A great journey isn't just a checklist of tasks; it's a personalized, engaging experience that enables employees and makes HR more efficient.
This guide will help you design journeys that feel natural, keep employees engaged, and reduce the confusion and frustration that lead to HR overload. You'll learn how to apply design thinking, craft best-practice communications, and personalize journeys so employees stay informed.
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People-first journey design
We approach journey design through the employee's eyes, ensuring every step is intuitive and meaningful. Design thinking helps create employee-first journeys that remove friction and make workplace experiences smoother. Here's how:
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Collaborate and empathize
Involve employees at every stage of the design process, using focus groups to gauge their thoughts and ideas.
If you want to take collaboration a step further, move beyond general Q&A sessions and host empathy interviews. These allow you to ask open-ended questions that reveal deeper emotional responses.
For example, ask, “What moment made you feel most supported, and why?”
Immerse yourself in their experiences - what worked well, and where were the pain points? Use these insights to refine and enrich the journey, staying true to what resonates while enhancing areas that need improvement.
Identify key pain points
Your investigations should include a focus on pain points. Consider:
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- Do employees struggle to find the resources they need?
- Is information overload making journeys overwhelming?
- Do employees feel connected and supported?
- Do employees feel isolated and lost?
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Define
Turn everything you learn into actionable points - addressing friction and adjusting your journeys accordingly.
Continuous improvement is key, adapting to analytics and feedback to evolve with changing employee needs. With this, you can ensure your journeys remain relevant and engaging over time.
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Ideate
Explore creative approaches to solving problems and engage cross-functional teams for diverse perspectives.
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Prototype
Create wireframes or low-fidelity journey designs and test small-scale versions before rolling them out company-wide.
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Test & iterate
Continuously refine the journey based on engagement data and employee feedback.
Using personas in design thinking
Personas are fictional characters representing different types of users based on real data, research, and insights. They help teams understand users' needs, behaviors, pain points, and goals.
A persona might include:
- Demographics (age, role, experience level)
- Motivation and goals
- Challenges and frustrations
- Typical behaviors and workflows
In the context of journeys, personas can help you tailor the stages and content to make it relevant to the individual. Map out your journey deliberately using design thinking and consider the journey through each persona.
Download our people-first automated onboarding experience guide for a best-practice example of a well-planned journey for a new employee and adapt it as necessary for other journey types.
Best-practice emails and notifications
Clear, timely communication is key to keeping employees engaged throughout their journey. Here's how to make every message count:
Dos and don'ts for effective emails:
Dos
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- Keep emails short and scannable: Use bullet points, bold headers, and concise paragraphs.
- Make subject lines clear and engaging: (e.g., "[First Name], Your First Day Checklist is ready!"). Emojis 👋🏼 in the subject line can drive higher engagement, but don't overuse them.
- Personalize content: Use names and tailor messages to the employee's role. Consider using personalization tokens where possible.
- Provide a clear call to action: Highlight next steps in a way that's easy to follow.
- Use a friendly and energetic tone: Write in the employee tone of voice - if you use Applaud's generate features, they will help you get this right.
- Send emails at the right moment: Space out communications to prevent overload.
- Make them visually appealing: Break up text with formatting, links, or images if appropriate.
Don'ts
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- Write long, unenergetic emails: Employees will skim or ignore overly wordy messages.
- Use corporate jargon and acronyms: Keep language simple and relatable.
- Send too many emails in a short period: This leads to notification fatigue.
- Bury action items in long paragraphs: Make next steps easy to find.
- Lack personalization: Generic messages feel impersonal and disengaging.
- Forget to explain 'what's in it for me': Employees need to understand the value of the message.
- Overuse emojis: It can make emails feel unprofessional.
Notifications that don't overwhelm:
- Right time, right place: Deliver notifications when they're most useful (e.g., "Welcome to your first day").
- Keep it short: No more than 160 characters for quick, digestible updates.
- Keep it relevant: Every notification should link directly to the employee's needs.
- Balance the mix: Avoid notification fatigue by using email and notifications strategically.
Notification cadence and optimization tips
Managing notification timing and spacing is critical for keeping employees engaged without overwhelming them.
Using the activity view in Applaud
- Filter by Notification and Participant: Use the journey activity view to review all notifications scheduled for a specific participant type.
- Review the cadence: Look at the timeline—are you sending multiple notifications on the same day? If so, adjust.
- Avoid clustering: Two messages in close proximity (e.g., preboarding and first-day congratulations) followed by a long silence can cause drop-off. Spread messages thoughtfully.
- Identify blind spots: Are there gaps where a nudge or check-in could keep momentum? Add touchpoints during key transition periods.
- Highlight opportunities: Use activity view screenshots to spot and fix issues. For instance, if a journey has activity on Day 0 and Day 1 but nothing until Week 4, consider inserting reminders, celebratory milestones, or feedback requests in between.
Personalization and adaptive journeys
Employees expect HR tech to work like consumer apps: personalized, intelligent, and easy. Customizing journeys helps employees feel in control.
- Role-based journeys: Tailor onboarding, offboarding, or transitions based on job function and level.
- Smart triggers: Adapt the journey based on employee actions (e.g., a reminder only if a task hasn't been completed).
- Self-paced progress: Let employees move at their own speed when possible.
- Dynamic content: Adjust messaging and support based on their progress and engagement.
Balancing digital and face-to-face interaction
While digital tools enhance efficiency and scalability, human interaction remains critical for engagement and relationship-building. Striking the right balance ensures employees feel supported and connected.
Best practices for balance
- Blend digital & human touchpoints: Use virtual onboarding and training tools but incorporate in-person check-ins where possible.
- Encourage manager & peer engagement: Ensure managers schedule one-on-one meetings, team meetings, or mentoring sessions.
- Host live Q&A sessions: Supplement digital communications with interactive sessions where employees can ask questions and receive real-time support.
- Use hybrid approaches: Offer both self-service knowledge base resources and access to live HR or IT support when needed.
- Monitor employee sentiment: Use surveys and feedback loops to gauge whether employees feel isolated or engaged and adjust interactions accordingly.
Measuring success and continuous improvement
HR teams need data-driven insights to make sure journeys work for employees.
- Track engagement: Monitor completion rates and feedback trends.
- Listen to employees: Use surveys, sentiment analysis, and real-time feedback to understand what's working.
- Iterate & improve: Adjust based on employee behavior and needs.
A well-designed journey is more than a process; it's an experience. When HR tech is built around employees, it becomes more human, intuitive, and rewarding to use. By applying design thinking, creating engaging communications, and personalizing experiences, you can build seamless, frustration-free journeys that empower employees and help HR do more for their people.