16 gems to help you start to understand internal comms 
Wednesday, September 3, 2014
Darren Caveney in #commsforchange14, #commsforchange14, 16 gems to help you start to understand internal comms, CIPR, change, comms2point0, internal comms, internal communications

Internal comms can often be the Cinderella part of PR and communications. It's often undervalued. But big schemes that need to be communicated well need to start with engaged and informed staff. There's a report that has stood the test of time is a good place to help start your understanding. 

by Dan Slee

Here’s a confession. It wasn’t until long into my career in communications that I realised the value of internal comms.

I used to stupidly think internal comms person was when you failed at being a press officer. There I’ve said it.

I couldn’t have been more wrong.

It wasn’t until I drew-up a big report on budget consultation that I went away and researched it that I saw why it was so important. I now think you need to put one of your best people doing it because if the staff don’t understand where you are headed and why you are heading there brother, you are in for a big fail.

Any kind of project but especially a change or transformation project needs to have engaged and informed staff not as a woolley nice to have but as a hard-headed essential thing.

Your communications should include what is called 'employee engagement'. The better it is the better the chance of success.

What is internal comms?

That’s things like the intranet, the all staff email, the weekly bulletin and the face-to-face briefing. All levers that can be used to try and talk to your employees. As the saying goes, if the people behind the counter aren’t enthusiastic about the apples you won’t sell many of them. But internal comms absolutely isn’t just for the internal comms officer or the IT person who looks after the intranet although they may have to play the cheer leading role.

What is employee engagement?

Sure, internal comms is a big part of it but employee engagement is the encouraging of opportunities for employees to connect with colleagues, managers and the wider organisation.

What is the MacLeod Report?

Back in 2008, the Secretary of State for Business commissioned David MacLeod and Nita Clarke to write a report on the value of internal communications. Or, rather as they describe it, ‘employee engagement.’ I would suggest anyone who is interested in communicating should read it and you can find a link to it here. The report was hugely influential and led to a voluntary movement loosely tagged ‘Engage for Success’ to promote its work.

Reading it for the first time it was a revelation. Here are some key points you need to know.

16 gems from the MacLeod Report

Some theory

 


Some data

Dan Slee is co-founder of comms2point0.

Picture credit.

Article originally appeared on comms2point0 free online resource for creative comms people (http://twoheads.squarespace.com/).
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