Onboarding Software Resources
Articles, Glossary Terms, Discussions, and Reports to expand your knowledge on Onboarding Software
Resource pages are designed to give you a cross-section of information we have on specific categories. You'll find articles from our experts, feature definitions, discussions from users like you, and reports from industry data.
Onboarding Software Articles
Employee Training: 8 Tactics Your Company Can Put Into Action
Tech Giants Betting Big on Employee Experience
Employee Onboarding: Tips for Every Stage Along the Way
Onboarding Software Glossary Terms
Onboarding Software Discussions
How does Fingercheck handle direct deposit timing and payroll deadlines?
How long does it take to set up Fingercheck and what support is included during implementation?
We’re researching what tool integrates onboarding with HR and payroll systems, and the products that keep coming up in G2's Onboarding Software category are Rippling, Paycom, and ADP Workforce Now. Based on our analysis, this decision tends to split into two camps. Some teams want one system to own onboarding, HR, payroll, approvals, and reporting. Others are fine with an HR hub plus payroll integrations, as long as the handoffs stay clean.
The right answer usually depends on where the business feels the pain most: duplicate data entry, payroll timing, reporting gaps, or admin overhead between systems. Based on these considerations, here are our top picks:
- Rippling — Best fit when the goal is to unify onboarding, HR, payroll, approvals, and IT actions in one platform. It is particularly compelling when the problem is not just payroll sync, but all the adjacent setup work that happens around a new hire.
- Paycom — Stronger option if the priority is a truly single database across HR and payroll. Paycom explicitly frames itself around automating the employee lifecycle from one unique data source, which is a big deal for teams trying to avoid cross-system errors.
- ADP Workforce Now — Good benchmark when the team wants an all-in-one HR suite with payroll, benefits, talent, time, and analytics in the same environment. It makes more sense for organizations that want fewer system boundaries, even if they accept a broader suite.
- Workday HCM — Worth considering when integration needs to extend well beyond onboarding and payroll into benefits, talent, and enterprise reporting. The trade-off is that depth and breadth can come with more setup complexity.
- Gusto — More attractive for smaller businesses that want onboarding and payroll tightly linked without moving into a larger enterprise suite. It works well when “integrated” means “simple and reliable” rather than “deeply configurable.”
- Paylocity — Relevant when the team wants payroll, onboarding, and a broader HR platform with vendor integrations and room to expand. It is a stronger fit for companies that have already outgrown lighter SMB tooling.
For teams that centralized this stack, did the win come mostly from one database, fewer manual handoffs, or better reporting and where did you still end up needing manual cleanup after implementation?
For those using tools like Rippling, Paycom, or ADP Workforce Now, do onboarding changes flow cleanly into payroll every time, or do edge cases still pop up where you have to step in and fix things manually?




