“The cursor hovers over a ‘Submit’ button that has been greyed out for exactly 47 seconds, a temporal purgatory designed to ensure I’ve actually read the slide about proper ergonomic seating. My neck just gave a terrifyingly loud pop-a jagged, structural protest against this sedentary ritual…”
The Great Onboarding Delusion
We are currently living through the Great Onboarding Delusion. Organizations have convinced themselves that 307 minutes of mandatory video content on data privacy is synonymous with professional competence. It isn’t. It’s a legal shield, a digital paper trail designed to prove to a judge that the company told Dave not to click on phishing links, even when the entire office knows Dave will click on every single link that promises a free toaster.
The focus has shifted entirely from capability building to risk mitigation. We aren’t training humans; we are ticking boxes on a liability insurance form that costs the company roughly $777 per head in lost productivity.
A Snapshot of Wasted Certifications
1 of 137
Conflict Res.
Hazard Mat.
Spreadsheet Ethics
The Madness of Week Eight
There is a specific kind of madness that sets in around Week 8. You’ve met 17 different ‘Stakeholders’ who each explained their role using the same seven buzzwords-synergy, alignment, leverage, pivot, holistic, bandwidth, and ecosystem-yet none of them told you what you are actually supposed to do between the hours of 9:07 AM and 5:07 PM.
I often find myself scrolling through obscure forums during my lunch break, seeking any form of genuine human engagement that isn’t filtered through a ‘Culture Survey.’ I stumbled upon Gclubfun while looking for a way to break the monotony of the 47th slide on ‘Proper Email Salutations.’ It struck me how much more intuitive that interface was compared to our $17,000-a-year onboarding portal.
The Onboarding Ghost and Wasted Potential
As a meme anthropologist, I’ve documented the rise of the ‘Onboarding Ghost’-the employee who is technically on the payroll but exists only as a series of completed percentages in a database. These ghosts haunt the breakroom, clutching lukewarm coffee, waiting for the day they are finally allowed to do the job they were hired for. It’s a waste of human potential that borders on the criminal.
The problem is that the people designing these programs are too far removed from the work. They are architects who have never swung a hammer, designing houses with 77 doors and no foundation. They worry about the ‘Employee Experience’ without ever asking an actual employee what they experience.
[The tragedy of a thousand clicks is the silence of a wasted mind.]
The Human Cost of Digital Surveillance
There is a counterintuitive truth here: the more you try to automate the integration of a human into a culture, the more you alienate them from it. When we replace human mentorship with digital surveillance, we shouldn’t be surprised when our teams feel like collections of strangers rather than a cohesive unit.
💬 Communication Failure Cycle
I explained this to my supervisor, a woman who hasn’t blinked in 27 minutes. She listened, nodded, and then sent me a link to a 17-minute survey about ‘Communication Efficacy.’
Survey Completion
73%
This is how the system wins; it wears you down until your standards for ‘useful work’ drop to the floor. I spent 47 minutes trying every combination of my birthdate before giving up on the printer PIN.
The Cost of Bureaucracy
Building on Boredom
Every time we put a new hire through the 3-month gauntlet of nothingness, we are teaching them that their time has no value. We are telling them that we don’t trust their judgment and that we prefer a compliant worker over a creative one. If the first 87 days are a lie, why should the rest of the tenure be any different?
Retention Year-over-Year
Potential Realized
The Beautiful Escape
I think back to Marcus. Yesterday, he finally quit… He left his badge on the desk-the one that took 27 days to arrive-and walked out the front door. He refused to be another ghost in the machine, another statistic in the LMS dashboard.
Meanwhile, I’m still here, staring at Slide 47 of 77, waiting for the vision in my right eye to stop pulsing. Maybe tomorrow I’ll finally get that bathroom key. We don’t need more modules. We need more humanity. We need to stop treating onboarding as a barrier to be cleared and start treating it as a bridge to be crossed.