I've been in both positions, as I'm sure most of yall have also.
But, I recently made the transition in "reverse order" so to speak; I went from running my own shop with employees and sub-contractors of my own to becoming an hourly employee of another larger company.
I'm assuming this employee has experience in the industry, AND that your company has also properly trained him on your business' unique workflow.
If your employee is asking questions, I feel it is a good thing. New blood is always a good thing, since it brings new ideas, experiences and creativity to the table.
When you've been entrenched at a certain workplace for a while, you've been able to wear quite a rut into the carpet.
This "rut" so to speak, seems like the most logical way of doing things, since you've been doing it that way forever. However, IS IT actually the best way now?
Is there a quicker way? (different way to cut/produce/set up)
Are you trying to get too much life out of consumables like blades? (they're cheap, or are you just talking about exacto blades?)
Why ARE you doing the same job again? (and why aren't your work orders shared between employees if he has to ask?) (maybe he's just worried that he f'd up the last one since he's the new guy?)
Not all businesses are ran correctly, in my experience most AREN'T.
An employee that wont work out is easy to figure out.
Common sense goes a LONG way, and most potential employees weed themselves out very quickly.
just my $.02