One of the simplest communication frameworks I use with teams is also one of the most effective.

When communicating change internally, I structure messaging around three core questions:

  1. What has changed?
  2. Why has it changed?
  3. How do people need to act?

It is simple, but it is grounded in how people actually process uncertainty and behavioural change.

A surprising amount of internal communication misses at least one of these steps. Usually the “how”.

Organisations often communicate change as an announcement rather than a behaviour shift. They explain the update. They explain the strategy. They explain the rationale.

But employees are still left asking:

“What does this actually mean for me tomorrow morning?”

That gap matters more than many leaders realise.

Research consistently shows that uncertainty during organisational change increases resistance, disengagement and confusion, particularly when employees do not understand either the purpose of the change or their role within it.

Internal communication is not just information distribution

One of the biggest mistakes organisations make is assuming communication equals understanding.

Sending an email is not the same as creating clarity.

A polished intranet article is not the same as behavioural adoption.

Research from the McKinsey & Company has repeatedly found that transformation programs are significantly more likely to succeed when organisations communicate clearly, consistently and behaviourally throughout change processes. Employees need both rational understanding and practical direction.

At the same time, studies in organisational psychology have long shown that people respond better to change when uncertainty is reduced and expectations are clear. Ambiguity creates stress. Clarity creates confidence.

That is why I keep returning to three core questions.

1. What has changed?