The short answer: Shopify gives retail teams staff accounts, roles and permissions through POS — but it has no built-in way to deliver structured training, onboarding checklists, or to confirm staff have actually read an update. So training a Shopify team in 2026 means pairing Shopify's native roles with a dedicated training and onboarding tool. Here is what that looks like, and how to choose.
Shopify POS includes unlimited staff accounts, roles and permissions, and some built-in help resources. That covers access — who can do what on the till and in the admin. It does not cover knowledge.
Out of the box, Shopify has no dedicated training module builder, no structured onboarding flow for a new hire, no place to keep your standard operating procedures (SOPs) where staff will actually find them, and no way to know whether a staff member has read the policy change you sent on Friday. Those gaps are what a staff-training setup needs to fill.
There is no single "right" tool — it depends on whether your gap is timekeeping, knowledge, or both.
These are the most-installed "staff" apps on the Shopify App Store, and they are excellent at what they do: clocking in and out, scheduling, timesheets, payroll and sales commissions. But that is timekeeping and pay — they are not training tools. If your problem is "I need to pay people for the right hours," start here. If your problem is "new staff don't know the products and nobody reads my updates," they won't solve it.
Full LMS platforms are powerful and can integrate with HR systems. For a large or multi-site retailer they make sense. For a small Shopify store they are usually heavyweight and priced for bigger teams — you end up paying for course-authoring depth you will not use.
This is the category most small Shopify retailers are actually missing. StaffHub — one of our own apps — focuses on knowledge rather than the clock: training modules, onboarding checklists, SOPs and product briefings, and announcements with read receipts so you can see who has read what. It is free for up to five staff, and it sits alongside a time-clock app rather than replacing it. We mention it plainly because we build it; judge it on whether it fits the gap above.
Free, and fine for a single-person shop. The moment you have staff, the weakness shows: you have no idea who has read the document, training is inconsistent between hires, and the "master" copy drifts. Workable as a stopgap, risky as a system.
Onboarding is a month, not a day — cramming everything into the first shift guarantees most of it is forgotten. A sensible week one:
Spread product depth, promotions and edge cases across weeks two to four, and reinforce with short refreshers rather than one long session.
Use Shopify's native roles for access, a time-clock app if you need hours and pay, and a dedicated training app for knowledge and onboarding. Most stores already have the first two and are missing the third — which is exactly why new staff take longer to get productive than they should.
Shopify POS gives you staff accounts, roles and permissions, but no structured training. To train staff you pair Shopify's native roles with a dedicated training and onboarding app (or a full LMS) that delivers training modules, onboarding checklists, SOPs, and announcements you can confirm staff have actually read.
Not a dedicated one. Shopify POS includes staff accounts, roles and permissions plus some help resources, but structured training modules, onboarding checklists, SOPs and read receipts come from third-party apps.
Time-clock apps such as EasyTeam or Homebase track hours, scheduling and payroll. Training apps such as StaffHub handle knowledge: onboarding, product training, SOPs and announcements with read receipts. They solve different problems and many stores use both.
Plan for the first month, not the first day. Front-load safety and till/POS basics in week one, then spread product knowledge, returns and SOPs across weeks two to four with short, reinforced sessions.
You can store SOPs in a doc or sheet, but you will not know who has read what. For anything compliance- or consistency-sensitive, a tool with read receipts and assignment tracking is safer than hoping staff opened the file.
Running a Shopify store and wrestling with staff onboarding or product knowledge? See our staff onboarding playbook, take a look at StaffHub, or ask us for free advice — we'll tell you honestly whether an app, a tweak, or nothing at all is the right call.