What we do
Internal Communications
Communication is representative of culture; it is the articulation of the strategy and it’s what we need to function as a group or community.



Why good internal communication matters
Innovation, growth, collaboration and remote working are all elements of organisations that need communication to succeed. A workforce that believes in the leaders, the mission, the strategy are a group who will be engaged, efficient and empowered.
Groups of any size need communication to succeed and any group over 150 needs structure, governance and support to operate effectively together.
What does organisational chaos feel like?
Individuals and teams are unable to make decisions to move things forwards and continue to work on things in ways that aren’t aligned to organizational goals. People off on stress/sick leave. High turnover of employees without leaving interviews.
Lots of meetings without things moving forward. Time spent together to discuss things with the wrong people in the room, a lack of good meeting management and therefore inefficient use of time.
Recovering from a global crisis with restructures and rebalancing activity. Structural changes like mergers or acquisitions, changes in financial ownership and significant changes around people structures.
Download the Free 5-Step Internal Comms Strategy Framework
This model for internal communications strategy will help align the function to your organisational strategy and includes fundamentals that will ensure your communication is influential and has a real impact.
Common problems in organisations
Restructuring
You need a communication strategy for different phases, an understanding of people to help them navigate change, an aligned leadership team and a consideration of the employee experience.
Trying to do more with less
Invest in the people doing the work and communicate with them to make sure they know why they are doing what they are doing and give them a chance to help you see other ways of doing thinks.
Communication isn’t getting through
Review the channels and the content you’re sharing and make sure the purpose of the communication function (if you have one) is clear. An internal communication audit will do this with clear outcomes to make changes.
People are off on stress/sick leave
This can happen when people feel overwhelmed and when managers aren’t equipped to manage people effectively. You need to get to the root cause of the issues and address them properly for any sustainable change.
Too many meetings and nothing gets done
This is more common than you think. Review and observe the meetings and find out why they aren’t working. It could be that there needs to be clarity of purpose, better chairing of the meeting or different ways to communicate.
People don’t know what they are doing
This is probably a mix of issues with broad corporate internal communication and managers/leaders behaviours. If there is just complete dysfunction, we have to look at the overall business strategy, the history and the vision for the future.
Internal Communication
Jenni is a consummate professional and an adept facilitator. She applies her breadth of experience, depth of knowledge, and high EQ to thoughtfully navigate and solve internal communication challenges with diverse stakeholder groups. I highly recommend her and her team to any organizational leader who is serious about addressing their internal culture and communication needs.Internal Communication
Jenni is a real pro when it comes to the area of internal communications. She has a natural ability to understand the client requirements and business outcomes and thereafter propose both tactical and strategic implementation plans to help deliver the required outcomes.Internal Communication
Our workshop sessions with Jenni have helped us take a leap forward in redefining our internal engagement. At a time when the world of work is changing rapidly and colleagues need new ways of engaging with one another, the workshops were the most efficient and targeted way for us to get the results we needed. They allowed us to critically evaluate how we work tactically and strategically and have resulted in more rapid and meaningful changes that we would have achieved through other means.Internal Communication
Jenni and her team understood our organisation very quickly and got to the heart of the issues that needed unpicking. She helped stimulate some really open and honest discussion. Thank you!Our happy clients

FAQ on internal communications
Internal communication – also referred to as employee communication, internal employee communication, business communication, intra office communication or inter office communication – can be defined as everything that gets said and shared inside an organisation. As a function, its role is to curate, enable, and advise on best practice for organisations to communicate effectively, efficiently and in an engaging way.
Internal communication is: “Everything that gets said and shared inside an organisation. As a function its role is to curate, enable and advise on best practice for organisations to communicate effectively, efficiently and in an engaging way.” (Field)
Employee engagement is: “A workplace approach designed to ensure that employees are committed to their organisation’s goals and values, motivated to contribute to organisational success, and are able at the same time to enhance their own sense of well-being”. (MacLeod and Clarke)
Employee experience is: “The way in which employees internalize and interpret the interactions they have with their organisation, as well as the context that underlies those interactions.” (Gartner)
Effective internal communication is the key to creating excellent workplace relationships. Here are some quick tips:
It takes time – acknowledge the symptoms of chaos, but don’t rush to fix. Take the time to delve into the root cause.
Great storytelling – make sure you’re telling a compelling story that takes people with you and helps them understand the journey towards achieving organisational goals. Know your desired outcome – focus on what you want people to “think, feel and do” to make sure your messaging elicits the desired response and behaviours.
Invest in yourself – we have to understand how we work and why we behave in certain ways to improve our relationships, so it’s essential to work towards increasing skills that improve communication, productivity, empathy and resilience (see links below).
Know your scope – what does internal communication mean as a function in your organisation and where does it sit? Being clear on scope is important. It doesn’t really matter where it sits, as long as it supports the business strategy.
Insights on internal comms
- leadership support

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