Data-processing methods only considering the turn-off ramp in transmitting waveforms are well established for land-based transient electromagnetic (TEM) methods. The turn-on ramp effects on late-time responses are generally neglected by data-processing methods. Our forward-modeling results of homogeneous half-space models show that the full-waveform effect which includes both effects caused by turn-on and turn-off stages is common for a wide range of conductivities. The inversion results for synthetic and field examples illustrate that the inversion algorithm which does not consider the full-waveform effects can lead to a higher resistivity in deeper parts of recovered models compared with the true model. Therefore, it is of vital importance to account for the full waveform effects in both forward modeling and inversion algorithms. We use synthetic examples to show how our inversion algorithms can improve the recovered model, and use real-data examples to show the importance of incorporating full transmitting waveforms in data-processing procedures.