Induction and Onboarding

Induction

No one is fully effective from day one – performance improves as employees learn the farm, systems and expectations. Clear expectations from the outset help employees perform better and are more likely to stay.

Induction provides new employees with the information they need to work safely, confidently and effectively. It introduces them to the farm environment, policies and ways of working, including:

  • work health and safety requirements and safety equipment
  • key policies (e.g. safety, anti-discrimination)
  • operating manuals and procedures
  • emergency contacts and processes
  • administrative tasks and systems
  • understanding how their role fits within the wider farm business

 

Use an induction checklist

Allow enough time for induction and encourage questions throughout the process. An induction checklist helps ensure all essential areas are covered and expectations are clear. Having the employee sign the checklist (ideally before starting work) provides a clear record that key information has been explained and understood.

 

Onboarding

While induction usually occurs in the first week, onboarding is a structured process over the first three months to help a new employee become confident, productive and embedded in the team.

 

Why onboarding matters

  • reduces mistakes, safety risks and confusion
  • builds trust, engagement and confidence
  • improves retention and productivity
  • sets clear standards and expectations early
  • identifies skill gaps early so they can be addressed before issues arise

 

Using Dairy Australia Enlight to support induction

Dairy Australia’s Enlight online learning platform can support your induction process by building consistent, foundational skills for new employees. Staff can now self-register and complete the Starting a Career in Dairy modules, which are well suited to new starters and can be used alongside on-farm training to reinforce safety, animal welfare and core dairy knowledge.

Key stages

Week 1

  • Shadow an experienced team member
  • Start simple tasks with supervision
  • Set clear performance expectations
  • Answer early questions

Month 1

  • Review progress and understanding
  • Check procedures and animal handling
  • Address issues early
  • Gradually increase responsibility

Months 2–3

  • Continue training and development
  • Transfer greater task ownership
  • Hold regular feedback sessions
  • Set goals and development plans
  • Confirm long-term fit

What good onboarding looks like

  • Clear, two-way communication
  • Simple written and verbal instructions
  • Health, safety, and animal welfare training
  • Introductions to the team, culture, and values
  • Regular feedback and checkpoints
  • Support matched to experience level
  • Identify capabilities and any gaps
  • A plan to close those gaps

Induction Resources

Induction Checklist

PDF

Onboarding Resources

Onboarding Guide 1: Welcome a new employee

PDF

Onboarding Guide 2: Farm culture

PDF

Onboarding Guide 3: Farm tour

PDF

Onboarding Guide 4: Farm safety

PDF

Onboarding Guide 5: Agrichemicals

PDF

Onboarding Guide 6: Animal welfare

PDF

Onboarding Guide 7: Quad bike

PDF

Onboarding Guide 8: Side by side vehicles

PDF

Onboarding Guide 9: 2-wheeler vehicle

PDF

Onboarding Guide 10: Working around electric fencing

PDF

Onboarding Guide 11: Treatments and withholds

PDF

Onboarding Guide 12: Clean dairy plant

PDF

Onboarding Guide 13: Visitors and contractors

PDF

Onboarding Guide 14: Moving the herd

PDF

Onboarding Guide 15: Calf rearing basics

PDF

Onboarding Guide 16: Calving cows

PDF

Onboarding Guide 17: Feeding livestock

PDF

Onboarding Guide 18: Bringing in the cows

PDF

Onboarding Guide 19: Post-milking teat disinfection

PDF

Onboarding Guide 20: Cups off

PDF

Onboarding Guide 21: Cups on

PDF

Onboarding Guide 22: Detecting clinical mastitis

PDF

Onboarding Guide 23: 90-day onboarding journey review

PDF

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