Agent skill
customer-onboarding
Design and execute customer onboarding that drives activation and retention. Use when building onboarding flows for new users, reducing churn in the first 30 days, improving time-to-value, or creating onboarding sequences (email, in-app, or manual). Covers activation metrics, onboarding step design, friction reduction, and measuring onboarding success. Trigger on "customer onboarding", "onboarding flow", "user onboarding", "reduce early churn", "improve activation", "onboarding sequence", "time to value".
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/JK-0001/skills/tree/main/customer-onboarding
SKILL.md
Customer Onboarding
Overview
Onboarding is where you keep or lose customers. The first 7-30 days determine whether they stay or churn. Most solopreneurs focus on acquisition and ignore onboarding — then wonder why churn is high. This playbook builds an onboarding system that gets users to their first win fast, builds confidence, and sets them up for long-term success.
Step 1: Define Your Activation Metric
Onboarding isn't about completing a checklist. It's about getting users to experience value — the "aha moment" where the product clicks.
Your activation metric is the action that predicts retention.
Examples:
- Slack: Sent 2,000 messages as a team
- Dropbox: Uploaded and shared at least one file
- SaaS analytics tool: Connected a data source and viewed their first report
- Project management tool: Created a project and added 3 tasks
How to find your activation metric:
- Look at retained customers (those who stuck around 90+ days)
- Identify what they did in their first 7 days that non-retained customers didn't do
- That action (or set of actions) is your activation metric
Rule: Onboarding is successful when a user completes your activation metric. Everything in your onboarding should drive toward this.
Step 2: Map Your Onboarding Journey
Before designing tactics, map the full journey from signup to activation.
Onboarding journey template:
SIGNUP
↓ (What happens immediately after signup?)
SETUP / CONFIGURATION
↓ (What do they need to configure? Integrations? Settings? Profile?)
FIRST VALUE MOMENT
↓ (What's the simplest, fastest way they can experience value?)
ACTIVATION
↓ (They complete the activation metric)
ONGOING ENGAGEMENT
↓ (They use the product regularly)
For each stage, ask:
- What does the user need to do?
- What's blocking them from doing it? (friction, confusion, missing information)
- How can we make this easier or faster?
Example (SaaS automation tool):
SIGNUP → Email confirmation
SETUP → Connect first data source (e.g., Google Sheets)
Friction: Don't know which source to start with
Solution: Pre-select most common source, add "why start here?" tooltip
FIRST VALUE MOMENT → See automated workflow run successfully
Friction: Don't know what workflow to build
Solution: Provide 3 templates, one-click to activate
ACTIVATION → Run 10 workflows successfully
Friction: Forget to check back after first success
Solution: Email reminder after 24 hours with progress + next step
ONGOING ENGAGEMENT → Use weekly, add more workflows
Step 3: Reduce Friction at Every Step
Friction = anything that slows down or confuses the user. Every friction point increases the chance they abandon.
Common friction points and fixes:
| Friction | Impact | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Too many fields on signup | Users abandon mid-signup | Collect only email + password. Get everything else later. |
| Unclear next step | Users sign up, then stare at a blank screen | Show a clear "Start here" CTA immediately after signup |
| Complex setup | Users get overwhelmed and leave | Break setup into 3-5 small steps with progress bar. Let them skip non-essential steps. |
| Jargon or unclear labels | Users don't understand what to do | Use plain language. Replace "Configure API endpoint" with "Connect your account" |
| Long time-to-value | Takes 30+ min to see results | Create a fast "quick win" path — even if it's a simplified version of the full value |
Rule: Every step in onboarding should take < 2 minutes. If it takes longer, break it into smaller steps or defer it until later.
Step 4: Build Your Onboarding Sequence
Onboarding is not just in-app. It's a multi-channel experience: in-app guidance + email + (optionally) human touch.
In-App Onboarding
Tactics:
- Welcome modal: Appears immediately after signup. "Welcome! Here's how to get started in 3 steps."
- Tooltips/hotspots: Highlight key features as users explore ("This is where you create a new project")
- Checklist: Show progress toward activation ("2 of 5 steps complete — you're almost there!")
- Empty states: When a user sees a blank page, show helpful prompts ("No projects yet? Start your first one here.")
Tools: Intercom, Appcues, Userflow, or custom-built with plain JavaScript.
Rule: Don't overwhelm. Show 1-2 tips at a time, not 10.
Email Onboarding
Email sequence (5-7 emails over 14 days):
EMAIL 1 (Day 0, immediately after signup):
Subject: "Welcome to [Product]! Let's get you started."
Body: Confirm signup, set expectations, link to first step or template
EMAIL 2 (Day 1, if activation metric not hit):
Subject: "Quick question — stuck on anything?"
Body: Address common blockers, offer help, link to docs or support
EMAIL 3 (Day 3, if activation metric not hit):
Subject: "Here's the fastest way to see results"
Body: Share a quick-win template or walkthrough video
EMAIL 4 (Day 5, if activation metric HIT):
Subject: "Nice work! Here's what to do next"
Body: Celebrate their first win, suggest next feature or use case
EMAIL 5 (Day 7, if activation metric not hit):
Subject: "Need a hand? Let's jump on a quick call"
Body: Offer a personal onboarding call (manual touch for high-value prospects)
EMAIL 6 (Day 10):
Subject: "3 pro tips from our best users"
Body: Share advanced tips or lesser-known features
EMAIL 7 (Day 14):
Subject: "How's it going? We'd love your feedback"
Body: Ask how onboarding went, request feedback, link to survey
Personalization triggers: Send different emails based on behavior:
- If they completed activation → send "here's what to do next" content
- If they didn't complete activation → send troubleshooting or offer help
Human Touch (Optional, for High-Value Customers)
For high-ticket SaaS or service businesses, add a human layer:
- Onboarding call: Schedule a 15-30 min call to walk them through setup
- Check-in emails: Personal email (not automated) asking how it's going
- Slack/community access: Invite them to a private Slack or Circle community for direct support
When to use: When LTV > $500 or when the product is complex.
Step 5: Measure Onboarding Performance
Track these metrics to know if onboarding is working:
| Metric | What It Means | Healthy Benchmark |
|---|---|---|
| Activation rate | % of signups who hit activation metric | 30-60% (varies by product) |
| Time to activation | Median days/hours from signup to activation | Under 24 hours is ideal |
| Day 7 retention | % of signups still active after 7 days | 40-60% |
| Day 30 retention | % of signups still active after 30 days | 25-40% |
| Onboarding email open/click rates | Engagement with onboarding emails | Opens: 40-60%, Clicks: 10-20% |
Where to track: Use your analytics tool (Mixpanel, Amplitude, or simple event tracking in Google Analytics) + email tool (ConvertKit, Mailchimp).
Diagnose issues:
- Low activation rate? Too much friction in setup, or unclear value prop. Simplify first steps.
- Long time to activation? Too many steps or too complex. Create a faster "quick win" path.
- High activation but low Day 30 retention? They got initial value but didn't build a habit. Improve ongoing engagement (notifications, email reminders, new features).
Step 6: Iterate on Onboarding
Onboarding is never "done." Continuously improve based on data and feedback.
Monthly onboarding review:
- Check activation rate — is it improving?
- Review user feedback from surveys or support tickets — where are people getting stuck?
- Watch 2-3 user session recordings (tools: Hotjar, FullStory) — what confuses people?
- Test one improvement per month (e.g., simplify signup, add a tooltip, rewrite an email)
A/B testing ideas:
- Different welcome email subject lines
- Checklist vs no checklist in-app
- Video walkthrough vs text instructions
- Length of signup form (fewer fields vs more upfront info)
Rule: Focus on the biggest drop-off point first. If 50% of users abandon during setup, fixing that is 10x more valuable than optimizing a later step.
Onboarding Mistakes to Avoid
- Dumping everything on Day 1. Don't explain every feature upfront. Guide them to one quick win, then introduce more over time.
- No clear next step after signup. A blank screen or "Welcome!" with no guidance kills activation. Always show a clear "Do this first" CTA.
- Ignoring non-activated users. If someone signs up and doesn't activate, don't give up. Re-engage them with helpful emails or a manual outreach.
- Making setup mandatory when it's optional. Let users skip non-essential steps. Forcing them to fill out a profile or connect integrations before they see value creates friction.
- No human touch for high-value customers. If your LTV is $1,000+, a 15-minute onboarding call is worth it. Don't over-automate at the high end.
- Not measuring time to activation. If it takes 2 weeks for users to see value, you'll lose most of them. Aim for value in < 24 hours.
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