Change Management Communication: 5-Step Plan + Template

Change-management-communication

With all the uncertainty in business today, leading through change is a clear priority for many organizations. The challenge is that so much change management is poorly handled largely because of one simple misstep – not taking change communication seriously enough.

The scale of change going on in companies today is endless. New strategies, digital transformations, transitioning from paper to electronic records, mergers and acquisitions, HR platform rollouts, new operational processes, and so much more. Too often, organizations spend so much time on the change itself but very little on communicating the context and meaning behind it for employees. And without employee buy-in, the chances of that change taking root and flourishing are slim.

Our organization has had a front seat alongside many leaders as they roll out and navigate change, and we’ve learned a lot from those experiences as to what works – and where the classic stumbles often occur.

Here are our five-step best practices, including real-life examples and templates you can use as you plan and implement your next important change effort.

What is Change Management Communication and Why is it Important?

Change management communication is the process of building awareness and support for organizational change. It helps stakeholders understand what’s changing and why, and how it will affect them. It delivers timely information and materials, ensures stakeholders receive information about what’s important, and provides ways to share feedback and ask questions.

Whether you are changing technology, business practices, leadership, or a combination of things, change management communication is essential to helping people move from where they are today to the desired “future state.”

Change Management and Communication Follow Similar Processes

The industry Standard for Change Management defines a multi-phase process that professional change managers use to strategize, plan for, and execute organizational change. It identifies the impacts across the organization, focuses on how changes will affect employees, and outlines a consistent set of strategies and plans needed to help the organization achieve its goals. The approach is informative as you think about documenting the key information you’ll need and creating your communication plan to support a change.

  1. Evaluate change impact and organizational readiness by doing the following:
    a. Clearly define the change and vision for the future – What is changing and when, where will changes take place and why, who needs to change and what do we want the future to look like? b.Assess all the factors related to the change – What risks, goals, culture, and other changes are happening, and what other internal and external factors could influence them? c.Analyze all the stakeholders affected – Who is accountable, how are different groups and roles affected, who is being impacted the most, and who might be resistant to the change? d. Consider how the organization operates – Once a clear vision of the future is developed, how is it different from the way the organization operates today and what risks are there in moving to the future state?
  2. Formulate the change management strategy – This includes approaches for resources, communications, sponsorship, stakeholder engagement, learning and development, measurement, and sustainability for the change.
  3. Develop a detailed change management plan – Spell out action steps and timeline to accomplish the strategy.
  4. Execute the change management plan – Monitor the implementation, measure outcomes, and adjust ongoing activities as needed to continue reinforcing adoption.
  5. Complete the change management effort – Evaluate outcomes against objectives, design and conduct a lessons-learned evaluation, and gain approval to close the project once successful.

Creating a Change Communication Plan

Like the process outlined in the Standard for Change Management, creating a change management communication plan starts with a deep understanding of the organization, stakeholders, and change impacts. The goal is to support the business objective by helping stakeholders understand the change, how they will need to adapt their day-to-day responsibilities, and what is expected of them.

By ensuring a consistent flow of information, engaging stakeholders, and continually managing feedback, change communication helps people feel more comfortable as they move to the future state and adopt new ways of working.

The communications planning process involves the following steps similar to the change management process described above:

Step 1: Assess the Situation, People, Channels, and Needs

If you are working with change management partners, they are likely responsible for a stakeholder analysis, which summarizes the levels and types of impacts on different roles and functions. If a stakeholder analysis is not available, you should work with the change sponsor or subject matter expert in each function to uncover the critical information needed for communications planning. It’s critical to analyze the mindset of the full team impacted by the change. You need to know what their concerns and challenges will be, so you’re grounded on how best to go about the behavior change you’re seeking.

As you assess the situation, people, channels, and needs to prepare for developing a change communications plan, be sure to:

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Step 2: Create the Change Communications Plan

The most effective change communication gets employees bought in and motivated to drive the change you’re seeking. This means employees understand what new ways of working are needed from each of them, and why. Any internal communication plan can build awareness of what is happening and promote its benefits. Change communication plans must do that and more – it must help people see where they fit and provide answers to their deepest concerns, such as:

What does this mean to me and what do I need to do?

Behavior change happens one person at a time and the more your communication can connect on a personal level, the more effective it will be.

This doesn’t mean your communication team should offer therapy or coaching to every employee. However, you will be most successful with an approach focused on individual needs as well as overarching general communications. Consider:

Your plan should support the behavior change with communication that gives stakeholders the information they need when they need it, and equips leaders to guide their team members through the process. The change communication plan includes the following key sections:

Consider using a template like the one below to help lead a discussion with your change sponsor on what you want each impacted group to know, feel, and do as a result of the change. This insight can be included in your communications plan to help guide your messages and communication strategies.

Example Audience types

Mindset

What I want them to Know

Feel

And Do as a result of the communications

All employees

Editorial Calendar Template:

An editorial calendar showing monthly communication themes aligned with key change milestones captures your plan at a glance and helps leaders understand how communications are reinforcing key behaviors.

January

February

March

April

Etc.

Monthly content focus/theme

Graphics (such as posters, digital signage, field guides, etc.)

Intranet or internal resource page

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Step 3: Prepare Key People for Their Critical Influencer Role

Leaders at every level of the organization – from frontline supervisors to middle managers and senior executives – need to champion change and lead their teams to adopt new behaviors. For any change to be successful, leaders from every stakeholder group must be active and visible in leading their teams and reinforcing progress. After all, employees can easily tell if a supervisor is on board with the change, and if that leader is on board, it’s far more likely the employees will be, too. We’ve seen many organizations make the mistake of letting frontline leaders share their skepticism or concerns about change, and it’s a recipe for failure. Best practice research confirms what employees want to hear from leaders during change, including:

In addition, employees often turn to influential peers across the organization because of strong relationships, experience, skills, and commitment. These influencers can be enlisted as “change agents” (or part of a “change network”), trained as communicators to carry messages forward into the organization, equipped with information, and asked to share feedback that they hear from their coworkers. It’s critical, though, that these influencers are authentic. If they are seen as mouthpieces or spies for leadership, their impact falls apart. In identifying and training change agents, it’s important to select employees who believe in the change overall but also aren’t afraid to share candid concerns or questions. These types of employee leaders have the best chance at establishing credibility and moving their teams to action.

These Official and Unofficial Leaders are the Drivers of Change

In best-practice organizations, the tone for change is set at the top, with the executive team sharing clear expectations for the importance of the change and the responsibility of all people managers in making the change happen and consistently communicating about it. All people leaders also need tools, training, and accountability to reinforce the change plan and ensure its success. This can be hard work but so necessary and can’t be shortchanged. The bottom line: organizations that simply announce the change and do little to continually communicate about it, gain feedback, and evolve are setting themselves up for failure.

To set leaders and change agents up for success, top leadership and communication teams need to collaborate to define their communication role and ensure they are equipped with information, tools, training, and support. These key steps should be a component of every change communication plan:

Step 4: Execute the Communications Plan

When you receive input and approval on your change communication plan and messages, it’s time to take action. Be sure to brief key communication contacts (such as internal communications editors, intranet managers, and video resources) about your plans so they are ready to provide support when needed. Also, give a heads-up to anyone who will be tapped to deliver messages to employees, so they know their role, what’s coming and when.

Because change programs must evolve to address needs that emerge during the process, expect to evolve your plans and adapt your materials to the changing needs of the projects and stakeholders. Your efforts are more likely to be successful if you follow a few guiding principles:

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Step 5: Evaluate What to Stop, Start, and Continue

After a project launch or at key milestones, gather input from leaders, change agents, and your cross-functional team of advisers to understand what communication is working well and what could be done better to meet employee needs. Ask the tough questions and probe to understand how employees are feeling, what challenges they are facing, and what they are worried about.

You can uncover important information in day-to-day conversations, input meetings, follow-up surveys, or stakeholder interviews. Consider using these tips to help you listen for what's not being said and ask questions to ensure understanding so you can formulate ways to revise your approach to better meet employee needs.

In addition to anecdotal feedback and insights from people on the front lines, some of the things you can use to evaluate your efforts include:

Change Management Communications in Practice

Here are some examples of ways that we at The Grossman Group have helped clients understand stakeholders and needs, identify change communication strategies, and support advancement of organizational transformation.

Case Study 1: An Exemplary Transformation Communication Plan

To implement an industry-endorsed approach to safety management, a multi-state organization deployed a large transformation team to align its structures, processes, and roles across multiple operating companies. They identified nearly 20 workstreams to advance the work and the change management team conducted stakeholder analyses for each workstream.

The analysis determined the level of impact for employees in a variety of functions such as construction, engineering, employee health and safety, field and system operations, human resources, maintenance, and planning. The stakeholders included leaders and employees at the corporate level and in the state-operating companies.

The safety management communication team was responsible for an overarching change communication plan and day-to-day support for individual workstreams. Through detailed interviews with leaders, they identified what was changing, why and when, and the desired behaviors to achieve workstream goals. The team also consulted communication and state-level leaders to select the best communication channels and identify potential challenges at the local level.

This research identified the audiences, key messages, milestones, and timeline to inform the communication plan, and helped set the strategy for supporting state communication teams. The final plan included specific messages for the overall safety effort and key workstreams, infographics to illustrate the process and benefits, leader communication toolkits, and an alignment strategy with monthly updates from state-operating companies.

Case Study 2: Preparing Leaders to Communicate Transformation

A long-standing scientific organization experienced multiple pain points in its traditional methods for developing and publishing its standards. In response, the organization identified the need for a new approach to a number of processes, as well as systems, technology, and talent to improve efficiency and enhance collaboration among its highly-skilled staff. With the vision defined, the organization identified key people to help identify solutions to achieve their transformation.

The organization needed its leaders to understand the vision, explain it to their teams in a clear and relatable way, and align around the ultimate goal that had been set by a select group within the organization. A leader prep meeting briefed 95 leaders on the plan, outlined role expectations, and introduced a toolkit with leader tips and key messages plus several tools to share. Following the briefing, working sessions for leaders in four divisions talked about what the transformation would mean for their teams, anticipated employee questions, and started planning for the upcoming employee launch.

Following the prep meeting, leaders used the materials to prepare their teams for the plan’s launch and encouraged involvement in eight solution teams tasked with identifying next steps. More than 100 employees volunteered to serve on the teams that were formed following the launch and together developed rollout plans for implementation over a period of two years.

In Conclusion

Change management communication is essential to building awareness and support for organizational change. Built on key information about what is changing and why and who is most impacted, it helps stakeholders understand what to expect, what their role is in the change, and how they can help the organization be successful.

What big changes are ahead for your organization and are you ready to put a best practice Change Communication Action Plan in place? Download this free editable template, which aligns with the content in this post, to guide you.