How to Hire Your First Employees: A Step-by-Step Guide for 2026

Hiring your first employee is the single biggest operational change a small business makes — the irreversible shift from “my business” to “our business.” This guide covers every step, from deciding whether you're ready through the first 90 days. Updated June 2026.

Hiring your first employee is the single biggest operational change a small business makes. Everything before this moment — the late nights, the solo decision-making, the wearing of every hat — was the solo phase. The first hire is when you become an employer: payroll, onboarding, management, and the irreversible shift from “my business” to “our business.”

It also changes the trajectory of what's possible. Companies with one to four employees generate on average $387,000 per year in revenue — nearly eight times the $49,489 average for solo operators. The first hire is the inflection point.

But the stakes are real. A bad first hire — someone who doesn't perform, doesn't fit, or leaves within six months — costs more than their salary. It costs the time you spent hiring, the time you'll spend managing out, the lost momentum, and the cost of starting over. Companies that use skills-based hiring report 90% fewer hiring mistakes, and 94% say skills-based hires outperform those selected based on degrees, certifications, or years of experience.

This guide covers every step of hiring your first employee: from deciding whether you're ready, through the hiring process itself, and the first 90 days.

Step 1

Decide Whether You're Actually Ready to Hire

The most common first-hire mistake isn't a bad screening process — it's hiring before the business is ready. Signs you're ready:

  • Revenue is consistent, not seasonal. Can you sustain a salary for 12 months regardless of slow periods? The cost of an employee is more than their salary — factor in benefits, employer contributions, and taxes on top of the base. Budget for the full loaded cost, not just the number on the offer letter.
  • You're turning away work or burning out. If you're consistently declining clients because you don't have capacity, or working 70-hour weeks to meet existing demand, that's a clear signal. If you're slow and hoping a new hire will generate revenue, that's a different problem that a hire won't solve.
  • You have a specific, defined role in mind. “I need help” is not a role. “I need someone to handle customer support from 9–5 so I can focus on sales and operations” is a role. A first hire without a clear scope is a first hire who won't know how to succeed.
  • You have systems they can follow. A new employee can't operate effectively from your memory. Before hiring, document the key processes they'll own — even rough notes are better than nothing. Assessing your financial capacity, clearly defining roles, and developing a hiring strategy are prerequisites to making a first hire that benefits your business in the long run.
Step 2

Define the Role Before You Write the Job Post

The job description is where most first-time hiring managers go wrong — either writing something so vague it attracts the wrong candidates, or so long and requirements-heavy that strong candidates self-select out.

A useful job description has four components:

  • The outcome, not just the duties. “Manage our customer support inbox” is a duty. “Ensure every customer gets a response within 4 hours and achieves a satisfaction score of 4.5+” is an outcome. Outcome-focused descriptions attract candidates who think in terms of results — the ones you want.
  • The must-haves, stated plainly. Two to four requirements that are genuinely non-negotiable. Not “5+ years experience” as a proxy for competence, but actual requirements for the role — specific software knowledge, availability hours, physical requirements if applicable.
  • A realistic description of the environment. Is this a fast-moving startup where things change weekly? A stable operation with clear processes? Remote, in-person, or hybrid? Candidates who self-select based on environment fit stay longer.
  • Compensation range. Job postings with salary ranges get significantly more applications from qualified candidates and fewer from mismatched ones. Hiding the range doesn't protect you — it filters out the candidates who value transparency, and many states now require it by law anyway.
Step 3

Write the Job Post and Decide Where to Post It

Once the role is defined, you need candidates. Where you post depends on the role:

  • For most professional roles: LinkedIn (free basic posting, paid for more visibility), Indeed (free posting, paid to promote), and your own personal and business network. For a first hire, your network often produces the strongest candidates because there's a trust layer built in.
  • For customer-facing, trade, or hourly roles: Indeed and ZipRecruiter for volume. Craigslist still works for local, in-person roles. Industry-specific job boards for specialised positions.
  • For technical roles: LinkedIn, AngelList (for startups), and Wellfound. Your network again — referrals from developers you respect produce far better signal than cold applications.

One channel that's underused by first-time hirers: ask your best customers, suppliers, and existing contacts if they know anyone. A warm referral with a personal endorsement starts the relationship differently than a cold application.

Step 4

Screen Candidates Without Spending 40 Hours on It

For a first hire, you'll likely receive 20–100 applications. Without a screening system, reviewing all of them takes days. With one, it takes hours.

  • Knockout questions at application stage. Two to four yes/no questions about actual requirements. Anyone who doesn't meet the must-haves is filtered before you read their resume. This alone reduces your review volume by 20–40%.
  • Resume review: 2 minutes per candidate maximum. You're looking for three things: evidence they've done the work before, tenure patterns that match what you need, and red flags. Move fast — the goal is to get to a shortlist of 8–10, not to make a hiring decision from a resume.
  • Async video screening instead of phone screens. Scheduling 15 phone screens is 15 scheduling exchanges and 5+ hours of calls. Async video screening eliminates the scheduling step entirely — candidates record responses to 3–4 structured questions on their own schedule, you review when convenient. A 6-minute review at 1.5× speed gives you more signal than a 20-minute unstructured phone call.
How EasyHire helps here: EasyHire's free plan lets you run 5 async video interviews per month with AI analysis of responses — no scheduling, no phone calls. Candidates receive a link, record their answers in their browser, and submit. You review with AI-assisted insights to help prioritise who to advance. Free plan, no credit card required.

See how video interviewing works for small businesses

Structured interview questions for the live round. For candidates who pass the async screen, prepare 6–8 structured questions you'll ask every finalist — the same questions, in the same order. This makes comparison fair and your decision clearer. Skills-based structured interviews result in 90% fewer hiring mistakes compared to unstructured conversations.

Step 5

Run the Live Interview Process

By the time candidates reach a live interview, you should have 3–5 finalists. The live interview has two goals: answer questions the async screen couldn't (culture fit, how they think in conversation, whether they've actually done what their resume says), and let the candidate evaluate you as an employer.

  • The interview is two-way. Strong candidates are evaluating your business, your management style, and whether they want to work there. How you conduct the interview is your first impression as an employer. Be on time, be prepared, and give them genuine time to ask questions.
  • Ask at least two behavioural questions. “Tell me about a time you [relevant situation]” produces far more useful information than “how would you handle [hypothetical situation].” Past behaviour predicts future behaviour.
  • Ask about their ideal role. “What does a great day at work look like for you?” The answers tell you whether what you're offering matches what they actually want — a mismatch here is the most common predictor of early attrition.
  • Reference checks are not optional. For a first hire especially: call two references, not email them. Ask open-ended questions: “Would you rehire them?” The pause before the answer to that last question is often the most informative part.
How EasyHire helps here: EasyHire's free plan also supports the Live interview type — schedule and run your live interviews in the same place you screen candidates, no separate tool required.

Step 6

Make the Offer

When you've chosen your candidate, move fast. The American labor market in 2026 means that strong candidates are often interviewing at multiple companies simultaneously, and delays at the offer stage are one of the primary reasons candidates accept competing offers.

  • Call first, email second. A verbal offer call signals enthusiasm and creates personal connection. Send the written offer letter the same day or the next morning — don't let days pass between the call and the paper.
  • Be clear on the terms. Salary or hourly rate, start date, location, hours, PTO, benefits, and any probationary period. If there's a trial period, state this clearly upfront — not in the fine print.
  • Give a clear but fair decision timeline. “We'd love a decision by [date] — does that work for you?” is reasonable. A week is standard for most roles.
Step 7

Onboard Them Properly

The most expensive hiring mistake isn't a bad hire — it's a good hire who leaves in month three because the onboarding was chaotic and they never felt set up to succeed. Effective onboarding begins before the start date and extends through the initial months.

  • Before day one: Set up their workspace, accounts, and access before they arrive. Nothing signals disorganisation faster than a new hire showing up to a desk with no computer access on their first day.
  • Day one: Focus on connection, not information dump. Introduce them to everyone they'll work with. Explain the why behind the work. Give them something specific to accomplish so they end day one feeling useful.
  • First two weeks: Structured learning schedule. Daily check-ins, even brief ones. Clear short-term goals they can hit within the first 30 days. Providing clear workflows and allowing time to digest information makes the difference between a new hire who ramps quickly and one who quietly disengages.
  • 30-60-90 day plan. Give your new hire explicit goals for their first 30, 60, and 90 days. At each milestone, have a structured conversation: what's going well, what needs adjustment, what they need from you. This creates a feedback loop early enough that course corrections are easy, not painful.

First-Hire Checklist

Before posting the role
Revenue supports 12 months of salary + benefits/taxes
Role defined with specific outcomes, not just duties
Must-have requirements identified (2–4 maximum)
Key processes documented for the new hire to follow
During hiring
Job post written with compensation range
Knockout questions configured
Async video screen set up (EasyHire free plan covers this)
Structured interview questions prepared (same for every candidate)
References checked for finalist(s)
At offer stage
Verbal offer call made same day as decision
Written offer letter sent within 24 hours
Decision timeline communicated clearly
Before day one
Equipment and access set up
30-60-90 day plan prepared
Day one schedule planned

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to hire a first employee?
The true cost of a new employee typically exceeds the base salary — factor in payroll taxes, benefits, and employer contributions on top of the salary itself. Budget for one-time costs too: job posting fees ($0–$500 depending on platform), any assessment or screening tools, equipment ($500–$2,000 depending on role), and training time. Companies commonly spend upwards of $1,000 on each employee's training, plus the productivity cost of ramp-up time — most new employees take several weeks to reach full productivity.
How long should the hiring process take for a first hire?
For most small business first hires, a well-run process takes 3–5 weeks from posting to accepted offer: 1 week of application collection, 3–5 days of resume review and async video screening, 1 week of live interviews, and 1 week from offer to acceptance. The biggest time losses are usually at the screening stage (taking too long to review applications) and the offer stage (taking days to prepare the paperwork after deciding). Moving with intention at each stage keeps the best candidates engaged.
What's the biggest mistake first-time hiring managers make?
Hiring for experience over fit. A candidate with 8 years of experience who isn't energised by the work you're offering will underperform a candidate with 3 years of relevant experience who's genuinely motivated by the role and environment. For a first hire especially — where you'll work closely together and their performance directly affects the business — cultural and motivational fit often matters more than seniority. The second most common mistake: skipping or rushing reference checks. References consistently surface information that interviews don't.
Do I need an HR software system for my first employee?
Not necessarily. A Google Drive folder with employment documents, a calendar, and a basic spreadsheet for tracking PTO is sufficient infrastructure for a single employee. As you grow to 3–5 employees, a dedicated HR system becomes more valuable for reviews and document management. For the hiring process itself, EasyHire's free plan handles async video screening at zero cost — sufficient for a first hire without any additional HR tech.

Key Takeaways

The revenue jump from solo operation to first employee is significant: companies with even 1–4 employees generate nearly 8× the average revenue of solo businesses.
Budget for the true cost of a new employee — base salary plus taxes, benefits, equipment, and training time.
Define the role by outcomes, not duties — it attracts better candidates and makes evaluation clearer.
Skills-based structured interviews produce 90% fewer hiring mistakes than unstructured conversations.
Async video screening replaces phone screens for first-round evaluation — eliminating scheduling and producing more comparable candidate data.
Onboarding doesn't end after day one — a 30-60-90 day plan with regular check-ins is what turns a good hire into a productive team member.

The first hire is the hardest one — not because the process is complicated, but because everything is new. The businesses that get it right treat it as a system to follow, not a decision to wing.

If you're at the screening stage and want to evaluate candidates efficiently without spending hours on phone screens, EasyHire's free plan covers async video interviews for your first hire at no cost.

Screen your first hire without spending hours on phone calls

Run async video interviews with AI analysis — no scheduling, no phone screens. EasyHire's free plan covers 5 interviews/month, no credit card required.

Last updated: June 2026. → How to Reduce Time to Hire · Video Interview Software for Small Business · Video Interview Questions to Ask Candidates

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