Onboarding is no longer just an administrative formality; it has become a strategic lever to accelerate productivity, boost engagement, and reduce turnover. However, many Swiss SMEs and mid-market companies still struggle to structure this process, risking the disorientation of new hires and undermining internal coherence.
In an environment where every day counts, a poorly designed integration journey can cost time and motivation. This article highlights three frequent mistakes to avoid and shows how to leverage modern HR platforms—employee portals, automated workflows, and document centralization—to turn the onboarding experience into a genuine competitive advantage.
Lack of a Well-Defined Onboarding Roadmap
With an onboarding phase lacking a clear process, new hires remain uncertain about their initial tasks. This absence of structure hinders skill development and delays employee autonomy.
Impacts of a Disorganized Integration Journey
When onboarding lacks framework, every step becomes a source of frustration. Managers spend considerable time repeating the same information, while new recruits struggle to understand their priorities. The lack of clear milestones creates a feeling of abandonment, reducing engagement from day one.
This confusion slows the delivery of initial operational results, and companies often observe a gap between the expectations set and the actual duties of the role. Handover timelines stretch out, resulting in an overall drop in productivity.
In the long run, this situation can even lead to premature turnover, as employees look elsewhere for a smoother integration experience. The investment made during recruitment is then partly lost.
Concrete Example from an Industrial SME
A company specializing in the manufacture of mechanical components discovered that its new engineers took an average of six weeks to reach their expected performance level. Onboarding procedures were not formalized: documents were scattered, there was no welcome schedule, and meetings were improvised.
This situation highlighted the importance of a detailed roadmap. Managers noted delayed project kick-offs, repeated requests for information, and widespread dissatisfaction.
The example demonstrates that a solid structure—even for a team of thirty employees—reduces time to autonomy and helps meet client deadlines, which is essential in a competitive sector.
Best Practices for Defining a Structured Process
To avoid this drift, it is crucial to map out every step of onboarding: administrative preparation, job-specific training, team integration, and regular follow-up. Each phase should be formalized in a guide that is easily accessible.
Defining a precise timeline, with clear milestones and responsible parties, ensures a linear and measurable progression. A shared schedule hosted on a collaborative platform guarantees transparency and accountability for every stakeholder.
Finally, scheduling checkpoints at 30, 60, and 90 days encourages feedback and allows the journey to be adjusted according to the actual needs of both the employee and the organization.
Poorly Defined Responsibilities and Roles
When each person’s role isn’t specified, onboarding becomes a chaotic exercise where everyone assumes someone else is handling it. This confusion hinders cross-functional collaboration and compromises rapid skill acquisition.
Consequences of Organizational Ambiguity
Without clearly appointed contacts, new hires won’t know whom to approach with each question. HR, the direct manager, or a designated mentor may all be solicited indiscriminately, creating redundancies and waiting times.
This lack of coordination also affects priority management: critical tasks remain unassigned, training sessions are scheduled too late, and initial assignments are delayed.
Beyond efficiency, this situation undermines the employee’s trust in the company: without structure, the promise of a professional integration loses all credibility.
Concrete Example from a Financial Services Firm
A financial services firm observed that 40% of its new hires did not have a designated mentor within the first week. Technical questions were directed to various contacts, resulting in contradictory answers.
This ad-hoc approach led to delays across several projects and misunderstandings between teams. The company realized that assigning a clearly identified mentor for each new employee was indispensable.
The example demonstrates the importance of a collaborative ecosystem in which each participant knows their scope and responsibilities, ensuring a coherent integration experience.
Structuring Responsibilities to Streamline Integration
Appointing a single point of contact (either the operational manager or a mentor) is the essential first step. This mentor should have a mission brief and clear objectives to guide the new hire.
Concurrently, HR should develop a meeting schedule with the various stakeholders: IT, training, security, and business units. Each step must be validated to avoid oversights.
Implementing a shared dashboard allows tracking the progress of these tasks and quickly identifying any blockages, enabling proactive intervention.
{CTA_BANNER_BLOG_POST}
Scattered Documents and Information
Dispersing contracts, manuals, and access credentials across multiple tools or paper media undermines coherence and creates friction from the outset. The time lost searching for resources blocks skill development and fosters a sense of disorganization.
Risks Associated with Documentary Dispersion
When information is stored in various locations—network folders, email inboxes, local drives—the employee spends precious time hunting down what they need. Every minute lost weakens their engagement.
Moreover, document version control becomes problematic: multiple versions of the same manual may circulate, causing errors and inconsistent practices depending on the contact.
Finally, this situation increases the risk of non-compliance, especially regarding regulatory or safety processes: an employee might start without critical process knowledge.
Concrete Example from an E-Commerce Company
An e-commerce firm discovered that its internal usage guides were spread across an intranet, shared folders, and paper printouts. New employees spent an average of two days gathering all the necessary information.
This fragmentation led to procedural errors and a feeling of isolation. The company then opted for a centralized employee portal.
The example illustrates that immediate content centralization drastically reduces friction and provides secure access to essential documents.
Centralization and HR Self-Service
Modern HR platforms offer a centralized employee portal that brings together contracts, manuals, online training, and administrative forms. Self-service lets employees autonomously find what they need.
Thanks to automated workflows, required documents are generated and accessible from day one, with full version traceability. Managers can track reads and approvals in real time.
Such a digital ecosystem ensures coherence, compliance, and speed while freeing HR teams from repetitive manual tasks.
Modern HR Platforms: A Strategic Performance Lever
Adopting automated workflows and employee portals transforms onboarding into a scalable, measurable process. It ensures advance preparation, organizational consistency, and an engaging experience for every new hire.
Measurable Benefits for the Company
Key indicators—average time to autonomy, training completion rates, new-hire satisfaction—become easily quantifiable. These metrics help continuously refine the onboarding journey.
An internal study conducted at a Valais-based SME showed a 25% reduction in time to competency after implementing an employee portal and automated workflows.
Beyond efficiency gains, centralization and digitization strengthen the employer brand’s coherence and contribute to long-term talent retention.
Onboarding: From Administrative Integration to a Retention Lever
A structured onboarding process, with a clear roadmap, defined roles, and centralized documentation, turns the arrival of new employees into a seamless, engaging journey. Leveraging modern HR platforms—automated workflows, employee portals, and self-service—accelerates skill acquisition, ensures compliance, and reinforces cultural cohesion.
For IT directors, digital transformation leaders, and executive committees, investing in a digitized onboarding process signals professionalism and serves as a strategic retention tool. Our Edana experts support Swiss SMEs and mid-market companies in deploying scalable, secure, and modular solutions tailored to each business context.















