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Steps to Design and Review an Onboarding Process

オンボーディングプロセスの設計・見直しの手順

Many people may wonder how to design and how to review the onboarding process, which greatly influences the retention of new customers and new employees. This article, after organizing what an onboarding process is, explains the steps for designing it and how to proceed with reviewing an existing process, in a way that is easy for beginners to understand.

What is an onboarding process?

An onboarding process refers to the series of steps that support newly joined customers or members so they can adapt smoothly to a service or organization and feel value early on. Rather than a one-off training or initial setup, its feature is designing the whole of what to deliver, in what order, and when.

The significance of designing it as a process

When you capture onboarding not as a collection of one-off measures but as a continuous flow, it becomes easier to see where dropout tends to occur and which step is a bottleneck. As a result, the major benefit is that it becomes easier to identify the places that should be improved.

The basic stages of an onboarding process

Many onboarding processes are broadly composed of the following stages.

  • Welcome and initial setup: Remove the anxiety right after starting use, and support the preparation to begin.
  • Learning basic operations: Help them learn the minimum usage so they can take the first step.
  • Value experience (activation): Bring them to the key experience where they feel glad they used it.
  • Retention and expansion: Encourage continued use and broaden the scope of usage.

By being aware of these stages, it becomes easier to notice omissions or imbalances across the whole process.

Steps for designing an onboarding process

To design an onboarding process from scratch, proceed with the following steps.

  1. Define the goal (activation): Concretely define the state in which the customer or member has felt value. This becomes the goal of the whole process.
  2. Visualize the current experience: Map out the flow from starting use to the goal, together with the customer's actions and emotions.
  3. Break down the steps: Divide the path to the goal into small, manageable steps and design gradual success experiences.
  4. Assign touchpoints and means: For each step, decide by which means, such as guides, email, or support, you will provide assistance.
  5. Set metrics: Decide in advance the metrics for measuring effect, such as the progress rate and completion rate of each step.
  6. Start small and verify: Rather than aiming for perfection from the start, try it with some customers and refine it while watching their reactions.

Steps for reviewing an onboarding process

If you already have a process, proceed with the review using the following steps.

  1. Identify drop-off points with data: Look at the progress rate of each step and grasp where customers are dropping off.
  2. Form hypotheses about the cause: Infer the causes of drop-off, such as too many steps or value not being conveyed.
  3. Prioritize and improve: Starting with the places that have high impact and are easy to address, consolidate steps and improve guides.
  4. Verify the effect and make it standard: Compare the metrics before and after the change, and incorporate effective changes into the standard process.

Rather than ending the review after one pass, repeating it while watching the metrics gradually raises the accuracy of the process.

Metrics for measuring an onboarding process

The effect of the process cannot be tracked by feel; it must be tracked with numbers. The main metrics to watch are as follows.

  • Activation rate: Shows the proportion of users who reached the initial milestone of feeling value.
  • Time to Value: The time until the customer feels the first value; the shorter it is, the more it leads to retention.
  • Step completion rate: Shows how many users completed each step, letting you identify stumbling points.
  • Retention rate and churn rate: A metric directly tied to results, showing whether people keep using the product after onboarding.

Summary

An onboarding process is a series of steps that support newly joined customers or members so they can feel value early. It is important to be aware of stages such as welcome, basic operations, value experience, and retention, and to design in order from defining the goal, to breaking down the steps, to setting metrics. Furthermore, by identifying drop-off points with data and continuing to review with priorities, the accuracy of the process rises. Start by mapping out your own onboarding as a single flow and finding the stumbling points.

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