If you work in internal communications, HR or leadership, you’ve heard it before:
“The first I’ve heard of it.”
It’s rarely said with bad intent. But it usually signals a gap in your internal communications strategy.
And in most cases, it isn’t because you don’t have enough channels.
It’s because those channels lack clear purpose.
Most organisations already use multiple internal communication channels:
• EmailYet despite this, employees still say they didn’t know.
That’s not a technology failure. It’s a clarity failure.
When every channel is used for everything, people stop knowing where to look, what matters, what’s optional, and what requires action
Noise replaces direction.
Before investing in another platform or launching a new initiative, review the channels you already have.
For each one, ask:
Is it designed for quick operational updates?
Deeper strategic storytelling?
Reference information?
Conversation?
Recognition?
Every effective internal communications strategy defines the purpose of each channel clearly. If that purpose isn’t obvious, confusion follows.
Is it part of a predictable communication rhythm?
Or does it appear in bursts when something urgent happens?
Consistency builds trust. Random spikes create fatigue.
Is content easy to find, visually consistent and aligned with your internal brand?
Or does it feel cluttered and fragmented?
Your internal communication channels are part of your internal brand. They either reinforce clarity and confidence or they undermine them.
Does it work for desk-based colleagues but not for retail teams, drivers or people constantly on the move?
If your employee communication only works for head office, it isn’t truly organisation-wide.
In our work, we often see meaningful improvements when organisations:
• Simplify email so people receive fewer, more targeted messagesThe goal isn’t more communication.
It’s a joined-up, manageable ecosystem where every channel has a clear role.
When that happens, “the first I’ve heard of it” becomes far less common.
This perspective is just one section from our guide:
Internal Comms – Your Brand on the Inside
In the full guide, we explore:
• The common internal comms patterns that create noise instead of clarityIf you’re reviewing your internal communications strategy this year, the guide is designed as a practical companion rather than a one-off read: