| name | first-day-survival |
| description | Hour-by-hour guide to surviving your first day at a new job. What to do, what to avoid, how to make the right impression without trying too hard. |
First Day Survival
When to Activate
- "Tomorrow is my first day"
- "What should I do on day one?"
- "I'm nervous about starting"
- "First day tips"
- User mentions new job starting soon
The Night Before
Logistics (Do Tonight)
Mindset Reset
Your only job tomorrow: Absorb, not impress.
No one expects output on day one. They expect you to:
- Show up on time
- Be pleasant
- Ask questions
- Not break anything
That's it. The bar is low. Clear it comfortably.
Hour-by-Hour Guide
Hour 0: Arrival (30 min early → 10 min early)
Arrive 30 min early, but don't enter.
- Find a coffee shop or sit in car
- Use this time to breathe, review names, check LinkedIn photos
- Enter building 10 minutes before start time
- First impression: calm, prepared, not anxious-early
Hour 1-2: Onboarding & Setup
Your mission: Set up, nod, smile.
- IT setup will take longer than expected — this is normal
- You'll forget passwords immediately — write them down
- HR paperwork is boring — do it anyway, ask if unclear
- If you finish early: don't announce it, review materials quietly
Phrases to use:
- "Where should I sit while this installs?"
- "Is there documentation I should read while waiting?"
Hour 3-4: Meeting People
Your mission: Collect names, give energy.
- You will meet 10+ people and forget 8 names — normal
- Write names down immediately after each intro
- Ask one question per person: "What do you work on?"
- Don't pitch yourself. Listen more than talk.
Name trick: Use their name once in conversation:
"Nice to meet you, Sarah. How long have you been on the team?"
Hour 5: Lunch
Your mission: Don't eat alone if invited.
| Scenario | Do This |
|---|
| Invited to group lunch | Go. Even if awkward. |
| No one invites you | Ask: "Where do people usually eat?" |
| Everyone eats at desk | Eat at desk, observe the culture |
| Still alone | Totally fine. Walk around, explore the area. |
Lunch conversation: Ask about them. Avoid:
- Complaining about previous job
- Strong opinions on anything
- "At my last company we did X..."
Hour 6-7: Afternoon Work
Your mission: Do the small things well.
- You might get a tiny task — do it thoroughly
- You might get nothing — ask: "Is there anything I can read or review?"
- Take notes on everything. You'll need them tomorrow.
- If confused, ask now. Day one questions are expected. Day 30 questions are embarrassing.
Hour 8: End of Day
Your mission: Leave on time. Don't be a hero.
- Check with manager: "Is there anything else I should do today?"
- If they say no, leave at normal time
- Staying late on day one looks insecure, not dedicated
- Say goodbye to people near you: "See you tomorrow!"
What to Avoid
Day One Sins
| ❌ Don't | Why |
|---|
| Suggest improvements | You don't understand the context yet |
| "At my last job..." | No one cares |
| Strong opinions | Save them for month 2 |
| Skip lunch with team | Relationship > efficiency |
| Stay super late | Looks desperate |
| Overshare personal life | Keep it professional-friendly |
| Ask about WFH/vacation | Not day one questions |
Day One Anxieties (That Don't Matter)
| Worry | Reality |
|---|
| "I forgot someone's name" | Everyone does. Ask again. |
| "I asked a dumb question" | Better than not asking |
| "I didn't contribute" | You're not supposed to yet |
| "I was quiet at lunch" | Listening is fine |
| "They'll realize I don't know X" | That's why they're training you |
The Real Goal
Day one is not about impressing. It's about:
- Being forgettable in a good way — No drama, no red flags
- Collecting information — Names, systems, culture clues
- Building one connection — Find one person who seems helpful
- Surviving intact — You'll have 200+ more days to shine
End of Day Checklist
Before you leave:
Night One Debrief
Answer these (for yourself):
- Culture clues: What did I notice about how people work here?
- Key person: Who seemed most helpful or influential?
- Tomorrow's focus: What's one thing I should figure out?
- Adjustment: Anything I'd do differently tomorrow?
Then: close laptop, don't check email, do something relaxing.
You survived. Tomorrow will be easier.
Response Principles
When helping someone with their first day:
- Reduce anxiety first — They're nervous. Normalize it.
- Be specific — "Arrive 10 min early" beats "be punctual"
- Lower the bar — They think they need to impress. They don't.
- Focus on relationships — Skills matter less than likability on day one
- No generic advice — "Be yourself" is useless. Give them actions.