Onboarding New Engineers: First 30 Days That Stick
Onboarding sets the tone for how quickly a new engineer can contribute and whether they stay. A chaotic or passive first month leads to slow ramp-up and early turnover. Here’s how to make the first...

Source: DEV Community
Onboarding sets the tone for how quickly a new engineer can contribute and whether they stay. A chaotic or passive first month leads to slow ramp-up and early turnover. Here’s how to make the first 30 days of engineering onboarding stick: clear plan, real context, and early wins. Why the First 30 Days Matter Speed to productivity: People who know where to find things and how work gets done ship sooner. Belonging: Feeling useful and included in the first month predicts retention. Expectations: A structured start signals that the team takes growth and clarity seriously. Treat onboarding as a product: define success, design the experience, and iterate based on feedback. Before Day One Access and setup. Accounts, repo access, dev environment, and tools. Document the steps so the new hire (or a buddy) can run through them. Test the doc on a fresh machine. Schedule the first week. Block time for intro meetings, onboarding sessions, and first tasks. Avoid leaving big gaps or overwhelming them