, documents, and meetings to invite them to. I stared at the list and thought, “Surely, great onboarding is so much more than this?! Our new team members deserve the best we can offer them right from the start.”

How could they learn about and become comfortable in our company culture? How might I effectively walkthrough design team processes and best practices? What could I do to encourage them to build strong relationships with team leads and their product team more quickly? Clearly, I needed to rethink my approach.

Fast forward to today. Our newest product designer is a few weeks in and she’s doing very well. Through this process, I captured tips that might be useful as you onboard new product design team members and help them achieve their full potential.

At Creative Market, we believe that we’re stronger together, that every individual has a valuable contribution to make, and that working together should feel inclusive, effortless, and a ton of fun. So, we want to get onboarding right for every new person that joins the team. These insights are specific to our team at Creative Market, but I hope you find them helpful.

Through every step of their first few weeks, the design manager should reinforce your company culture and show how the product designer’s contributions can make an impact on company growth. To make sure we get this right, the design manager invites the team to share in the onboarding responsibilities.

It takes a village. The details matter, so don’t go it alone.

1) Build an Onboarding Foundation

Start During the Interview

Great onboarding starts during the hiring process. You and your team have the opportunity to paint the picture of your company culture, process, and values. The more you communicate about the realities of the job upfront, the greater returns you’ll find later in the process.

Make Your Preparations

The more you prepare to onboard, the more likely that your new product designer will feel comfortable, confident, and set up for success. Don’t saturate them with unorganized information all at once on their first day.Create a solid plan for the first month of core onboarding, and what you plan on focusing on for the next five months after that.

“According to a 2007 study by the Wynhurst Group, when employees go through structured onboarding, they are 58% more likely to remain with the organization after three years.”

Create a prioritized onboarding checklist for the new product designer to go through during their first two weeks. Pass this document to them on day one as a resource home for all of their information needs.

Before Day One

Every designer gets a little anxious about starting a new job. There’s a few ways in which we soften the first day experience for new team members.

2) The First Week 

Day One

The big day! Your new product designer is probably as nervous and excited as you and the team are to meet them. Be as gracious, clear, positive, and helpful as you can be. Focus only on the essential, non-critical items during the first day. It’s a lot to take in. Don’t skip ahead.

Day Two

As they enter their second day, your new product designer is starting to get a sense of the company and the team. Now it’s time to onboard them to the purpose and goals of the design and product teams they’ve joined, and how their role and contribution will make a difference.

Days Three, Four, Five

The rest of the first week should be about making the product designer feel comfortable with the work, tools, processes, and their team. Only assign them tasks associated with onboarding. Leave product work to the second week (or later). There will be plenty of time for that.

Weeks Two through Four

As the new product designer starts their second week, set the expectation that they’ll begin some light product work. There are three primary goals for the rest of their first month, which are the following: finish tool and process onboarding, build deeper relationships with the team, and start designing small projects with their product team.

Month Two and Beyond

Obviously, onboarding your new product designer doesn’t stop after the first month. The first four weeks are just the tip of the iceberg. I could keep adding a ton of conversations and information to continue to pass your new product designer for the first few months. Much of those insights are contextual to our brand, product, and company. These insights about the first month also works well for onboarding new brand designers and other team members, too.

Research shows that only 15% of companies continue onboarding after six months. While first impressions matter, putting together a structured onboarding program is what truly makes the difference. Plan on working close with your new product designer in the first six months to ensure best results for them, yourself, the team, and company. It’s a good idea to track closely with their product work through the first year as they discover how to achieve their full potential at your company.

Get them as deep into your product system as early as possible. Empower them to collaborate with the team to evolve your product in ways that can increase results for your company in the short- and long-term. Keep following up with them to make sure they’re understanding the work and enjoying the choice they made to join your product and team!

Note: A special thank you to our talented Head of Operations, @priyakothari , who has contributed much work to our tool and logistics onboarding process over the past 2+ years.