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I think day one at a new job is the most important. It is going to set the pace for the rest of the job. I’m always conscious of first impressions and nothing is more important than a job’s first impression. There are only a few ways a first day can go though:
I’ve experienced a mixture of all these and I know there are plenty more. I’ve walked into a small business (4 people) and had to find out why the router isn’t working anymore, contact the ISP and put together a proposal as to which provider we should switch to (JIC).
I’ve walked into a cubicle farm and been handed boring, menial tasks because nobody was there to supervise me yet and help me get to work on a project. I’ve gone to three consecutive weeks of training worth absolutely nothing.
I think companies should start to see the value of the first scenario. It’s like a First Class Interview because your new hire will either sink or swim. Why waste 16-40 hours of salaried time getting them acclimated, trained and filling out papers that might not be relevant in a few weeks? What if they fail in a month and you had already wasted a few days paying them. (Yes, I’m suggesting that interviewing is imperfect and some folks will slip through the cracks, but that’s another discussion.)
Have you ever had a spectacular first day? One that set the pace for the rest of your time with the company?
Devin Reams works for Crowd Favorite as an account manager. He deals with new clients, old clients, projects, and developers and tries to make each party happy. Once described as a "web ninja", Devin is sensibly impulsive, consistently non-committal, and passionately impartial to the world around him. He enjoys skiing, golfing, talking in the third person and long walks on the beach.
Contact: devin@reams.com or 303.835.3512.