Originally published on Substack on Fed 17th, 2026

The Situation: An Operator Losing Line-Level Employees

Executive leaders at a multi-location, multi-state company believed they had a strong onboarding process in place. All new hires completed their paperwork, they were entered into payroll, and they received an email with their start date. From leadership’s view, this was all that was needed. However, culture leaned slightly negatively and turnover was still high.

Hourly employees received paperwork and task training, but little else. Many didn’t know who owned the company. Few understood that the business was part of a franchise. Entry-level roles felt transactional and temporary — not because these roles lacked importance, but because no one explained the bigger picture. New employees never bought in and never knew that there was an actual career path forward within the company.

Managers, already stretched thin, focused on getting people through training quickly. Onboarding became something to get through, not something to invest in. Minimal attention during the first weeks became normal. Turnover followed.

Effective onboarding is crucial for retaining talent and enhancing workplace culture.

The Root Cause: Employee Onboarding was Administrative, Not an Experience

onboarding, process, orientation, leadership

Employee onboarding and orientation was treated as an administrative step instead of an experience for the new hire. Culture was discussed inconsistently, if at all. Expectations were assumed rather than taught. Managers believed they didn’t have time to go beyond the paperwork, and the organization paid for it later through churn, re-hiring, and disengagement.

This is the same pattern I’ve written about elsewhere as Structural DebtTM (the gap between where a business is operationally and where its people operating structure is). When a company has outgrown its informal people systems but the structure hasn’t caught up, employee integration is often the most visible place the gap shows up. New hires feel it first.

What We Built: A Culture-Based System

The first shift was to redefine what onboarding was and when it actually started.

The reframe was a New Hire Experience that begin at the first interaction a potential employee had with the company and continued through 90 days.

We trained leaders and managers to understand that the Employee Experience begins with the first interaction. Culture messaging, expectations, and values had to be consistent from the first conversation through Day 1 and beyond, across all locations. If a new hire heard something different from every person they spoke to, alignment was already lost.

Culture-based interview guides were introduced, along with structured questions and manager training. The goal wasn’t just to assess skills but also to clearly communicate who the company is, how decisions get made, and what success looks like.

Next, a culture-specific program was built into Day 1. This program was not a replacement for operational training but an addition. New hires were oriented to the company so they understood who they worked for, what the organization stood for, how their role fit into the larger system, why the work mattered, and the opportunities to grow within the company.

Task training became contextual instead of mechanical. Line employees stopped learning what to do in isolation and started understanding why it mattered.

Manager Enablement Was the Turning Point

Manager buy-in was critical and not automatic.

Many managers initially resisted because they felt they didn’t have time; training new hires already felt like a burden. This was a process problem, not a people problem: managers weren’t lazy, they didn’t have a defined structure for what the first 90 days should look like should look like inside the hours they already had. The fix was naming the structure, not adding more pressure.

This mindset was addressed directly once the reframe was clearly defined and then through manager training that focused on the cost of early disengagement and turnover.

To ensure managers didn’t feel like culture onboarding was just one more thing to do, they were given simple, structured expectations, not more work, but clearer work. Once they understood the purpose and saw early results, resistance faded.

Results: What Changed

After implementation:

An unexpected benefit emerged as well.

Managers became more confident in their hiring decisions. Through culture-based interviews and a structured program, many learned more about their own company than they had before. This clarity improved decision-making, consistency, and ownership at the leadership level.

Key Takeaway

This wasn’t an HR fix. It was a leadership system correction.

When the new hire experience was reframed as a culture and performance process that started at the interview and was reinforced consistently, both employees and managers showed up differently. The organization hired better, led better, operated with more clarity, and retained their teams.

This is the core of what fractional HR for franchise and multi-location operators is built to deliver: people systems that travel without the owner being physically present at every location. If onboarding inconsistency, line-level turnover, or manager misalignment is what your last quarter looked like, the people operations diagnostic maps exactly where the gap is and what it would take to close it.

Frequently Asked Questions

When does onboarding actually start?

Onboarding begins at the interview — not on Day 1. The way a candidate experiences your hiring process is the first signal they receive. By the time someone signs an offer letter, they’ve already absorbed a version of your culture. The question is whether what they absorbed is consistent with what you want them to see

What’s the difference between paperwork onboarding and culture-based onboarding?

Paperwork onboarding ends when the I-9 is signed. Culture-based onboarding includes the paperwork but adds context: who owns the company, what the organization stands for, how decisions get made, how the new hire’s role fits into the larger system, and what success looks like. Both are required. The first alone produces turnover; both together produce retention.

How do you get managers to buy in to expanded onboarding when they say they don’t have time?

Two things move the needle. First, name the math: the cost of replacing a line-level employee at 90 days is several times the cost of an extra hour of onboarding on Day 1. Most managers haven’t done that calculation. Second, give them simple, structured expectations — not more work, but clearer work. Resistance usually fades once they see retention improve on their own team.

Is this fix specifically for franchise businesses?

It’s a fix for any multi-location operator where culture currently relies on the owner being physically present. Franchise systems just feel the pain most acutely because they’re often the most distributed. Culture-based onboarding is one of the highest-leverage ways to make culture travel without you.
Colleen Moore, fractional HR consultant for multi-location and franchise operators, Denver Colorado

About the author

Colleen Moore is the Founder and Principal of Moore Consulting LLC, a fractional HR consultancy serving multi-location and franchise operators with 20 to 300 employees and no internal HR. In 2026 she was awarded the American Business Awards Bronze Stevie for HR Executive of the Year. Based in Denver, Colorado.