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  • Casual Articles - It Pays to Help New Staff Start Right

    Booster & Drainers
    Like huge anchors on cruise ships, other people can hold you down. Not intentionally, but their negativity impacts you. It’s hard to be winning at working when you’re anchored in place. It’s hard to see the next great idea and enthusiastically embrace it, when you’re feeling a sticky heaviness. And it’s hard to think creativity when you’re feeling empty.   Like a balloon with air pouring out, deflated and flat at the end, I hung up the phone, drained. For the most part I’d offered a supportive ear with occasional contributions of asked for advice. Several days in a row, he called or stopped by my office, with a second, and a third, and a fourth verse of the same song. After each encounter, my energy felt zapped. It got to the point where Jay’s presence alone started my energy leaving, replaced with an empty heaviness as if his negative energy was seeping into me.   It took me awhile to figure it out, but Jay was an en
    ons from the beginning. Ensure new staff are well versed in their responsibilities and corresponding levels of authority.

    Demonstrate and thoroughly explain your approach to staff appraisal. Show new staff the actual appraisal system and illustrate how good performance will be measured, assessed and rewarded.

    Point to the career paths of those who have come before to illustrate advancement possibilities and potential.

    5. Handle administrative matters.

    There will always be detailed procedures to follow and paperwork or online procedures to complete: employment agreements, insurance policies, benefits packages, charitable contribution forms, locker allocation, issuing passwords, uniform distribution – the list goes on and on.

    While these are important, resist the temptation to ‘get it all over with’ in one long (and very boring) session.

    Instead, spread those administrative tasks over several short sessions in the first few weeks. Hours spent filling out forms on the first day at work is not the way to inspire enthusiasm about the dynamic nature of your organization!

    6. Provide reality checks.

    Make sure your orientation program is not a fantasy tour of what you wish the company would be.

    If your program shows only the bright side of the business and the happy side of daily work, don’t be surprised if new employees are shell-shocked after two or three weeks on the job.

    Be open and candid about the pressures and realities of your company, your team, your customers, your industry and your competition.

    One large regional firm developed an extensive orientation program along the following theme: ‘You will know more about the problems of this organization than the people who have worked here for years!’

    This novel approach creates new staff who understand the realities and are ready to work – and work hard – to hel

    7 Steps To Managing Procrastination
    Procrastination happens to the best of us. And we rationalise our action (or lack of action in this case) in so many ways.The harsh reality is that procrastination is just a nice way of saying avoidance. Why do we avoid things? Simple - because we don’t enjoy them, or because they take us out of our comfort zone.So instead of succumbing to the dreaded beast – try these tips for getting over the procrastination hurdle:1. Be honest about why you are avoiding the activity. Is it fear, is it that you don’t get on with someone, is it because you have to deliver bad news and you’re not sure how to go about it?2. Commit to doing it at a certain time. I usually do the things I like to avoid in the morning, so they are out of the way.3. Prepare! If you need to write yourself a script, do it. If you need to have absolute quiet, switch off the phones for a couple of hours. Whatever it takes – set yourself up for success.4. Just do it!5. Reward yourself when you are finished – but only when you are finished. I reward myself by going out for coffee afterwards, or taking a break.6. Appreciate the feeling of getting something done that would normally sit in your in-tray for ages.7. Consider whether you should actually be doing this job. There are some things that we just aren’t suited to, or that we don’t have the expertise for. If the things you avoid fall into this category, consider outsourcing them
    Effectively orienting your new employees can pay big dividends in staff retention, employee commitment, company culture and customer satisfaction.

    Staff members who are properly trained and welcomed at the beginning of their careers will feel good about their choice of employer, fit in more quickly with peers and colleagues and readily contribute new ideas.

    Properly oriented employees will also speak well about your organization to their family and friends. They will represent you more confidently with customers, business partners and suppliers.

    But poor orientation of new employees can cost you dearly.

    Those who don’t start right don’t tend to stay long, either. High staff turnover means you must recruit, hire, orient and train new staff all over again.

    Staff turnover also takes a high toll on the morale of those who remain behind. When people leave your organization, those who remain inevitably wonder if they should seek new employment, too.

    While many managers agree that orientation is important, very few invest the time and attention necessary to make sure it’s done right and consistently. Now is a good time to review your staff orientation program to be sure your new staff ‘start right’.

    Here are some guidelines to doing it right:

    Think long-term.

    Effective orientation is a gradual process and does not end after the second day on the job. The initial induction of employees during the first few days is important. But it is even more important to make sure new employees fit in and feel comfortable over the long term. This can mean six weeks for a factory worker, or up to six months for new members of a senior management team.

    A time for everything, everything in it’s time.

    New employees arrive with basic questions that must be answered quickly: ‘What is the dress code? Where are the tools for my job? How does the telephone system work? When do people eat, meet and get paid?’

    After the initial induction period, your employee’s questions will change and mature: ‘How am I being appraised? Why is the system set up this way? How can I (safely) suggest changes? Who can I see for guidance, approval and support?’

    Don’t try to answer all possible questions in the least possible time. Stretch out the process to cover the first weeks or months on the job. This lets new staff understand essential information more gradually – and thus more completely.

    An extended orientation program also reassures new employees. Newcomers are under great pressure to perform and adapt. Your extended program shows you understand their situation, you care about their adjustment and you will continue to show interest and support over time.

    Involve everyone in the process.

    New employees are not the only ones affected by the design and quality of your orientation program. Other groups are influenced during this important period as well: peers, bosses, junior staff, senior managers, customers, suppliers and even the new hire’s family back home.

    Each group has different questions and concerns about the new employee. You can address their concerns by giving these groups an active role in the overall orientation program. Buddy systems, lunch meetings, panel discussions, site visits, family days – these methods and other activities can involve diverse groups of individuals in the overall orientation process.

    The reputation of your human resources and training departments are also at stake. If orientation is well planned and conducted, these departments will be seen by new employees as a valuable resource for addressing their future concerns. On the other hand, poor staff orientation sends an early message that these ‘people departments’ are ineffective or out-of-touch.

    A well-designed orientation program should accomplish seven major objectives:

    1. Create comfort and rapport.

    Newcomers want to feel a sense of acceptance and belonging inside their new organization. You can accelerate this process by creating abundant opportunities for new hires to interact with peers, managers, direct reports, colleagues from other departments, customers and suppliers.

    Diversify the time and nature of these meetings. Coffee breaks, meal times and after-hours get-togethers are all good choices for informal conversations. Include new hires in formal gatherings as well: customer visits, focus groups and even department or management meetings.

    Send your new employees on short assignments to visit other divisions and departments. Spending a week, a day or even an afternoon in a different part of the business will do wonders to build rapport and understanding for the new hires throughout your organization.

    2. Introduce the company culture.

    New staff usually want to fit in with accepted norms and values. ‘How do things really work around here? What importance do people attach to style, dress, presentation? Is punctuality important? Do meetings start on time? Are long hours the exception or expected?’

    Understanding the company culture only comes over time, through formal presentations, informal dialogue and a lot of personal experience. What gets said ‘officially’ is compared with what gets said ‘confidentially’ during lunch, after hours and between colleagues in the washroom.

    Extend your positive influence beyond the formal presentations. Create a buddy system or mentor program to match your most successful and enthusiastic staff with your incoming employees.

    But don’t expect your enthusiastic staff to stay that way if their mentor role becomes a burden. Give the mentor relationship real support: pay for lunches, allow time in the work schedule for mentoring conversations, include mentoring in your annual staff appraisal and show genuine appreciation to your chosen mentors with tokens of reward, recognition and respect.

    3. Showcase the ‘Big Picture’.

    You must help new staff find honest answers to all of the following questions:

    ‘Where has this company been? Where is it today? Where are we heading tomorrow? Who are our customers? What do they say about us? Who are our major competitors? What is our market position?

    ‘What is our current focus? Are we expanding operations, going regional and launching new technologies? Or are we trimming costs, stabilizing product lines and streamlining operations?’

    You can orient new staff to these ‘big picture’ issues with a well-designed presentation. Using multi-media, highlight your history and present status, future targets, goals and directions. Share humble beginnings, detail greatest achievements.

    Show excitement for future direction, but be candid about company weaknesses, too. Talk openly about difficulties and challenges in the market. Keep your ‘big picture’ presentation lively and up-to-date.

    In large organizations, very senior managers are often the best authorities to share insights on the future of the business. But these same managers may frequently be out of town or involved in handling current situations. They are not always available when you want them to participate in a new staff orientation session.

    You can solve this problem by capturing them on video as they discuss the opportunities and challenges facing your organization. Then use the video in your program and bring the managers back ‘live’ at a later date for panel discussions, question-and-answer sessions or informal ‘meet the manager’ conversations.

    4. Explain job responsibilities and rewards.

    Clearly define your expectations from the beginning. Ensure new staff are well versed in their responsibilities and corresponding levels of authority.

    Demonstrate and thoroughly explain your approach to staff appraisal. Show new staff the actual appraisal system and illustrate how good performance will be measured, assessed and rewarded.

    Point to the career paths of those who have come before to illustrate advancement possibilities and potential.

    5. Handle administrative matters.

    There will always be detailed procedures to follow and paperwork or online procedures to complete: employment agreements, insurance policies, benefits packages, charitable contribution forms, locker allocation, issuing passwords, uniform distribution – the list goes on and on.

    While these are important, resist the temptation to ‘get it all over with’ in one long (and very boring) session.

    Instead, spread those administrative tasks over several short sessions in the first few weeks. Hours spent filling out forms on the first day at work is not the way to inspire enthusiasm about the dynamic nature of your organization!

    6. Provide reality checks.

    Make sure your orientation program is not a fantasy tour of what you wish the company would be.

    If your program shows only the bright side of the business and the happy side of daily work, don’t be surprised if new employees are shell-shocked after two or three weeks on the job.

    Be open and candid about the pressures and realities of your company, your team, your customers, your industry and your competition.

    One large regional firm developed an extensive orientation program along the following theme: ‘You will know more about the problems of this organization than the people who have worked here for years!’

    This novel approach creates new staff who understand the realities and are ready to work – and work hard – to help

    How Do I Delegate Better?
    Lots of bosses are good at dumping, but not at delegating. They're great at off-loading the things they don't like to do and dropping assignments on their subordinates with little or no guidance.Other bosses think that delegating is always the best way to assign work. That's not right either. When you've got a competent and willing worker, delegation is the right way to go, but it's not a good choice for workers who aren't as competent or committed.Delegation is only one among the four basic options you when you ask a subordinate to do a piece of work. Here they are in order from most controlling to least controlling.Make the decisions about what is to be done and tell folks what to do. I call this style "Tell."Telling is good for people who may be new to the job and have lots of enthusiasm, but not enough ability yet. It's also the style you'll use with subordinates who've proved through several supervisory interviews that they may have the competence, but they seriously lack willingness. Those are discipline problems and tight control is appropriate.You can also discuss the work with your subordinate, but make the final decision. This is good for less experienced people who either need instruction or who need their confidence built up. I call this style "Discuss and Tell."Discuss and Tell is the style that most managers seem to like best and revert to under pressure. It seems like it let's them be bot
    the telephone system work? When do people eat, meet and get paid?’

    After the initial induction period, your employee’s questions will change and mature: ‘How am I being appraised? Why is the system set up this way? How can I (safely) suggest changes? Who can I see for guidance, approval and support?’

    Don’t try to answer all possible questions in the least possible time. Stretch out the process to cover the first weeks or months on the job. This lets new staff understand essential information more gradually – and thus more completely.

    An extended orientation program also reassures new employees. Newcomers are under great pressure to perform and adapt. Your extended program shows you understand their situation, you care about their adjustment and you will continue to show interest and support over time.

    Involve everyone in the process.

    New employees are not the only ones affected by the design and quality of your orientation program. Other groups are influenced during this important period as well: peers, bosses, junior staff, senior managers, customers, suppliers and even the new hire’s family back home.

    Each group has different questions and concerns about the new employee. You can address their concerns by giving these groups an active role in the overall orientation program. Buddy systems, lunch meetings, panel discussions, site visits, family days – these methods and other activities can involve diverse groups of individuals in the overall orientation process.

    The reputation of your human resources and training departments are also at stake. If orientation is well planned and conducted, these departments will be seen by new employees as a valuable resource for addressing their future concerns. On the other hand, poor staff orientation sends an early message that these ‘people departments’ are ineffective or out-of-touch.

    A well-designed orientation program should accomplish seven major objectives:

    1. Create comfort and rapport.

    Newcomers want to feel a sense of acceptance and belonging inside their new organization. You can accelerate this process by creating abundant opportunities for new hires to interact with peers, managers, direct reports, colleagues from other departments, customers and suppliers.

    Diversify the time and nature of these meetings. Coffee breaks, meal times and after-hours get-togethers are all good choices for informal conversations. Include new hires in formal gatherings as well: customer visits, focus groups and even department or management meetings.

    Send your new employees on short assignments to visit other divisions and departments. Spending a week, a day or even an afternoon in a different part of the business will do wonders to build rapport and understanding for the new hires throughout your organization.

    2. Introduce the company culture.

    New staff usually want to fit in with accepted norms and values. ‘How do things really work around here? What importance do people attach to style, dress, presentation? Is punctuality important? Do meetings start on time? Are long hours the exception or expected?’

    Understanding the company culture only comes over time, through formal presentations, informal dialogue and a lot of personal experience. What gets said ‘officially’ is compared with what gets said ‘confidentially’ during lunch, after hours and between colleagues in the washroom.

    Extend your positive influence beyond the formal presentations. Create a buddy system or mentor program to match your most successful and enthusiastic staff with your incoming employees.

    But don’t expect your enthusiastic staff to stay that way if their mentor role becomes a burden. Give the mentor relationship real support: pay for lunches, allow time in the work schedule for mentoring conversations, include mentoring in your annual staff appraisal and show genuine appreciation to your chosen mentors with tokens of reward, recognition and respect.

    3. Showcase the ‘Big Picture’.

    You must help new staff find honest answers to all of the following questions:

    ‘Where has this company been? Where is it today? Where are we heading tomorrow? Who are our customers? What do they say about us? Who are our major competitors? What is our market position?

    ‘What is our current focus? Are we expanding operations, going regional and launching new technologies? Or are we trimming costs, stabilizing product lines and streamlining operations?’

    You can orient new staff to these ‘big picture’ issues with a well-designed presentation. Using multi-media, highlight your history and present status, future targets, goals and directions. Share humble beginnings, detail greatest achievements.

    Show excitement for future direction, but be candid about company weaknesses, too. Talk openly about difficulties and challenges in the market. Keep your ‘big picture’ presentation lively and up-to-date.

    In large organizations, very senior managers are often the best authorities to share insights on the future of the business. But these same managers may frequently be out of town or involved in handling current situations. They are not always available when you want them to participate in a new staff orientation session.

    You can solve this problem by capturing them on video as they discuss the opportunities and challenges facing your organization. Then use the video in your program and bring the managers back ‘live’ at a later date for panel discussions, question-and-answer sessions or informal ‘meet the manager’ conversations.

    4. Explain job responsibilities and rewards.

    Clearly define your expectations from the beginning. Ensure new staff are well versed in their responsibilities and corresponding levels of authority.

    Demonstrate and thoroughly explain your approach to staff appraisal. Show new staff the actual appraisal system and illustrate how good performance will be measured, assessed and rewarded.

    Point to the career paths of those who have come before to illustrate advancement possibilities and potential.

    5. Handle administrative matters.

    There will always be detailed procedures to follow and paperwork or online procedures to complete: employment agreements, insurance policies, benefits packages, charitable contribution forms, locker allocation, issuing passwords, uniform distribution – the list goes on and on.

    While these are important, resist the temptation to ‘get it all over with’ in one long (and very boring) session.

    Instead, spread those administrative tasks over several short sessions in the first few weeks. Hours spent filling out forms on the first day at work is not the way to inspire enthusiasm about the dynamic nature of your organization!

    6. Provide reality checks.

    Make sure your orientation program is not a fantasy tour of what you wish the company would be.

    If your program shows only the bright side of the business and the happy side of daily work, don’t be surprised if new employees are shell-shocked after two or three weeks on the job.

    Be open and candid about the pressures and realities of your company, your team, your customers, your industry and your competition.

    One large regional firm developed an extensive orientation program along the following theme: ‘You will know more about the problems of this organization than the people who have worked here for years!’

    This novel approach creates new staff who understand the realities and are ready to work – and work hard – to hel

    Does Your Management Style Need An Overhaul?
    During a period of uncertain economic times, mergers, acquisitions, re-structuring, increased influence of technology, increased foreign competition or any number of other market and consumer shifts, attitudes, trends and expectations, it is vital that management be aware of the impact of their management style on the performance and productivity of their employees.This doesn’t meant that you should:- tighten the strings on employees - increase the number of meetings - cut budgets arbitrarily - abandon ship in the middle of a project, program or activity - hire more people - let people go -…there’s more, but I want to get to the point.What is the perception of the majority of your employees of your dominant management style? Do they see you as:- out of touch with reality? - letting arrogance rule the day? - overly interested in processes vs. results? - isolating yourself from the day to day operations? - delivering a lot of top-down mandates without bottom-up feedback? - just asking people to do more and more and more?Or, do they see you as:- really interested in people’s opinions and feedback? - empowering performance to the lowest levels in the organization? - encouraging creativity, imagination and new ways to operate?There are a number of management styles. Here are a few. See if you recognize yourself.1. Autocratic
    -designed orientation program should accomplish seven major objectives:

    1. Create comfort and rapport.

    Newcomers want to feel a sense of acceptance and belonging inside their new organization. You can accelerate this process by creating abundant opportunities for new hires to interact with peers, managers, direct reports, colleagues from other departments, customers and suppliers.

    Diversify the time and nature of these meetings. Coffee breaks, meal times and after-hours get-togethers are all good choices for informal conversations. Include new hires in formal gatherings as well: customer visits, focus groups and even department or management meetings.

    Send your new employees on short assignments to visit other divisions and departments. Spending a week, a day or even an afternoon in a different part of the business will do wonders to build rapport and understanding for the new hires throughout your organization.

    2. Introduce the company culture.

    New staff usually want to fit in with accepted norms and values. ‘How do things really work around here? What importance do people attach to style, dress, presentation? Is punctuality important? Do meetings start on time? Are long hours the exception or expected?’

    Understanding the company culture only comes over time, through formal presentations, informal dialogue and a lot of personal experience. What gets said ‘officially’ is compared with what gets said ‘confidentially’ during lunch, after hours and between colleagues in the washroom.

    Extend your positive influence beyond the formal presentations. Create a buddy system or mentor program to match your most successful and enthusiastic staff with your incoming employees.

    But don’t expect your enthusiastic staff to stay that way if their mentor role becomes a burden. Give the mentor relationship real support: pay for lunches, allow time in the work schedule for mentoring conversations, include mentoring in your annual staff appraisal and show genuine appreciation to your chosen mentors with tokens of reward, recognition and respect.

    3. Showcase the ‘Big Picture’.

    You must help new staff find honest answers to all of the following questions:

    ‘Where has this company been? Where is it today? Where are we heading tomorrow? Who are our customers? What do they say about us? Who are our major competitors? What is our market position?

    ‘What is our current focus? Are we expanding operations, going regional and launching new technologies? Or are we trimming costs, stabilizing product lines and streamlining operations?’

    You can orient new staff to these ‘big picture’ issues with a well-designed presentation. Using multi-media, highlight your history and present status, future targets, goals and directions. Share humble beginnings, detail greatest achievements.

    Show excitement for future direction, but be candid about company weaknesses, too. Talk openly about difficulties and challenges in the market. Keep your ‘big picture’ presentation lively and up-to-date.

    In large organizations, very senior managers are often the best authorities to share insights on the future of the business. But these same managers may frequently be out of town or involved in handling current situations. They are not always available when you want them to participate in a new staff orientation session.

    You can solve this problem by capturing them on video as they discuss the opportunities and challenges facing your organization. Then use the video in your program and bring the managers back ‘live’ at a later date for panel discussions, question-and-answer sessions or informal ‘meet the manager’ conversations.

    4. Explain job responsibilities and rewards.

    Clearly define your expectations from the beginning. Ensure new staff are well versed in their responsibilities and corresponding levels of authority.

    Demonstrate and thoroughly explain your approach to staff appraisal. Show new staff the actual appraisal system and illustrate how good performance will be measured, assessed and rewarded.

    Point to the career paths of those who have come before to illustrate advancement possibilities and potential.

    5. Handle administrative matters.

    There will always be detailed procedures to follow and paperwork or online procedures to complete: employment agreements, insurance policies, benefits packages, charitable contribution forms, locker allocation, issuing passwords, uniform distribution – the list goes on and on.

    While these are important, resist the temptation to ‘get it all over with’ in one long (and very boring) session.

    Instead, spread those administrative tasks over several short sessions in the first few weeks. Hours spent filling out forms on the first day at work is not the way to inspire enthusiasm about the dynamic nature of your organization!

    6. Provide reality checks.

    Make sure your orientation program is not a fantasy tour of what you wish the company would be.

    If your program shows only the bright side of the business and the happy side of daily work, don’t be surprised if new employees are shell-shocked after two or three weeks on the job.

    Be open and candid about the pressures and realities of your company, your team, your customers, your industry and your competition.

    One large regional firm developed an extensive orientation program along the following theme: ‘You will know more about the problems of this organization than the people who have worked here for years!’

    This novel approach creates new staff who understand the realities and are ready to work – and work hard – to hel

    Using The Internet For Job-hunting
    The Internet is a very useful tool for job seekers as it is a great source of information. Also, taking into account of a more wired world, getting online has never been easier. People can cost-effectively get Internet access in public libraries at broadband speeds. But with the fear of information overload, many job seekers do not fully utilize the many advantages of the Internet. This is never a good development.Here are some tips for job seekers:Viewing Corporate WebsitesBefore going for an interview, it is recommended to view the company’s corporate mission statement and goals. This information is readily provided in the company’s corporate website and should also be free of charge.Industry InformationIf you are interested in understanding the employment viability of a particular industry, you can use the search engine to get online information. You will be instantly directed to online newsletters (normally at no charge) and be able to see if you have the necessary skills to achieve career advancement.E-learningMany job seekers are not fully harnessing the power of e-learning to boost their skills. They give the reason that e-learning may not be fully recognized by Singapore employers as a job requirement. This view is erroneous. The attractive proposition of e-learning is that your study content is easily updated to match the relevance of your job industry. The onus is on you to choose the most r
    time in the work schedule for mentoring conversations, include mentoring in your annual staff appraisal and show genuine appreciation to your chosen mentors with tokens of reward, recognition and respect.

    3. Showcase the ‘Big Picture’.

    You must help new staff find honest answers to all of the following questions:

    ‘Where has this company been? Where is it today? Where are we heading tomorrow? Who are our customers? What do they say about us? Who are our major competitors? What is our market position?

    ‘What is our current focus? Are we expanding operations, going regional and launching new technologies? Or are we trimming costs, stabilizing product lines and streamlining operations?’

    You can orient new staff to these ‘big picture’ issues with a well-designed presentation. Using multi-media, highlight your history and present status, future targets, goals and directions. Share humble beginnings, detail greatest achievements.

    Show excitement for future direction, but be candid about company weaknesses, too. Talk openly about difficulties and challenges in the market. Keep your ‘big picture’ presentation lively and up-to-date.

    In large organizations, very senior managers are often the best authorities to share insights on the future of the business. But these same managers may frequently be out of town or involved in handling current situations. They are not always available when you want them to participate in a new staff orientation session.

    You can solve this problem by capturing them on video as they discuss the opportunities and challenges facing your organization. Then use the video in your program and bring the managers back ‘live’ at a later date for panel discussions, question-and-answer sessions or informal ‘meet the manager’ conversations.

    4. Explain job responsibilities and rewards.

    Clearly define your expectations from the beginning. Ensure new staff are well versed in their responsibilities and corresponding levels of authority.

    Demonstrate and thoroughly explain your approach to staff appraisal. Show new staff the actual appraisal system and illustrate how good performance will be measured, assessed and rewarded.

    Point to the career paths of those who have come before to illustrate advancement possibilities and potential.

    5. Handle administrative matters.

    There will always be detailed procedures to follow and paperwork or online procedures to complete: employment agreements, insurance policies, benefits packages, charitable contribution forms, locker allocation, issuing passwords, uniform distribution – the list goes on and on.

    While these are important, resist the temptation to ‘get it all over with’ in one long (and very boring) session.

    Instead, spread those administrative tasks over several short sessions in the first few weeks. Hours spent filling out forms on the first day at work is not the way to inspire enthusiasm about the dynamic nature of your organization!

    6. Provide reality checks.

    Make sure your orientation program is not a fantasy tour of what you wish the company would be.

    If your program shows only the bright side of the business and the happy side of daily work, don’t be surprised if new employees are shell-shocked after two or three weeks on the job.

    Be open and candid about the pressures and realities of your company, your team, your customers, your industry and your competition.

    One large regional firm developed an extensive orientation program along the following theme: ‘You will know more about the problems of this organization than the people who have worked here for years!’

    This novel approach creates new staff who understand the realities and are ready to work – and work hard – to hel

    Paper Shredder Prices
    Today, a number of manufacturers offer high quality paper shredders to suit everyone?s budget. Depending on features and functions, the price of paper shredders varies. Paper shredders are available starting form $10. Strip cut machines are relatively less expensive than crosscut models.A countless number of dealers are there in the paper shredder business scenario to provide paper shredders of all price ranges. Destroyit, GBC, Fellowes, Dahle, MBM, and Kobra are a few among the leading brands. The price of Destroyit shredder models for low volumes starts from $180. Their D.O.D/ NSA-CSS approved shredders and industrial shredders cost more than $5,000 and $28,000 respectively. Fellowes provides paper shredders from $10 to above $2,000. GBC also offers paper shredders of the same price range.Industrial paper shredders with self-sharpening A2 tool steel cutters are capable of shredding tons of materials, such as wooden planks and metal sheets. They cost more than $90,000. High security paper shredders with security levels crosscut 1/32" x 1/2" and crosscut 1/26" x 1/5" (designed to shed top secret documents) are also quite expensive. As a rule, the higher the security level, the higher the price.Before making an investment, it is better to make a comparison of prices. Also, read product reviews published on the web. Paper shredder prices can be obtained from websites of many popular paper shredder manufacturing companies. There are
    ons from the beginning. Ensure new staff are well versed in their responsibilities and corresponding levels of authority.

    Demonstrate and thoroughly explain your approach to staff appraisal. Show new staff the actual appraisal system and illustrate how good performance will be measured, assessed and rewarded.

    Point to the career paths of those who have come before to illustrate advancement possibilities and potential.

    5. Handle administrative matters.

    There will always be detailed procedures to follow and paperwork or online procedures to complete: employment agreements, insurance policies, benefits packages, charitable contribution forms, locker allocation, issuing passwords, uniform distribution – the list goes on and on.

    While these are important, resist the temptation to ‘get it all over with’ in one long (and very boring) session.

    Instead, spread those administrative tasks over several short sessions in the first few weeks. Hours spent filling out forms on the first day at work is not the way to inspire enthusiasm about the dynamic nature of your organization!

    6. Provide reality checks.

    Make sure your orientation program is not a fantasy tour of what you wish the company would be.

    If your program shows only the bright side of the business and the happy side of daily work, don’t be surprised if new employees are shell-shocked after two or three weeks on the job.

    Be open and candid about the pressures and realities of your company, your team, your customers, your industry and your competition.

    One large regional firm developed an extensive orientation program along the following theme: ‘You will know more about the problems of this organization than the people who have worked here for years!’

    This novel approach creates new staff who understand the realities and are ready to work – and work hard – to help their company succeed.

    7. Gain full participation.

    Give everyone a role to play in new employee orientation. Involve peers and colleagues in your mentor programs and buddy teams; engage top managers in talks and panel discussions; give junior staff a stake as hosts and guides in cross-department visits.

    Invite the new staff’s family members to a special ‘Meet the Company Day’ and take photographs at the event. Later, send the best photos back to their homes with a copy of your company’s newsletter – and a handwritten note from you to the entire family.

    Most important of all, gain full participation from the new employees themselves. Resist the temptation to project all the information in a one-way stream from the company to the new staff. Have your newcomers explore the company, research the competition, meet the customers – and then generate their own good questions for you and your colleagues to answer.

    Finally, get your new employees involved in welcoming the next batch of incoming staff. This ensures that your orientation program stays fresh and relevant. It can become a watershed event, making your new staff feel like company veterans: experienced, involved and useful.

    Key Learning Point
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    The time, money and human resources you dedicate to new employee orientation can be one of your best long-term corporate investments. Make sure your program is thoughtfully designed, carefully delivered, continuously upgraded and improved.

    Action Steps
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Gather a cross-functional team of recent hires, seasoned employees and key managers. Do a complete review of every aspect of your existing new staff orientation program.

    How does your current program measure up? What is being done well? What is engaging, motivating and effective? Is anything boring, tedious or out-of-date? What else could be included? What should be taken out?

    Revise your program and conduct a trial run. Ask the participants for suggestions to make your program even better. Keep adapting, keep improving. Keep it up!

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