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Internal communication

Easy 8-Step Internal Communications Strategy

Written by
Kevin Alster
October 23, 2025

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Internal communication can easily turn into noise with emails, meetings, and memos everywhere. A clear strategy can turn that chaos into clarity.

Streamlined communication means it's easy for everyone from interns to managers to:

  • Know what's going on in active projects.
  • Stay aligned with where the company is headed.
  • Feel fulfilled knowing how their work fits into the bigger picture.

In reality, things rarely work that smoothly.

In a 2023 Axios study on workplace communications, 46% of employees said they don’t have the context they need to do their jobs well.

💡 Key Insight

Nearly half of employees lack the context they need to do their jobs effectively, according to a 2023 Axios study.

Clear, consistent internal communication is one of the biggest opportunities to close that gap.

In this post, I’ll walk you through the steps to turn your internal communications into a strategic asset that helps good people do great work.

What are internal communications?

Internal communications refers to the tools and strategies organizations use to enable people to talk to each other.

As long as we’re talking small groups, internal communications initiatives are relatively simple.

However with corporate communications across thousands of employees, it takes a bit of magic to make internal comms really work.

You need to make sure every level of the company is connected without being overwhelmed.

An example of an internal communication structure

Effective internal communication must keep everyone informed and connected, no matter where or how they work.

Common internal communication channels are face-to-face briefings, casual chats between peers, and tools requiring an internet connection.

These tools include the company intranet, emails, video, social media, messaging apps, video calls, and phones.

Why is internal communication important?

Good internal communication helps ensure everyone in the organization is on the same page and has what they need to work at maximum capacity. It's also a key component of public relations, crisis management, and team building.

Of all the internal strategies a business implements, communications are among the most important.

Miscommunication snowballs into issues worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. Poor internal communication can lead to:

  • Delayed or failing projects
  • Low morale
  • Missed performance goals
  • Lost sales

A good internal communication strategy isn't just about throwing information out there, it's about making that information clear, engaging, and easy to understand for everyone, whether they're on the front lines or behind a desk.

Managers with strong communication skills can boost engagement and lead to employee retention. When employees get the lowdown on what's happening in the company, they feel valued and are more productive overall.

Did you know? 🤔

Employees who have meaningful conversations with an experienced internal communicator manager are 2.8 times more likely to be engaged at work, which leads to 23% higher margins for the company.

A brief history of internal communications

Internal communications has come a long way, transforming from a simple management trick to a vital part of modern company culture. 

It all started in the Victorian era when pioneers like the UK's Lever Brothers and New York's Larkin Soap Company used it as a function responsible for boosting team spirit and worker pride. 

The real game-changer in internal communication came with Alex Heron's 1943 book, "Sharing Information with Employees," which focused on the art of talking to employees and delivering messages effectively.

But academics only began taking notice in the 1970s. The field started to heat up in the early 2000s as study after study was conducted on why and how internal communication was important.

How to build an effective internal communications strategy

The following eight steps and best practices will help your leadership team pave the way to internal communications success.

Step 1: Analyze your existing communication methods

Before you can improve your current internal communications strategy, you first need to understand how information flows in your organization. 

Map out your company communications paths to see who's connected with whom, and how information travels from top management to front-line staff and back.

Next, evaluate your internal communication in terms of existing channels and their effectiveness: Are emails overlooked? Are meetings productive? Identify what helps you engage employees and what doesn't.

📈 Quick check

Still relying mostly on emails and meetings?

Many companies find that these channels lead to "email fatigue" and poor engagement.

Try introducing short internal videos to make key messages stand out.

Take action:

  • Conduct an internal employee communications survey asking for feedback on your current communication’s effectiveness, frequency, and clarity.
  • Audit the types of internal communication tools and review usage statistics of your existing strategy, like email open rates and intranet engagement metrics.

Step 2: Set your goals and objectives

Effective internal communication objectives do three critical things: help increase employee engagement, address the communication gaps you’ve found during your initial audit, and help employees understand their roles.

Engagement is critical because only 15% of employees feel actively engaged, and any small internal communication improvement will greatly impact this direction. Higher engagement makes employees 3 times more likely to stay at your company.

Breaking down the big picture makes it possible for everyone, from executives to new hires, to know their tasks and how their role contributes to the company's success.

These insights from internal communication make employees feel valuable and motivate them to work.

Take action:

  • Set KPIs: e.g., aim to increase email open rates by 20% within six months.
  • Connect each goal with a business objective, ensuring your communication strategy supports overall business goals.

Step 3: Segment your audience

When you know who you’re talking to, you can craft internal communication messages that are more relevant to the recipient and likely to be well-received and effective.

Segment your audience by department, role, skill level, and location.

Choose the right channels and styles of communication that resonate best with each segment.

Take action:

  • Create employee personas representing different segments of your workforce that you need to reach through internal communication.
  • Use internal data from HR to understand the demographics and preferences of different employee groups for which you'll have to adjust internal communication.

Step 4: Define your key messages

Decide what messages you want to communicate and why each is important for your audience to know.

Then, craft each message for intended audience segments in a simple, easy-to-understand form without jargon or overly complex language.

For example, internal communication for explaining a new technical tool might be more detailed for the IT department than for the rest of your staff.

Take action:

  • Identify the 2-3 most important information pieces you want to convey in each message.
  • Validate that each message in your internal communication plan addresses the specific concerns or interests of the intended audience segment.

Step 5: Pick your communication channels and tactics

Good internal communications also require appropriate channels.

The channel choice can depend on the message's nature, your audience's preference, and whether you need a quick reply or a good back-and-forth conversation.

Use a mix of employee communication tools and methods to reach your audience effectively — email, intranet, social media platforms, and tools like Slack or Trello.

I strongly recommend focusing on video communication for quick and engaging information dissemination.

I've seen companies use Synthesia for everything from leadership updates and onboarding to multilingual training videos that keep distributed teams aligned.

🎥 How companies use Synthesia
  • Leadership updates and onboarding videos
  • Multilingual training content for global teams
  • Health and safety or compliance refreshers
  • Quick updates and announcements that replace lengthy emails

This represents a shift from static written content to visual, video-based communication that helps make complex information more digestible and engaging while still be fast and easy to produce.

One additional benefit is that Synthesia makes it easy to localize videos for global teams, which is something that’s time-consuming and expensive with traditional production.

Here’s how Synthesia works: 

AI Video in 4 Minutes with Synthesia

Using Synthesia, you can also create an avatar of yourself, the CEO, or any other manager to use in your internal communication videos.

Take action:

  • Upgrade your internal communication tools
  • Use Synthesia’s free AI video generator to create your first AI video in less than 5 minutes. 

Step 6: Create a communications calendar

A comms calendar is a valuable tool.

It brings structure and supports effective internal communication, ensuring the relevant information is delivered at the right time to the right people.

Want to ensure no internal communication falls through the cracks? Identify the key events and dates, schedule communications, and assign internal communicators to send them out.

An example of what your internal communication calendar might look like.

Take action:

  • Plan thematic internal communication campaigns: Develop themed communication campaigns — e.g., a monthly focus on a specific company value — and schedule them in your calendar.
  • Include regular updates in your calendar, such as weekly round-ups, company events, or monthly employee newsletters, to maintain consistent internal communication rhythms.

Step 7: Set your Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)

Setting and monitoring internal KPIs is an essential part of any effective internal communication strategy.

It's how you can tell where you need to improve and how to fine-tune your employee communications.

📊 How to measure internal communication

Employee engagement: Track attendance at meetings, participation in surveys, and activity on internal platforms.

Communications reach: Check email open rates, intranet views, and analytics from your communication tools.

Video performance: Monitor completion rates and feedback on Synthesia videos to see what resonates most.

Looking to get employee opinions on the quality of your internal communication? Use feedback forms for employee experience, look at the comment sections on internal platforms, or have your internal communicators open meeting discussions.

I've seen organizations measure the effectiveness of Synthesia videos through a mix of qualitative and quantitative metrics.

Engagement data — like completion rates and view time — helps track participation, while employee feedback and sentiment surveys give qualitative context.

Others look at the impact on efficiency: faster content turnaround and reduced production costs compared to traditional video workflows.

For global companies, I've also seen reach and accessibility across multiple languages have also become key success metrics.

Take action:

  • Choose the most relevant KPIs for your internal comms strategy: Select KPIs that directly reflect your internal communication goals, like survey-based employee satisfaction scores or intranet engagement levels.

Step 8: Review and refine your communications plan

Effective internal communication and facilitating two-way dialogue are ongoing efforts you need to integrate into your company culture.

You must regularly review your strategy and KPIs, gather feedback, and adjust.

The key is to be flexible and responsive to your employee’s needs and preferences.

Take action:

  • Schedule monthly or quarterly meetings to review KPIs, discussing what's working and what needs adjustments in your internal communication.
  • Establish feedback loop mechanisms for continuous employee feedback on internal communication, like quick polls or suggestion boxes.
🚀 Pro tip

Start small.

Try creating a short leadership update or onboarding snippet in Synthesia.

Once people see how quick and engaging it is, adoption across departments tends to grow naturally.

Create an internal communications video in the next 5 minutes

Internal communication's purpose is to turn information into engagement. 

With AI video, communicating internally gets a new level of interaction and interest. It's quick and easy and turns your usual updates into cool videos that everyone actually enjoys watching.

See how you can incorporate AI video into your internal comms strategy.

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