The First 30 Days: How to Set New Hires Up for Success
Your onboarding doesn’t need to be fancy—but it does need to be intentional. Here’s how to structure a new hire’s first month so they feel aligned, supported, and ready to contribute.
Published on February 25, 2025
Why the First Month Matters
New hires are watching, listening, and absorbing everything. It’s their window into your culture, systems, and values. What they experience early on shapes how they contribute—and how long they stay.
Research shows that employees who experience structured onboarding are 58% more likely to remain with a company after three years. In architecture and design, where project cycles are long and team cohesion matters, that consistency is gold.
Key Takeaways
Day 1 sets the tone—make it human and organized.
Clarity beats charisma—be explicit about expectations.
Pair new hires with mentors or buddies.
Spread onboarding over time—don’t frontload everything.
Early wins build confidence and momentum.
Before They Start: Set the Stage
Send a welcome email with Day 1 details and team intros
Prep their tools, software, accounts, and space (if in person)
Share a clear schedule for week one
Introduce their mentor, buddy, or main point of contact
Include a short welcome video from the founder or creative director—it helps humanize leadership.
This signals preparedness—and respect. The smoother their entry, the sooner they can contribute meaningfully.
Day 1: Make It Personal and Practical
Start with a warm hello (from the whole team if possible)
Give them a tour—physical or virtual
Walk through their schedule, tools, and key contacts
Keep it simple: 2–3 goals for the day
Pro Tip: End with a small gesture—swag, a studio note, a shared lunch. Day 1 memories last.
Also, give space. Don’t pack the first day with back-to-back sessions. Let them absorb and breathe.
Week 1: Focus on Context and Culture
Share the studio’s origin, values, and design philosophy
Outline key projects, clients, and recent wins
Show how teams collaborate (tools, rituals, rhythms)
Encourage questions, no matter how small
Assign a small, low-risk task to build early contribution. Confidence comes from doing.
Invite them to shadow meetings. Let them observe internal reviews, client calls, or team syncs—even if they’re not presenting yet.
Week 2–3: Expand Scope, Build Trust
Assign a medium-scope task with peer review built in
Include them in team critiques or client meetings
Invite them to co-present or observe process steps
Ask for their perspective: “How does this compare to past roles?”
This builds psychological safety—and helps them integrate faster.
Manager Tip: Send a quick pulse check: “On a scale of 1–10, how clear do you feel about your role and expectations?” Use it to course-correct early.
Week 4: Review, Reflect, Re-align
Schedule a one-on-one check-in
Ask: “What’s working? What’s confusing?”
Revisit goals, expectations, and growth areas
Adjust scope if needed
End the month with a small milestone—presentation, doc, or reflection. Closure builds confidence.
Even better: let them present a brief “First 30 Days” insight to the team. What they’ve learned, seen, or suggest. It validates their voice and strengthens belonging.
Who Should Own Onboarding?
Hiring manager: owns timeline and expectations
Team lead: integrates role-specific training
Buddy: answers quick questions, shares cultural context
Ops/admin: handles logistics and access
Shared ownership = stronger systems.
If you’re a small studio, one person might wear multiple hats—but still define who’s leading what.
Tools to Support Onboarding
Welcome handbook or Notion page
Role guide with tools, acronyms, file structures
Org chart and team directory
Calendar of studio rituals (crits, all-hands, 1:1s)
Shared goals tracker or 30/60/90 doc
Consider using Loom videos to demo how internal systems work. Visual learning beats long PDFs.
Sample 30-Day Timeline
Day 1–2: Studio tour, systems setup, team intros Week 1: Light reading, small tasks, shadowing Week 2: Medium tasks, intro to project workflows Week 3: Start contributing to real project cycles Week 4: Review, feedback, reflection, goal setting
This pacing prevents overload and builds confidence.
What Great Studios Do Differently
Celebrate small wins in the first month
Normalize asking “how are you settling in?”
Make room for shadowing, learning, and social connection
Avoid info dumps—pace learning over time
They also follow up on what they promise. If you say, “We’ll revisit your goals in a month,” do it.
Red Flags to Avoid
No check-ins or feedback in the first 30 days
Onboarding handled entirely by one overwhelmed person
“Figure it out” culture with no documented systems
Copenhagen studio: assigns every new hire a “design dialogue” partner to reflect weekly
Melbourne firm: creates a visual onboarding map with milestones
NYC architecture office: ends every Friday with a 15-minute “Week in Review” that includes new hires
Small touches make big impressions.
Final Thought
The first 30 days aren’t just an intro—they’re a design challenge. When you craft that experience with clarity and care, new hires start not just oriented, but empowered.
Build it right, and they don’t just join your studio. They invest in it.