Boy, three decades goes by fast. It seems like only yesterday my co-founder and I were starting Davis & Company with not much more than an electronic typewriter and a fax machine. (Yes, really. It was 1984, after all!)
Although I'm certainly older than I was in 1984, luckily I'm also wiser. So here are 10 essential things I've learned about internal communication:
- Employees know best. If you need help figuring out how to improve any aspect of communication, ask employees (using surveys, focus groups or interviews). They’ll tell you.
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Leaders have strong perspectives, but don’t necessarily know what works for employees. Your role as communicator is to counsel leaders how to focus on objectives (and stop micromanaging).
- In general, avoid the “if I like it, so will they” bias. People in functions (like HR and IT) and at headquarters often assume that their preferences apply to everyone. Not so.
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Every communication channel—from simple bulletin boards to fancy apps—has value. Although we’re attracting to shiny new methods, sometimes the simplest, low-tech vehicles work best. For example, posters can be extremely effective.
- Posters and other workplace communication only attract attention if they’re in the right place. That old real estate adage—location, location, location—applies to internal communication as well.
- Albert Einstein was right. As you recall, he said, “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” The same rule applies to employee communication: If something isn’t working, change it.
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Richard Saul Wurman was right. Best known for being the founder of the TED conference, Mr. Wurman is also author of a fabulous book called Information Anxiety which introduces the LATCH structure to organize any kind of content: Location, Alphabet, Time, Category and Hierarchy.
- Your grandmother was right. Grandma knew what she was talking about when she repeated that old adage: “You can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar.” Unfriendly, cranky communication simply does not appeal to employees.
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Even though “authentic” has become a buzzword, it’s still an essential concept. Employees are increasingly suspicious about packaged, spun, fake communication. They want the unvarnished truth.
- Two more key words: Fresh and unexpected. Communication becomes stale even faster than a baguette. You’ve got to constantly find ways to surprise your employee audience.