Internal Communication

FREE Online Inclusive Internal Communication Course ~ Week 3

Well done on completing Week 2

WEEK 3: Getting Staff Involved From the Start

Monday

Subject: The messages you should never have written alone

That announcement you spent hours perfecting?

An employee could have told you in 5 minutes why it wouldn’t land.

But you never asked.

This week: Real ways to involve staff from the beginning.

Tuesday

The working-together approach

Stop creating in a bubble.

Old way: IC team creates → Boss approves → Employees get it

New way: IC spots a need → Brings in employees → Creates together → Tests with staff → Fixes it → Launches

Communication should be back-and-forth, not just you sending stuff out.

Big shift: You’re the person who brings people together, not the only writer.

Wednesday

Start a communication advisory group

Create a regular group of 10-15 employees with:

  • Different jobs and departments
  • Different levels (not just managers)
  • Different locations and work setups
  • Mix of new people and long-timers

What they do:

  • Look at communication plans
  • Test messages before they go out
  • Give ongoing feedback
  • Share communications in their areas

Meet: Once a month for an hour

Thursday

Test everything first

Every message should go through real employees before launch.

Quick testing:

  • Show a draft to 5-10 people: “Does this make sense?”
  • Read it out loud to a coworker: “Where did you get lost?”
  • Show someone outside your team: “What’s the main point?”

What you’re checking:

  • Do they understand it?
  • Do they care?
  • Do they know what to do?
  • How does it make them feel?

Your turn: Pick your next message. Who will you test it with?

Friday

Find your communication champions

Look for natural communicators across your company.

These are people who:

  • Their coworkers trust
  • Ask good questions
  • Share information naturally
  • Connect people

Get them to:

  • Look at communications early
  • Share in team meetings
  • Collect feedback from their peers
  • Be a two-way bridge

Note: These aren’t managers—they’re people others actually listen to.

Saturday

Create change messages together

Change communications fail when you do them TO people, not WITH them.

Involve staff in:

  • Naming the change
  • Writing the main messages
  • Creating the FAQ (they know the real questions)
  • Planning when to roll it out
  • Making the materials

Example: Ask employees to send in questions about the upcoming change. Answer them together.

Sunday

Week 3 Challenge: Co-Create One Thing

Pick one upcoming communication.

Steps:

  1. Identify 5-8 employees who’ll be affected
  2. Share what you need to communicate
  3. Ask: “How should we say this? What matters most?”
  4. Draft it together in the meeting
  5. Test with a few more people
  6. Launch it

Notice: How does this version compare to what you would have written alone?

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