Staff Onboarding Week 1 to 4 Template for E-commerce & Retail
A structured four-week onboarding program that guides new employees from initial orientation through to full integration into their role, team, and the broader organisation, covering training milestones, performance expectations, and relationship building.
Purpose
To ensure new employees receive consistent, comprehensive support during their first four weeks, building the knowledge, skills, and relationships needed to perform their role effectively and feel a genuine sense of belonging within the organisation.
Scope
This SOP covers the onboarding journey from the end of the first day through to the completion of the fourth week. It addresses training fulfilment, milestone check-ins, gradual responsibility increases, and social integration activities for all new permanent and fixed-term staff.
Prerequisites
- First-day SOP activities completed successfully
- Four-week onboarding plan customised for the specific role and department
- Buddy or mentor assigned and briefed on their responsibilities
- Training materials and resources prepared and accessible
Includes Australian Consumer Law (ACL) compliance features, GST calculations, and product safety record management.
Step-by-Step Procedure
Deliver Week One Structured Training
During the first week, provide foundational training covering organisational systems, core processes, and role-specific skills. Schedule a mix of formal training sessions, self-paced learning, and shadowing opportunities with experienced colleagues.
- 1.1Provide an overview of key business processes relevant to the role
- 1.2Schedule hands-on training for primary software and tools
- 1.3Arrange shadowing sessions with experienced team members
- 1.4Assign introductory tasks that allow the employee to practise new skills
- 1.5Conduct a brief daily check-in during the first week to answer questions
- Balance structured training with downtime so the employee can process new information
- Provide written guides or recordings that the employee can revisit later
Conduct End-of-Week-One Review
Hold a formal check-in team sync at the end of the first week to review progress, address questions or concerns, gather feedback on the onboarding experience so far, and confirm objectives for week two.
- 2.1Review completion of first-week training modules and tasks
- 2.2Ask the employee for feedback on the onboarding experience
- 2.3Clarify any misunderstandings about role expectations or processes
- 2.4Set specific learning objectives and deliverables for week two
- 2.5Document any support needs or adjustments required
- Use a structured agenda but keep the conversation open and supportive
- Share positive observations to build the employee's confidence
Expand Responsibilities in Week Two
Gradually increase the complexity and scope of assigned tasks during week two. Introduce the employee to cross-functional processes and stakeholders they will interact with regularly. Begin transitioning from shadowing to supervised independent work.
- 3.1Assign tasks with moderate complexity that build on week-one learning
- 3.2Introduce cross-functional contacts and explain collaborative workflows
- 3.3Schedule meetings with key stakeholders the employee will work with
- 3.4Reduce the frequency of daily check-ins to every second day
- 3.5Encourage the employee to begin attending regular team meetings and contributing
- Let the employee take ownership of tasks while remaining available for guidance
- Introduce stakeholders gradually to avoid overwhelming the new employee
Conduct End-of-Week-Two Review
Hold a second formal review to assess progress against the onboarding plan, discuss challenges encountered, evaluate growing independence, and set objectives for weeks three and four.
- 4.1Review task completion and quality of work produced in week two
- 4.2Discuss any challenges or areas where additional support is needed
- 4.3Evaluate the employee's integration with the team and stakeholders
- 4.4Adjust the onboarding plan based on progress and feedback
- 4.5Set clear objectives and deliverables for weeks three and four
- Be specific about what is going well and what areas need further development
- Encourage the employee to self-assess their progress
Foster Independence in Weeks Three and Four
During weeks three and four, the employee should be working with increasing independence on standard tasks. Focus on deepening role-specific expertise, building professional relationships, and beginning to contribute to team goals and projects.
- 5.1Assign standard workload tasks with minimal supervision
- 5.2Include the employee in campaign planning and team decision-making
- 5.3Encourage the employee to identify process improvements or ask questions proactively
- 5.4Facilitate informal networking opportunities with colleagues across the organisation
- 5.5Transition buddy or mentor support to an as-needed basis
- Resist the urge to micromanage — allow the employee to develop their own workflow
- Recognise and celebrate early achievements to build motivation
Complete Mandatory Compliance Training
Ensure all mandatory compliance and regulatory training modules are completed within the four-week period. This includes workplace health and safety, anti-discrimination, privacy, code of conduct, and any industry-specific compliance requirements.
- 6.1Verify completion status of all mandatory training modules in the learning management system
- 6.2Schedule any outstanding modules and ensure they are completed before the end of week four
- 6.3Record completion certificates and compliance acknowledgements in the HR system
- 6.4Brief the employee on ongoing compliance obligations and refresher training schedules
- Spread compliance training across the four weeks rather than cramming it into one session
- Use varied training formats such as videos, quizzes, and scenarios to maintain engagement
Conduct Four-Week Onboarding Review
Hold a comprehensive review team sync at the end of week four to evaluate overall onboarding progress, confirm the employee is performing at the expected level, gather final onboarding feedback, and transition to the standard performance management cycle.
- 7.1Review performance against the four-week onboarding objectives
- 7.2Discuss the employee's strengths and areas for further development
- 7.3Gather feedback on the entire onboarding experience for continuous improvement
- 7.4Confirm transition to the regular performance review cycle and set initial performance goals
- 7.5Formally close the onboarding period and update the employee's status in the HR system
- 7.6Schedule the next formal check-in as part of the standard review cycle
- Celebrate the completion of onboarding to mark the milestone positively
- Share the onboarding feedback with HR to improve the process for future hires
Archive Onboarding Records and Update Systems
Ensure all onboarding documentation, training records, and review notes are properly filed and archived. Update the HR information system to reflect the employee's completed onboarding status and any outstanding action items.
- 8.1File all signed onboarding documents in the employee's personnel file
- 8.2Update the HR system to reflect completed onboarding milestones
- 8.3Record any development goals or follow-up actions from the four-week review
- 8.4Send a summary report to the hiring manager confirming onboarding completion
- Use a standardised checklist to verify all records are complete before archiving
- Set calendar reminders for any follow-up actions identified during the review
Quality Checkpoints
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Expected Outcomes
Percentage of new employees who complete all onboarding milestones within the four-week timeframe
Average number of weeks until new employees reach the expected performance level for their role, measured against role-specific benchmarks
Percentage of new employees who remain with the organisation after 90 days, indicating effective onboarding and cultural fit
Frequently Asked Questions
What if the new employee is struggling to keep up with the onboarding plan?
If an employee is struggling, the hiring manager should adjust the pace of the onboarding plan, provide additional training or support resources, increase the frequency of check-ins, and consult with HR if further intervention is needed. The goal is to support success, not to rigidly follow a timeline.
What role does the buddy or mentor play during the four weeks?
The buddy or mentor provides informal support, answers day-to-day questions, helps the new employee navigate organisational culture, introduces them to colleagues, and serves as a safe person to approach with concerns that they might not raise with their manager.
How should onboarding differ for senior versus junior roles?
Senior roles typically require less hands-on training for basic systems but more time on strategic context, stakeholder relationship building, and understanding organisational dynamics. Junior roles need more structured skill-building and closer supervision during the early weeks.
Should onboarding continue beyond four weeks?
While this SOP covers the first four weeks, effective onboarding ideally continues through the probation period with regular check-ins, ongoing training, and progressive responsibility increases. The four-week milestone marks the transition from intensive onboarding to standard performance management.
How do you measure the effectiveness of the onboarding program?
Effectiveness is measured through new hire satisfaction surveys, time to productivity metrics, 90-day retention rates, hiring manager feedback, and analysis of onboarding completion rates. These metrics should be reviewed quarterly to identify trends and improvement opportunities.
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