It’s tempting to build products and chase revenue now and let workplace culture happen down the line. But if you don’t build culture early, you’ll feel the impact faster than you might think.
Cue confused priorities, unmotivated employees, and missed expectations.
Luckily, you don’t need a full HR department to create a strong and healthy work culture. You just need a strategy.
Let’s take a closer look at why culture makes or breaks your initial employees, and how to foster connection with every new hire.
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Why Culture is So Important to Keeping Great Staff Around
You can offer all of the free snacks and ping pong tables in the world. However, if your teams don’t feel connected to your company’s values or one another, the culture won’t stick.
Skip the cheap gimmicks. Instead, focus on how your staff feels at work and how clearly they understand what’s expected of them so they can succeed.
Remember, your first few employees are the blueprint for your future hires.
If they’re confused, burned out, or disconnected, you’ll see stress, high turnover, and second-guessing.
But when you lead with clarity and care, you can build a foundation that retains great people and attracts more like them.
(In fact, 93% of employees say they’d stay for at least five years at a company if it had a great culture.)
But here’s the kicker.
Big brands can lean on benefits, high salaries, and other perks to keep roles filled. Startups don’t have that luxury.
Startups have to create genuine connections, lead with transparency, and hire for value alignment. This creates a place where people actually want to invest their time and energy.
And there’s plenty of opportunity to do so.
Only 31% of U.S. workers feel engaged at work. If you create a culture where employees feel empowered, connected, and understood, you’ll outshine the average and build the kind of workplace that people feel proud to be part of.
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6 Practical Ways to Build Culture When Hiring Your First 10 Employees
You don’t need employee handbooks spilling over with HR policies. You don’t need expensive consultants to coach you on culture.
You just need to get a few core things right.
Here’s how to build a strong, clear, human-first culture, one hire at a time:
1. Write Clear Job Descriptions That Reflect Your Company Values
Your job description is your first opportunity to showcase to quality candidates what your company stands for. Yes, you’re hiring to fill a role. But you’re also inviting someone to join and shape your culture.
That’s why it’s so important to be clear about your values, your mission, and explain what the ideal employee looks like.
Here’s what to include in your job descriptions:
Start with why this role matters to your business.
Explain your company’s values and how the role supports them.
Outline specific job responsibilities.
Explain mandatory qualifications and experience.
Be honest about challenges and expectations.
Include info about your benefits packages, such as health insurance and retirement plan options, if you offer them.
Include a salary range (and bonus details if relevant).
Be sure to also share how you’ll work together, how feedback takes place, what communication looks like, and what makes your team different.
If you do this well, qualified candidates that align will lean in. And you’ll naturally filter out the rest.
*Pro-Tip: Write in your brand’s tone of voice so potential candidates get a feel for your culture straight away.
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2. Set Basic Workplace Policies Early
While you want innovative employees who use their initiative, workplace policies help you create clarity and consistency. They also reduce friction and help potential employees feel confident and safe.
Consider:
Creating a document that outlines important details like work hours, remote/hybrid expectations, and vacation policies.
Including policies on safety at work (e.g., inclusivity standards, a policy about the right to personal safety, and how you keep their personal data safe).
Train your new hires on your policies and expectations early, and be sure to update them as you grow.
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3. Build Personal Connections From Day One
The best teams trust each other, and that trust starts with a real human connection.
That’s why, according to Nectar, 78% of people say workplace connection is key to building a great company culture. In fact, 69% of employees say they’d be happier with deeper relationships at work.)
It’s your job to help create these connections.
Here are a few ideas on how to do that:
Kick off the onboarding process with a personal 1:1 video session: After the hiring process, schedule a call to discuss the new hire’s goals, working style, and what helps them thrive.
Assign a peer buddy: Give new hires someone to check in with during their first weeks.
Celebrate wins and milestones: Call out achievements, birthdays, and anniversaries as a team.
Run regular team check-ins: Use short sessions to gauge how people are feeling (not just their performance).
Create space for casual chats: Leave room for non-work talk in Slack, meetings, or async tools.
Model openness as a leader: Talk about challenges, lessons, and what you’re working on.
Speaking of communication …
4. Choose the Right Communication Platform for Your Team
Communication is key to staying connected as a team.
And poor communication is one of the fastest ways to destroy employee satisfaction and burn out remote employees, that’s why it’s crucial to choose a proper chat for business
Luckily, your first hires give you a chance to set good communication habits from the start.
We recommend:
Choosing tools that support the ways you want to work: If Slack isn’t the right fit, look into alternatives to Slack that better match your team’s style and values during those early growth stages.
Setting clear norms for how communication works: Define when to chat, when to email, and how often to check in as a team. (You can also set boundaries around when not to reach out.)
Deciding what goes where: Use consistent channels for project updates, shoutouts, and team check-ins.
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5. Use Smart Tools to Stay Secure and Organized
The way you manage HR tasks sets the tone for how seriously you take your team. Clunky processes and missing records can erode trust and culture.
Pay needs to arrive on time, holidays need to get logged properly, and people need to know how to request time off.
(You might not have a full HR department yet, but you still need systems that work. When the basics fall apart, people can feel ignored, frustrated, or worse — disrespected.)When thinking about smart tools to use, consider:
➜ Choosing a payroll software or payroll service that automates tax forms, timekeeping, and employee compensation.
➜ Using an employee management platform to create workflows for tracking holidays, sick leave, and employee benefits. (This is a crucial step so that everyone knows how everything works.)
➜ Using a tool like AI-SPM to control access to sensitive employee data, so you’re not putting staff at risk or exposing your team to unnecessary stress.
➜ Creating private Google Drive folders to securely store essential info like I-9 forms, employment contracts, and job responsibilities in one place.
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Wrap Up
Building a strong work culture requires clarity, connection, and a commitment to making your company a place where people want to work.
Think of your first 10 hires as the future leaders of your business.
What they learn now about trust, expectations, and values will mold your entire team and the culture that follows it.
PS: Want more practical tips on building and scaling your business? Subscribe to The Start newsletter from StartupNation now.
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The post Hiring Your First 10 Employees: How to Build Culture Without a Full HR Department appeared first on StartupNation.