Customer onboarding
Customer onboarding is the process of guiding new customers from their initial purchase or sign-up through the steps needed to successfully use a product or service. A well-designed onboarding process reduces time-to-value, decreases early support volume, and sets the foundation for long-term retention.
Onboarding is often where the customer relationship is won or lost. A customer who quickly understands how to get value from a product is more likely to stay, expand their usage, and recommend it to others. A customer who struggles early, cannot find answers, or needs to contact support repeatedly to complete basic setup is at significantly higher risk of churning before their first renewal.
What customer onboarding includes
Onboarding spans a range of interactions and touchpoints, depending on the complexity of the product and the customer segment. Common components include:
- Welcome communication: An initial email, message, or call that confirms the purchase, sets expectations, and outlines next steps.
- Account setup guidance: Instructions or in-product flows that help the customer configure their account and connect any necessary integrations.
- Training and education: Documentation, tutorials, or live sessions that teach the customer how to use core features effectively.
- Check-in touchpoints: Scheduled follow-ups by a customer success manager or automated system to confirm progress and address early questions.
- Self-service resources: A knowledge base or help center stocked with setup guides, FAQs, and troubleshooting articles so customers can find answers without waiting for support.
The role of support in onboarding
Support teams are directly involved in onboarding, whether they intend to be or not. When onboarding documentation is unclear or incomplete, customers contact support instead. Tracking the topics that generate the most onboarding-related tickets reveals where the process has gaps, which is useful input for improving documentation and in-product guidance.
AI agents can play an active role in onboarding by providing instant answers to setup questions, walking customers through configuration steps, and proactively surfacing relevant resources based on where a customer is in the process. Proactive customer support approaches, where the support system reaches out before a customer contacts it, are particularly effective in the onboarding phase because common friction points are predictable.
Measuring onboarding success
Onboarding effectiveness can be measured through several metrics:
- Time-to-first-value: How long it takes a new customer to complete a meaningful action or realize a benefit from the product.
- Onboarding completion rate: The percentage of customers who complete defined onboarding milestones within a target timeframe.
- Early support contact rate: How often new customers contact support during their first 30 or 90 days, which signals whether onboarding is answering their questions adequately.
- Early customer churn rate: The percentage of customers who cancel or disengage before their first renewal, often correlated directly with onboarding quality.
- Customer health score: A composite measure of engagement, usage, and support activity that indicates how well a customer is progressing post-onboarding.
Making onboarding scalable
For teams with high customer volume, individual onboarding touchpoints quickly become unsustainable. Scalable onboarding typically relies on automation for lower-touch segments while reserving high-touch engagement for enterprise or complex accounts. According to Salesforce research on customer success, companies with structured onboarding programs see notably higher retention rates than those with ad hoc approaches.
AI agents can extend the capacity of customer success and support teams by handling common onboarding questions at scale, allowing human team members to focus on accounts that need personalized attention. For more on how AI agents handle support volume that arises during onboarding, see the Decagon blog on AI customer service agent capabilities.

