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When Veteran Employees Make Onboarding Difficult For New Hires -By Isaac Asabor

Against the backdrop of the foregoing, it is expedient to opine in this context that the most enduring legacy any veteran employee can leave behind is not a collection of guarded secrets, but a generation of capable professionals empowered to succeed long after they are gone.

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ISAAC ASABOR

Every organisation wants talented employees. Yet, in many workplaces, the greatest obstacle to a new hire’s success is not a lack of skills, inadequate qualifications, or unfamiliar technology. Rather, it is the attitude of some long-serving employees who, consciously or unconsciously, make onboarding a frustrating and discouraging experience.

Ideally, onboarding should serve as a bridge that helps new employees transition smoothly into their roles. Unfortunately, for many recruits, it feels more like a trial by fire. Instead of receiving guidance and support, they encounter indifference, impatience, gatekeeping, and, in some cases, outright hostility.

At a time when employers are investing heavily in talent acquisition and retention, many continue to overlook a critical factor that determines whether new employees thrive or fail: the workplace culture shaped by veteran staff.

One of the most common complaints among new hires is not the complexity of their assignments or the pressure of deadlines. It is the reluctance of experienced colleagues to provide adequate guidance.

A new employee asks where a document should be saved, who approves a request, or how a particular process works. The response is often a sigh, an impatient look, or the familiar remark: “I already explained that”, or insolently, “I nor knowoooo”.

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In reality, many of these processes were never properly explained. What seasoned employees consider obvious is often entirely new to someone joining the organization. Years of experience can make institutional knowledge seem routine, causing veterans to forget what it was like to be unfamiliar with the company’s systems, culture, and unwritten rules.

Given the foregoing, it is not out of place to opine that effective onboarding requires patience. When experienced employees dismiss genuine questions, they create unnecessary barriers that undermine learning and confidence.

Even more damaging is the tendency among some veteran employees to guard information as though it were personal property. In many workplaces, critical knowledge exists outside official manuals and training documents. Employees learn through experience which procedures truly matter, which clients require special attention, and which internal practices must be followed to avoid problems.

Rather than sharing this knowledge openly, some employees treat it as a source of power. By ensuring that only they understand certain processes, they maintain a sense of indispensability and control.

The result is predictable. New hires unknowingly violate unwritten rules and are criticized for mistakes they could not reasonably have avoided. Instead of being coached and corrected, they become subjects of workplace gossip or ridicule. Such behaviour is not mentorship. It is gatekeeping, and it weakens organizations by preventing knowledge transfer and collaboration.

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Not only that, many veteran employees justify their lack of support by citing heavy workloads and demanding schedules. While it is true that experienced staff often carry significant responsibilities, refusing to invest time in onboarding is ultimately counterproductive. Spending a short period properly explaining a process can prevent repeated mistakes, reduce inefficiencies, and save valuable time in the long run.

Unfortunately, some employees become so accustomed to dysfunctional systems that they resist any suggestion of improvement. When a new hire proposes a more efficient approach based on previous experience, the response is often defensive rather than receptive.

Instead of evaluating new ideas on their merits, they are dismissed simply because “that’s not how things are done here.” Such attitudes stifle innovation and create environments where conformity is valued more than competence.

The consequences of poor onboarding extend far beyond individual frustrations. When new employees are denied support and guidance, productivity suffers. Confidence declines. Engagement weakens. Talented individuals who joined with enthusiasm gradually become disengaged and reluctant to contribute ideas.

The financial cost of turnover is significant, but the human cost may be even greater. Organizations lose the fresh perspectives, creativity, and energy that new hires bring. Instead of cultivating future leaders, they inadvertently drive talent away.

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A workplace that discourages learning and collaboration ultimately undermines its own growth. Therefore, there should be need for change in Mindset.

It is important to acknowledge that many veteran employees are themselves products of difficult workplace environments. They may be overworked, frustrated by years of organizational challenges, or disillusioned by management decisions. However, those realities do not justify transferring frustration to newcomers.

Every experienced employee was once a beginner. Every professional once asked questions they later considered obvious. Most can recall at least one colleague who took the time to explain a process, offer encouragement, or provide guidance when they needed it most.

The responsibility of experienced staff is not merely to perform their duties but also to help preserve institutional knowledge and strengthen the next generation of employees.

Simple actions can make a significant difference: greeting new colleagues warmly, documenting important procedures, explaining unwritten expectations, and responding to questions with patience rather than irritation. These are not acts of charity. They are investments in the organization’s future.

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The true measure of an experienced employee is not how much knowledge they possess but how willing they are to share it. Veteran employees who frustrate, intimidate, or deliberately withhold information from new hires may temporarily preserve their sense of importance, but they ultimately weaken the very organizations they serve. Knowledge that is hoarded eventually becomes obsolete, while knowledge that is shared creates stronger teams, better performance, and sustainable growth.

No organization can prosper if it treats new employees as burdens rather than assets. A workplace that consistently discourages its newest members is not building a future; it is slowly undermining one.

Against the backdrop of the foregoing, it is expedient to opine in this context that the most enduring legacy any veteran employee can leave behind is not a collection of guarded secrets, but a generation of capable professionals empowered to succeed long after they are gone.

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