I’ve worked in client service long enough to know that onboarding isn’t just paperwork. And since not everyone uses that term, here’s what I mean by it: onboarding is simply the setup phase — the moment when two sides get aligned, exchange the right information, and establish how they’ll work together. It’s the moment when expectations, assumptions, and working styles collide — or align. And across three very different seats in my career, I’ve seen how much that first impression shapes everything that follows.
Agency‑Side: When Preparation Was the Standard
When I worked in national‑brand agencies, onboarding wasn’t optional — it was a discipline. We walked into every kickoff already fluent in the client’s world: their audience, their goals, their competitive landscape, and the internal pressures they were navigating. The assignment brief wasn’t a suggestion; it was the foundation.
But the real differentiator wasn’t the brief.
It was how well we understood the client’s expectations and preferences — the things they didn’t always say out loud.
Some clients wanted structure.
Some wanted speed.
Some wanted reassurance.
Some wanted to be challenged.
The teams who honored those nuances built trust instantly.
The ones who didn’t created friction before the work even began.
Client‑Side: When I Was the One Being Onboarded
Later, when I moved to the client side and started onboarding agencies myself, I saw the other half of the equation. The best partners didn’t just show up prepared — they showed up attuned.
They listened for what mattered to us.
They noticed how we communicated.
They adapted to our pace and our priorities.
They made us feel like the project was already in motion.
And then there were the teams who treated onboarding like a formality.
They asked questions they should have known.
They missed cues.
They didn’t read the room.
Those teams weren’t “bad.” They just didn’t honor the expectations behind the brief — and that gap created doubt before the work even started.
In‑House Bookkeeper: When I Was the One Walking Into Someone Else’s Systems
Years later, when I joined a home improvement company as their new on‑staff bookkeeper, I experienced onboarding from a completely different angle. This time, I wasn’t onboarding someone else — I was the one being onboarded.
And the difference between prepared and unprepared onboarding was stark. Prepared onboarding felt like stepping into a well‑lit room.
I knew where things lived.
I knew who owned what.
I knew how to get started.
Unprepared onboarding felt like walking into a dark attic with a flickering flashlight.
No passwords.
No documentation.
No clarity.
Just a pile of work and a hope that I’d figure it out.
That experience taught me something I hadn’t fully understood from the agency or client side:
Onboarding isn’t just about information.
It’s about orientation.
It’s about respect.
It’s about giving someone the confidence to begin.
The Through‑Line: What These Experiences Taught Me
Across every role, one truth kept resurfacing:
Prepared onboarding honors the person receiving the information.
Unprepared onboarding hands them a burden.
And the deeper lesson — the one that’s stayed with me — is this:
Clients don’t just need accuracy.
They need clarity.
They need to feel understood.
They need to feel supported from the very first step.
How This Shows Up in My Bookkeeping Practice Today
These aren’t abstract lessons for me. They’re the backbone of how I work.
When a client steps into my bookkeeping practice, I want them to feel the opposite of that dark‑attic moment. I want them to feel:
- oriented
- supported
- understood
- and confident that they’re in capable hands
That’s why I treat onboarding as more than a checklist. It’s the moment I show clients what it feels like to work with me — calm, structured, and grounded in their expectations, not just their data.
Because the way you start isn’t just the beginning of the work.
It’s the beginning of the relationship.
If you’d like to know more about my approach and background, this page shares the full story.
You can also explore additional tools and guides in the Resource Library.
