Business
Client Onboarding Checklist Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A client onboarding checklist generator built for agencies, consultants, and service businesses that need a repeatable process — not another generic template. Poor onboarding is one of the fastest routes to early churn: credentials arrive late, goals stay undefined, and clients lose confidence before the first deliverable lands. This tool produces a tailored checklist in seconds, covering the steps that matter most for your service type. Select your service category — marketing agency, SaaS, consulting, accounting, design, or coaching — and set how many items you need. Shorter lists work for lean retainers; longer ones handle complex engagements with multiple stakeholders. Use the output as a starting point, then add your stack-specific steps before dropping it into Notion, Asana, or a client welcome doc.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Select your service type from the dropdown — choose the option closest to your business model.
- Set the number of checklist items using the count field, typically 10 for standard engagements or up to 15 for complex ones.
- Click Generate to produce a tailored onboarding checklist matched to your selected service type.
- Review the output and copy the items directly into your project management tool, document, or client welcome email.
- Repeat with a different service type or item count to compare structures and build a master checklist template.
Use Cases
- •Standardising onboarding across a marketing agency's account team before hiring a second client manager
- •Building a SaaS customer success playbook and pasting items directly into a Notion onboarding template
- •Generating a consulting engagement kickoff checklist for a fixed-fee project with a 10-day start window
- •Creating a design studio's first formal onboarding sequence before taking on a second concurrent retainer
- •Drafting an accounting firm's compliance-aware onboarding steps including data-processing agreement and portal access
Tips
- →Generate separate checklists for different service tiers (e.g. retainer vs. one-off project) so nothing is over- or under-specified.
- →Run the generator with a high item count (15+) first, then trim down to your preferred length rather than starting sparse.
- →Map each checklist item to a responsible person (you, your team, or the client) before pasting into a project tool.
- →Add estimated time or deadline offsets to each item — 'Day 1', 'Day 3', 'Week 2' — to turn the checklist into a mini timeline.
- →Compare a freshly generated checklist against your existing process annually to spot steps you've stopped doing but probably shouldn't have.
- →For SaaS onboarding, layer generated checklist items into an automated email sequence so the process runs without manual chasing.
FAQ
what should be on a client onboarding checklist for an agency
At minimum: signed contract, completed intake form, discovery call, access provisioning for tools and brand assets, defined KPIs, agreed communication cadence, and a first-milestone deadline. The exact mix shifts by service — a SaaS onboarding leans on product setup steps, while a creative agency leans on brief and asset handoff. Use the service type selector to get items weighted toward your actual workflow.
how many items should a client onboarding checklist have
Ten to fifteen items covers most engagements without becoming unmanageable. Fewer than eight usually means critical steps are bundled and get skipped; more than twenty often signals you've merged onboarding with ongoing project management. If your list runs long, split it into phases: pre-kickoff, kickoff week, and first 30 days.
should I share my onboarding checklist with the client or keep it internal
Share a simplified version that shows only the steps requiring client input — form submissions, asset uploads, approvals. Keep your full internal checklist detailed. A shared Notion page or Google Doc works well; it builds trust and cuts back-and-forth emails before the kickoff call.