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Enterprises often struggle to onboard new team members at scale. Human resources (HR) teams spend time on manual tasks that delay productivity, such as processing documents to answering repeated questions about benefits and policies. For organizations with many new hires, these steps make it harder to keep onboarding consistent and compliant. Organizations lose substantial amounts of time per day per new hire during onboarding, with new employees typically reaching only a fraction of their potential productivity in the first month. Amazon Quick is a fully managed agentic service. With it, HR departments can create no-code onboarding agents that answer new-hire questions, track compliance across existing tools, and clear tickets automatically so that new hires can ramp faster with less manual work.
In this post, we walk through building a custom HR onboarding agent with Quick. We show how to configure an agent that understands your organization’s processes, connects to your HR systems, and automates common tasks, such as answering new-hire questions and tracking document completion. You can adapt this solution to your onboarding workflow so new hires get consistent answers and HR teams reclaim time previously spent on routine inquiries.
Quick transforms employee onboarding from scattered documents and manual processes into an intelligent, connected experience through the following integrated components:
Quick can help HR teams create specialized onboarding assistants that combine knowledge access with automated tasks. You can use the built-in system agent (“My assistant”) for immediate help or create custom chat agents tailored to your organization’s specific onboarding needs, such as a dedicated HR onboarding assistant that knows your company policies and can automatically handle common requests like IT setup or benefits enrollment.
This solution uses a custom chat agent in Quick for employee onboarding. Without an agent, HR might switch between wikis, SharePoint, ticketing, chat, and email to coordinate each step. With Quick, the agent presents the latest checklist from the HR space, answers with approved language, opens requests through actions, notifies stakeholders, and points the employee to the next step. Confirmations and status remain in the HR tools, and the agent reads or updates them through actions or flows. The following diagram illustrates the solution architecture.
Implementing the solution consists of the following high-level steps:
Quick provides two types of chat agents that facilitate this onboarding solution: the system chat agent (“My assistant”) and custom chat agents. The system chat agent (“My assistant”) – “My assistant” appears on the Amazon Quick console by default and helps users ask questions and complete tasks using resources they are allowed to access. Users can interact with the system agent in multiple ways:
Custom agents help you build specialized assistants for your business needs. You configure behavior (purpose, tone, response format); attach spaces with dashboards, topics, and knowledge bases for grounded answers; and link action connectors so the agent can perform tasks in tools like Jira, Slack, ServiceNow, Salesforce, Outlook, or Teams. You can share custom agents with specific users or groups. Custom agents offer the following capabilities:
You can use the system chat agent for general assistance across Quick, or create a custom agent tailored to a workflow such as HR onboarding. In that case, you define instructions, attach the HR space or knowledge base, and enable actions for requests and notifications.
In the following sections, we walk through the steps to implement this solution using two personas: the HR administrator who sets up and shares the agent, and the employee who completes onboarding tasks with the agent.
Before you begin, make sure you have completed the following steps:
employee_handbook.pdfleave_policy.pdfonboarding_checklist.pdfperformance_review_guidelines.pdfpublic_holidays.csv (optional, used later for reporting or analytics)If your organization already uses a corporate Confluence site, you might not have permission to create spaces or upload sample files unless you request additional access from your Confluence administrator. To experience the value of Quick without waiting on admin changes, use a separate Atlassian Cloud site to follow this post.
This procedure uses two personas: the HR administrator who sets up and shares the agent, and the employee who completes onboarding tasks with the agent.
The following sequence diagram shows how the HR administrator creates, configures, and shares the HR onboarding agent in Quick.
First, you create the chat agent itself, which becomes the single place where new hires ask questions and get guided through onboarding:
Quick will automatically expand your prompt into a detailed persona and response instructions and scan your available resources to link relevant spaces and action connectors to the agent.
Next, you shape how the agent should respond so its tone, scope, and guardrails match your HR policies and HR brand:
Now you connect your HR knowledge sources so the agent answers from approved handbooks and policies instead of inventing its own language:
After the agent can answer questions, you add actions so it can also trigger work in your HR tools, such as tickets, requests, and notifications:
Only action connectors configured with the necessary OAuth details can be linked to the agent, so end-users can authenticate individually during their chat. Update your reference documents and persona instructions to specify when to invoke specific action connectors. For example: “When an employee requests equipment, use the ServiceNow connector to create a hardware request ticket,” or “For access requests, create a Jira ticket in the IT-Access project with priority set to ‘Normal.’”
Finally, customize the agent with a welcome message and suggested prompts. You can test the agent with realistic scenarios, tune the experience, and share it with a pilot group so HR can validate the workflow before broad rollout. Test with real questions and tasks using the preview chat.
When you’re ready, launch the agent, and it will be available in your personal library for private use. To share with others, choose Share and add users and user groups as viewers to use the agent. You can also select other users from your team to be owners to edit and test the agent along with you. HR managers can share the custom agent with new employees by using the sharing options in the navigation pane to grant access to specific team members or groups.
The following sequence diagram shows how an employee uses the onboarding agent to complete required tasks and track their Day 1 progress in one place.
After the agent is published and shared with employees as viewers, they can open it from the link HR provides (for example, in their Day 1 email or HR portal) or from the chat agents list in Quick, and then use it as follows:
As an employee, the experience is simple: they open a single chat, see their Day 1 checklist, ask questions in natural language, and let the agent open requests and point them to the right systems. Instead of juggling emails, portals, and tickets, onboarding feels like a guided conversation where each next step is clear.
You have now set up the HR Onboarding Confluence space with sample HR documents, created a custom onboarding agent in Quick, configured its behavior, connected HR knowledge, and added Jira actions for requests. You can use this setup as a proof of concept with a small group of new hires or HR partners, then extend it by adding more content, additional actions, or new spaces for other HR workflows such as performance reviews or policy updates.
Quick includes built-in safety and content controls for chat agents, so you can follow along with this post using the default settings in your account. If you want to experiment with policy controls as part of this proof of concept, you can also add a small list of blocked words or phrases so the agent avoids specific terms in HR responses (for example, informal slang or discouraged wording). Blocked terms are configured on the Quick console and applied across agents in your account. For step-by-step instructions and additional security options such as access control and encryption, see the Amazon Quick User Guide.
Quick offers two user subscriptions: Professional and Enterprise. Professional supports everyday use of chat agents and spaces, running Amazon Quick Flows and Amazon Quick Research, and viewing Amazon Quick Sight dashboards, with the ability to create and share custom agents and spaces. Enterprise includes everything in Professional plus advanced authoring features such as configuring actions, creating knowledge bases, building automations in Amazon Quick Automate, and authoring dashboards in Quick Sight, with larger monthly usage allowances. A 30‑day free trial is available for up to 25 users per account. For details, refer to Amazon Quick pricing.
This post showed how to build an HR onboarding chat agent in Quick, attach HR content, add actions and optional flows, and share it with employees. Start with a pilot that covers your most frequent questions and two or three requests, review usage, and refine the agent’s instructions and content. For next steps, expand the HR space, add additional actions as needed, and review the Quick documentation for advanced configuration. Beyond onboarding, HR teams can explore building agents for employee self-service, performance management, talent acquisition, learning and development, analytics, and off-boarding processes to transform their entire HR operations.
Ready to transform your workplace productivity? Get started with Quick, explore pricing options that fit your needs. Click here to begin building your own HR agent, explore our official documentation for detailed implementation guidance, or contact your AWS account team to discuss how Quick can transform your organization’s approach to data-driven decision-making.
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