Change communication: using strategic employee communication to facilitate major change
Author(s) -
Deborah J. Barrett
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
corporate communications an international journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1758-6046
pISSN - 1356-3289
DOI - 10.1108/13563280210449804
Subject(s) - organizational communication , internal communications , business , employee engagement , strategic communication , process (computing) , employee research , models of communication , best practice , change management (itsm) , knowledge management , process management , marketing , public relations , computer science , management , psychology , economics , lean manufacturing , communication , political science , operating system
Whether organizational change results from a merger, acquisition, new venture, new process improvement approach, or any number of flavors‐of‐the‐day management fads, employee communications can mean the success or failure of any major change program. The Strategic Employee Communication Model with the best practice definitions, which are composites of effective employee communication examples collected from researching selected Fortune 500 companies, help management understand the strategic role of employee communication in a high‐performing company. The model functions as an analytical tool to diagnose a company’s strengths and weaknesses in employee communication so that the company can structure the change communication program and position communication to facilitate the overall change program. In this paper, I explain the Strategic Employee Communication Model and best practice definitions, demonstrate a change communication approach to improving employee communications using the Strategic Employee Communication Model, and provide a case study of the successful use of the model and approach during a major change program.
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