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Employee Onboarding Process for IT: 6 Steps

Written by Megan Anderson on February 11, 2020

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Contrary to common belief, the onboarding process isn鈥檛 just for HR. As an IT admin, you鈥檙e tasked with getting new users access to everything they need to be productive. But what鈥檚 the best, most effective way to set a new hire up for success? There鈥檚 no single 鈥渞ight鈥 way, but these six steps can serve as useful guidelines.

Employee Onboarding Process

1 – Gather User Information

Before a new hire starts, gather information from HR and the hiring manager to create their account. You鈥檒l want:

  • Names (first, last, middle or nickname, if applicable)
  • Contact information
  • Job title
  • Department
  • Starting date
  • IT resources they鈥檒l need access to
  • Type of device(s) they鈥檒l need

Getting all the necessary information on a new hire before they start will save you from needing to go back and make changes later on. Always be sure to verify that information with the new hire as well. The 鈥渢elephone effect鈥 鈥撯 where information is passed along a string of people 鈥撯 can easily lead to miscommunication and errors, so verifying information with its source is  advised.

2 – Set Up Their Workspace

Arriving on the first day to a desk setup with all the necessary resources can positively impact a new hire鈥檚 onboarding experience and save you stress in the long run. It prevents the new hire from experiencing anxiety over not having the right tools to accomplish work, and you鈥檙e spared from scrambling to provide those tools in a timely manner.

Order equipment where appropriate and leave communications open after the new hire starts. As they expand within their role, they may need more or different equipment. They may also need access to additional applications, which they鈥檒l need you to provision them to.

3 – Provision, Provision, Provision

New hires are eager to get to work, so provisioning them to all their IT resources is essential. This includes their machine, email, applications, and access to servers and infrastructure, where relevant. Depending on how you have things set up, this could be a tedious manual process, or it could be nearly automatic.

You could utilize JIT (Just-in-Time) provisioning, for example, to create user accounts automatically when they first launch an application. In addition, a cloud-based directory service can expedite this process through a simplified interface that allows you to assign users to groups and automatically provision them to resources using only a few checkboxes.

4 – Pass Along Credentials

Create their account and give them the credentials to access it on the first day. These credentials should always be temporary until the user sets up their own. 

The temporary credentials could be written on a sticky note you place on their new hire folder or sent to their personal email account. Walk them through the process of changing their password, and what to do in case they forget it. Add multi-factor authentication to those base accounts 鈥撯 their machine, email, and any other high value services 鈥撯 if possible.

5 – Demonstrate How to Submit Help Tickets

Users should always be able to reach out to their IT admin when they need help. By ensuring that a new hire has a way to get in touch with you, you can address all IT requests systematically and avoid repeatedly getting tapped on the shoulder.

6 – Give a Security Briefing

Now that a new user is part of your organization, it鈥檚 important to educate them on cybersecurity best practices. The more they know, the less risk they present. You can continue their education by holding regular cybersecurity training sessions or administering 鈥減op quizzes鈥 throughout their employment. That way, they鈥檒l stay informed throughout their time at your organization.

Learn More

Among these are many more helpful steps for onboarding new users. Have a few questions? Feel free to contact us. We鈥檙e always happy to help.

Megan Anderson

Megan is a content writer at 黑料海角91入口 with a B.A. in English from MSU Denver. Colorado-born and raised, she enjoys hiking, skiing, and all manner of dogs.

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