In a recent article published in “INTHEBLACK” an Australian digital magazine for CPA’s Nicole Heath writes…
…How to communicate so employees will actually listen
Five tips for companies to communicate effectively with staff in a way that engages, rather than stresses, staff.
By Nicole Heath 1 Apr 2023
At global employee experience platform Culture Amp, there is a Slack channel simply called “CEO”, where founder and CEO Didier Elzinga shares his insights and chats with staff – all 1100 of them.
Jessica Hudswell, Culture Amp’s head of internal communications, says Elzinga “posts in there every other day – his latest thoughts, somebody that he’s just met with, a story about a customer and thoughts on our results”.
“He’s very personally engaged in it, and the team responds really positively,” she adds.
This is a good example of Culture Amp’s employee communication philosophy at work, says Hudswell.
“We start with what people want and meet them where they’re at.”
What employees want, she says, is communication with the CEO that is direct, authentic and unscripted.
“Our team tells us regularly that they love hearing from Didier,” Hudswell says.
“If we understand who our employees are and we understand them really well, we know exactly how they want to be communicated to – in good times and tough times.”
Communicate to engage
Employee communication is critical in times of change or crisis, says Hudswell.
“You can’t get through change without engaging people in a meaningful and consistent way.”
This point is echoed by psychologist Dr Amy Silver, whose book, The Loudest Guest, deals with managing fear.
“It is life and death for the company,” she says.
Employee communication underpins all facets of an organisation’s operations, culture and performance and is closely tied to employee engagement.
Leadership expert Mark LeBusque says effective employee communication results in high employee engagement by building trust.
When staff trust the people making decisions and communicating information, they tend to tap into their discretionary effort and do more.
However, when communication is mishandled – it is confusing or poorly timed – people go into “survival mode”.
“They’re not thinking about anything but themselves, and because of that, they become disengaged. It is then not about team members, my business, my customers – it is just about me surviving,” LeBusque explains.
5 tips for effective employee communication
- Make it timely, direct and clear
- Be succinct, focused and relevant
- Be honest
- Treat it as a two-way dialogue

