Future of Employee Communication Depends on Us

The newly launched CommScrum features a terrific multi-author piece on issues in internal communications that outlines several huge issues in the function.

  • Mike Klein wants to reclaim the term Employee Communication, owing to the multi-audience impact of employees.
  • Dan Gray says the boundaries between internal and external communication have fallen, with alignment no longer the sine qua non, and fusion the future.
  • Lindsay Uittenbogaard says that employee ambassadorship needs “20 cans of Red Bull and a red-hot poker” and continued emphasis on alignment.
  • Kevin Keohane outlines the disparate “belief systems” about employee communication that cloud the ability to see employee communication leadership as “connecting up the core factions to deliver value to the organization and its people.”

You’ll want to read the post, but here are my thoughts.  I believe internal communicators need to respect each of these constituencies.

Information provision is still important — a gatekeeper/distributor or merely a systemic means of access for employees is the change afoot here. People still need information that helps them do their jobs. Tactical support.

The human capitalists – HR wants there to be a predictive model, hence the focus on engagement and free will — they want to believe that persuasion isn’t needed, that pushing the right buttons will lead to further discretionary effort in support of business objectives.  Certainly, a few of the Gallup 12 questions will apply in the new order, but not the ones that focus on the purely social aspects of workplace. Systemic methods of finding collaborators and achieving objectives will be welcome, whilst ersatz sentimentality and misguided cheerleading will not. Look, everyone knows better now what companies are in business for – earning money for their owners. No more corporate Kum By Ya, if you please.

The experientialists – Branding agents want the internal constituency to be like customers – send your messages overtly, and subliminally through design, color, etc., at the worst; understand the customer’s motivation and make employees understand it too, at the best. Advertising and direct marketing don’t work on employees – it’s too one-way and too asymmetrical and employees can smell a sales job a mile away.  It’s the potential disconnect between brand ideation and reality that represents the second largest threat to success.

The influencers – Keohane writes: “A third camp is (and often the most seriously flawed) the PR and change camp, where internal/employee comms is all about defining “publics” and then influencing them using spin and external PR techniques.”  I’d argue that this has been on the decline for a while now.  After a brief flirtation with indentifying peer influencers and doing internal outreach, a la a traditional campaign, most of us have come to our senses.  Nevertheless, involving employees in a meaningful way (the “cultivating influencers” model) could have widespread positive impact.  But again, there can’t be a say-do disconnect – the walk must match the talk.

The changelings – “Communications is change.  Change comes from workstreams.”  Change isn’t an event. We are very close to realizing the Deming concept of continuous improvement, where so many aspects of the business are changing so often that there is no pause.  Here’s where the engagement concept fails so utterly – with no new normal, no one ever gets comfortable, or attains much mastery of the work environment.  The flexible, excellent communicators live in this change and adapt easily to help the organization manage through the issues that arise.

The executives – “It’s all about leadership communication.” A large proportion of it is about leadership (I suppose I’d type myself into this camp), but not in the sense of leaders making pronouncements from on high. Too much managerial communication focuses on managers sharing the strategy with the hoi polloi.  Managers need to be the primary communication agent in the organization, knowing how the strategy will affect their departments and teams and drawing the linkages for them to improve line of sight to the overall objectives.

The managerials – “It’s all about line managers.” Only insofar as the organization has line managers. Of course, in manufacturing, union stipulations, work rules and (European) Works Councils govern much of how the operations will function. The line manager may not be able to participate as fully as the managerials would prefer, though their role in any model can be as robust or lean as required. This is a tough one to generalize about.

The KM brigade – “It’s about intranets and managing knowledge.”  It’s only about intranets if you have enough employees using them. At Goodyear, about 32,000 employees use PCs, and about 43,000 operate complex machines. You don’t want a worker building a truck tire to be looking at a monitor, no matter how compelling the content, and the process of knowledge sharing is person-to-person, which we know is far superior to person-to-database.

The storytellers – “It’s all about big pictures and stories, since the dawn of time it always has been.” Well, stories are still important, dang it.  Organizations are made up of people doing things that help the organization succeed. There are good, compelling, interesting stories about these people. Stories still capture our imagination, perhaps now more than ever.  Do we watch American Idol in the states because it’s great art, or that the story lines are so interesting?  Good employee communication makes dry topics interesting with humanity.

We didn’t even get into the concepts of two-way communication – the process of fostering dialogue to build understanding and commitment, generate improvement feedback and otherwise create an organizational impulse to participation rather than passivity.

The future of employee communication does depend on communication leaders’ ability to tie these many perspectives together.

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9 Responses to “Future of Employee Communication Depends on Us”

  1. Mike Klein says:

    YOWZA!!!!

    Thanks for the spirited–and brilliant–response.

    We employee/internal communicators–as a profession and indeed as a tribe–are in a transition that we are well positioned to lead.

    All of the constituencies, and even the approaches, mentioned by Kevin retain at least some of their validity going into this transition, and some will emerge more resonant, useful and powerful than others.

    Our obstacles are also formidable. We still work for clients who want tested methods, and adore things like cascades that reinforce hierarchy better than they deliver information or unleash action.

    Thanks for the reply, and I look forward to your continued leadership in this awesome effort.

    Mike Klein–The Intersection, Brussels
    @mklein818

  2. Sean says:

    Mike – that is certainly the first time I’ve ever written anything at all — or done anything in work life — that’s rated a “YOWZA!!!!”

    Thanks for your kind comment.

    I continue to believe that the truest return on communication investment will derive from internal communication. Ideally, we will work ourselves right out of a job, so effectively will we help the organization communicate. It makes most media relations look like a monumental waste of time — we can get our people working together!

    But, don’t get me started again – you see the nosebleed I wrote after reading your piece.

    ;-)

  3. Dan Gray says:

    Awesome post, Sean. Your observations on the “changelings” constituency are particularly profound, I think. In an increasingly complex, diverse and unstable world, the ability to cope with/thrive in ambiguity is perhaps the biggest leadership challenge of all, and the one that, if internal comms pros apply their skills properly to help the C-suite meet it, will be seen to add the greatest strategic value.

    (PS. Love the DYOB vibe of your comment above. Jack Welch would be proud!)

  4. [...] Excerpt from:  Future of Employee Communication Depends on Us « Communication … [...]

  5. Sean says:

    Dan, thanks so much! I’m delighted to discover a committed few pros focusing on internal communications. This social media experiment of mine didn’t seem to come with an instruction manual…

    Jack’s gotten little love, lately, which is a pity. Reading “Straight from the Gut” indicated the premium he placed on leadership communication (though one hears horror stories about his own, rather (ahem) animated style.)

    Sometimes I think we internal communicators lack guts — we’re afraid to get fired for speaking up/out, so we don’t. I have a story to tell in that regard, but not right now…

    We’re best equipped to help the organization through change, because we have a broad, cross-functional perspective and our skill set is all about relationships. We need to embrace the change and get on with it.

    Thanks again for stopping by!

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  7. Mike Klein says:

    Guts–an interesting concept.

    Our industry has interesting DNA–very few workplace communicators dream of it when playing football as kids. We are a rag-tag bunch, far more ex-journos or ex-junior managers than ex-political consultants or ex-management consultants.

    Guts in my world, reflect two factors–the ability to exhibit risk-taking and courage, and the extent to which such exhibitions are viewed as seriously.

    That’s why this moment in “enterprise communication” is so vital–never before will our contribution be so central, and never before has it been so critical that we communicators generate the confidence–as well as competence–to have our voices heard above the chaos.

  8. Sean says:

    Mike – great definition of Guts – the other factor besides from whence we’ve come to internal comms is personality. We’re often creatives and introverts. Ever had the experience of a formerly taciturn communicator suddenly become outraged and voluble? It’s quite a sight!

    There is no doubt in my mind (and launching my own firm into the teeth of a major “recession” is proof of that) that we communicators are essential to business, especially if we cast off the shackles of our “always done it that ways” and embrace measurement, research, counsel and courage.

    Thanks again for spurring such a great conversation (and for adding me to the blogroll at Commscrum…)

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