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All
Aboard!
Downloads:
Orientation
Checklist (DOC)
Related Trade Secrets:
Pendaflex Dependency
 
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©
Bill Main & Associates

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The interviews are over. The offer has been made.
You can finally relax because that promising young worker has chosen YOU!
They're excited and ready to get to work when they show up for their first
shift, but now the pressure is on.

You have to reaffirm
that they made the
right decision to come
to work for you.
Conducting an employee orientation session is the ultimate second impression.
With a shortage of good workers out there, you must be more than a source
of a paycheck. Your employee orientations should be more than a mere tour
of the facilities and brief overview of company do's and don'ts. Make
orientations first step in an ongoing employee retention program. Here's
how to make the most of your sessions:
Get Wordy!
When it comes to educating team members about their new workplace, offer
as much information as you can. Share the history of your operation, the
details of your menu, and how the whole team works together for a dining
experience that can't be beat. Pretend new hires are press reporters.
Give them the most impressive and enthusiastic tour possible.
Managers Are People, Too
Put faces to the names of the people on your organizational chart. Don't
let your management team members hide in their cushy corner offices during
new employee orientations. Get them involved. Let human resources give
an overview of special company policies. Have the controller share the
correct way to report tips. Ask the head chef to extol the virtues of
his menu and cuisine. This will do wonders to foster the sense of teamwork
crucial to a successful operation. Oh and by the way. Get the head honcho
in there too. My partner and I used to conduct orientations on a regular
basis.
Spread It Out
We've all experienced a full day of lectures, lessons, policies and training
modules. Not much fun.. By the end of a full-day marathon I guarantee
everybody's name is a blur, and the retention factor, along with enthusiasm,
has sunk dangerously low. Spread your orientation out over several days
or shifts. A little bit of hands-on work mixed in with the policy reviews
and paperwork will ease the transition.
Be Hospitable
We are in the hospitality business. Don't wait until an employee leaves
to celebrate them. Celebrate the new hires, too. Introduce them at pre-shift
briefings, put their photo on the bulletin board, make them wear a name
tag that says "I'm the new guy" (just kidding!), or even throw a party
once a month to welcome new employees to the team.
Of course, none of this can or should replace a thorough and systematic
review of company policies, completion of forms, and the like. To help
Trade Secrets Members make sure they don't leave out any details, we've
provided a customizable Orientation
Checklist excerpted
from our Trade Secrets Employee
Recruiting and Hiring Protocols & Forms. If you'd like to order the
complete package, visit our on-line
product catalog.
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