Internal communication

Introduction to Internal Communications

The purpose of internal communication is to inform and engage employees in a way that motivates staff to maximise their performance and deliver the business strategy most effectively.


Creating exceptional internal communications across government

Creating exceptional internal communications across government will transform our approach to the practice and provide an exemplar beyond government and the public sector. Internal communication is about bringing employees together and it has never been more critical to organisational success.

To ensure our approach to professional excellence is integrated across all disciplines in GCS, we have merged the content of the government’s Internal Communication (IC) Space website with the GCS site. You can access internal communication guidance and best practices in this section.

The nature and complexity of government and public service, and the diversity of our colleagues and their work, demand that we are exceptional in how we practise internal communication.  We continually seek to ensure we are on top of our game in our professional approach and in the quality and capability of our practitioners.

Russell Grossman, Director of Communications, Office of Rail and Road and GCS Head of Discipline for Internal Communications said:

“Internal Communications’ function is to help leaders in your Department or Agency inform and engage employees, in a way which motivates staff to maximise their performance and deliver the business strategy most effectively. It is not about ‘sending out stuff’.”

Internal communication can help build trust, motivate, create shared identity and increase engagement. Individual communication preferences and an increasingly mobile workforce further complicate workplace communication, but good internal communication can really help employees perform their jobs well.


Standards

Internal communication is part of the Government Communication Functional Standard and the Modern Communication Operating Model. This sets the expectations for the management and practice of government communications.

Internal Communications Standard Operating Model

The Standard Operating Model sets out the overall vision, role and remit for internal communications. These should help you develop and shape your internal communications function in the way it runs and the people that make it all happen.

With the Internal Communications Standard Operating Model diagram (large image, PNG, 1 page, 163KB), we want to inspire and engage colleagues to build brilliant, high-performing organisations.

The aim is:

  • to improve our organisations’ performance externally, creating proud advocates for our work
  • to make our organisations work better internally, creating ambassadors
    for our culture.

By doing the following:

  • creating advocates: we prioritise engaging people in the purpose and impact of our organisation
  • partnering with leaders: we partner with and advise our senior leaders
  • creatively innovating: we engage people creatively through innovative means
  • driving change: we drive engagement in the change narrative
  • engaging three-ways: we foster insight-driven three-ways communication.

Learning and resources

Start learning at your own pace and build the skills you need, using our curriculum. You can also engage with our internal communication blogs and resources.

Read our internal communication blogs:

IC Space Live 2021 replay

Access the learning from IC Space Live, yearly event about internal communications