Any tips/advice welcome
I successfully brought on one new staffer by having her shadow me (in formal and informal meetings with decision makers, community meetings, telephone calls, document prep) for a month and do a TON of grunt work, things like making lists of the various organizations working on a particular issue, what their viewpoint was, identifying DC Council staffers working on the issue, identifying their interests and learning styles.
I know the staffer felt somewhat constrained on the leash, but she ended up being so much more successful than other policy staff who did not go through this and do the grunt work. Though, thinking back, success may have had much more to do with my having conveyed a specific approach to the work, goals for the work, etc.
But you can also take advantage of that if you task new members to maybe evaluate these tools or a specific one. That way they have a task beyond familiarizing themselves, which is often a blurry goal. The task also requires to get to know the tools employed to be able to compare them to alternatives.
That way you can also leverage the fact that someone new maybe doesn't have the same blinders yet and it can take work off you to keep up with developments in the field.
It takes a bit of time though, since newcomers are also a bit reluctant to tell you that the tools you use are suboptimal. You maybe need to encourage them to speak their mind.
As I said, it is a bit dependent on the field. Perhaps this approach is terrible for web devs, because the amount of alternatives is staggering and a lot of it comes down to opinion and personal preferences. So maybe this is terrible advice here.
The idea was to to collect the best solutions and strategies for recurring problems or edge cases, background knowledge for new and seasoned employees to understand the reasoning behind specific processes, a link database, form templates and general IT self-help advice.
It was somewhat helpful when the most-experienced co-worker was missing for months due to illness.
Unfortunately the idea never truly got off the ground and was abandoned after I quit.