Hiring someone is expensive. The job listing, the interviews, the offer, the paperwork — and then you spend the first month as their full-time babysitter while your actual work piles up.
It's not that new employees are slow. It's that nobody wrote anything down. Every process lives in your head. Every answer to "how do we handle this?" requires you to stop what you're doing and explain it again.
AI doesn't fix bad hiring. But it's very, very good at turning what's in your head into documents — fast. Here are three things you can do this week.
3 Ways to Get New Hires Up to Speed Faster
Turn a 10-Minute Voice Note Into a Training Doc
You know your business inside out. The problem is getting it out of your head and onto paper. Instead of writing anything, just talk. Open a voice memo app, hit record, and walk through how something works — like you're explaining it to a friend over lunch. Then drop the transcript into AI with this prompt:
Most iPhone/Android voice memos now transcribe automatically. You can also use a free tool like Otter.ai. Ten minutes of talking becomes a polished training doc in about 30 seconds.
Build an FAQ From the Questions You've Already Answered
Scroll back through your last three months of Slack messages, texts, or emails with employees. Every time someone asked you how to do something and you answered — that's an FAQ entry waiting to happen.
Copy a batch of those exchanges (10–15 is plenty) and use this prompt:
You'll end up with a living document that answers 80% of what new hires ask in their first month — without you having to invent it from scratch.
Write a "Week 1 Checklist" That Actually Tells Them What to Do
Most onboarding checklists are useless — "read the employee handbook," "set up your email," "meet the team." That's not training. That's a to-do list with no context.
Give AI a rough outline of what you want new hires to know in their first week, and ask it to write a real checklist:
This takes about five minutes to set up and saves you a full day of hand-holding per hire. Once it's built, you use it every time.
Want the Full Onboarding Playbook?
Those three tips will get you most of the way there. The patterns below are what separate businesses that hire well from ones that constantly feel like they're starting over every time someone joins the team.