Every company wants new employees to become productive as quickly as possible.
Yet many onboarding programs still rely on the same approach:
A week later, the new hire is still asking:
"Where do I find this?"
"Which process should I follow?"
"Who approves this?"
The problem isn't that new employees aren't capable.
The problem is that we're expecting them to remember dozens of processes before they've had a chance to use them.
Think about your own first week at a new job.
You probably received:
It feels productive.
But most people forget a large portion of what they learn in those first few days.
Not because they're careless.
Because it's simply too much information.
Instead of asking:
"How do we teach people everything?"
Ask:
"How do we help people find the right answer exactly when they need it?"
Those are very different problems.
Documentation tells people what exists.
Guidance helps people decide what to do next.
Imagine a new support agent handling a refund request.
Instead of searching through a 20-page SOP, they answer a few questions:
Within seconds, they know exactly which path to follow.
No guessing.
No waiting for a manager.
No unnecessary mistakes.
One thing I've noticed while working with operational teams is this:
The more experienced your managers become, the more questions everyone asks them.
Eventually, managers spend a large part of their day answering the same operational questions.
Not because the team isn't capable.
Because the knowledge isn't easy to access.
That's expensive.
It slows everyone down.
Imagine if your best employee could answer every common question—even when they're on leave.
That's what good operational systems should do.
Whether you use documentation, a knowledge base, or interactive workflows, the goal is the same:
Make knowledge available without depending on a single person.
This challenge inspired me to build PathPilot.
I wanted a simple way for businesses to turn SOPs, onboarding guides, troubleshooting procedures, and operational playbooks into interactive workflows that anyone could follow.
The idea isn't to replace documentation.
It's to make documentation actionable.
When people know the next step instead of searching for it, they become productive much faster.
Ask your team one question:
"What's the process you explain most often?"
If the answer comes immediately, you've identified one of the biggest opportunities to save time. That single process could become a workflow that answers the question forever.
I'm building in public and sharing what I learn about SaaS, software engineering, workflow automation, and operational excellence.
If you're interested in making business processes simpler and more scalable, let's connect.
🌐 Website: [https://axonave.com](https://axonave.com)
🚀 Try PathPilot: [https://pathpilot.axonave.com](https://pathpilot.axonave.com)
💬 What's the one process your team has to explain over and over again?