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Communications Checklist for Change Management

Tim Creasey

3 Mins

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Prosci's Communications Checklist is based on over 20 years of benchmarking research and describes proven practices for communicating effectively about change to your organization.

Use the checklist as a guide to develop your Communications Plan for new change initiatives and projects. You can also use the checklist to audit the effectiveness of the communications activities for a current change initiative.


Communications Checklist

Use our free, high-level checklist to align your communications plan with change management best practices.

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10-Item Checklist on Change Management Communication

1. Use preferred senders to deliver communications in your organization

Change management benchmarking research shows that employees prefer to hear messages from two key roles in the organization:

  • Executives and senior leaders – for organizational messages, including the business reasons for change
  • Immediate supervisors or people managers – for messages about the personal impacts of the change
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2. Prepare and equip preferred senders to effectively deliver communications

One of your key roles as a change practitioner is to prepare and equip the preferred senders (i.e., senior leaders and people managers) to effectively communicate change-related messages. This includes drafting the key messages they need to deliver, ensuring that senders are aligned and communicate consistent messages, planning the delivery sequence, and even scheduling the communications for them. Preparing and equipping should also include coaching preferred senders on how to deliver key messages most effectively.

3. Ensure that preferred senders answer the right questions first

When people learn about a change, their first question is, "Why is this happening?” But when senior leaders answer, they typically share the vision of the future state that will exist after the change is implemented. And project teams tend to focus on sharing information about the solution itself. Both answers focus on the change, but they answer the what and not the why.

The first communications about a change should always focus on: 1) Why the change is happening, 2) Why it’s happening now, and 3) The risk of not changing. And the change team needs ensure that the communications continue reinforcing the why behind the change throughout the project lifecycle. Reinforcing the why is particularly important on change initiatives for which a significant amount of time will elapse between your first communication and the start of implementation.

4. Next, answer the WIIFM question

WIIFM stands for “What’s in it for me?” It’s a question people always ask during change, even when the change seems positive. Because making a change is a personal choice, communications only resonate with the impacted individuals if you address what they care about. To influence their Desire to participate and support the change, you must provide a compelling case for how they will be better off or what they get out of engaging in the change. You must answer, “What's in it for me?” early and often in your communications.

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5. Preferred senders should repeat key messages five to seven times

The first time a change is communicated, people will immediately think about how the change will impact them and won’t be able to focus on any other details of the change. Having the preferred senders repeat key messages ensures that the messages you want to communicate get heard by your audience as you intended. Share messages more often than you think necessary.

6. Resist the urge to communicate exclusively through the project team

People prefer to hear messages from two roles in the organization, and neither is the project leader or change manager. One of the biggest and most common mistakes you can make is to have your project team sending all the communications.

7. Find effective ways to reach your audience

An effective communications plan uses numerous channels to reach impacted individuals. The communications channels could include virtual or in-person meetings, small group forums, one-on-one conversations, newsletters, presentations, brainstorming workshops, focus groups, lunch and learns, intranet Q&A forums, screen-saver messages, etc.

8. Emphasize face-to-face communications

Prosci research identifies face-to-face communication as the most effective mode of communication for change initiatives. While it is more time intensive to meet with someone live—either in person or virtually—the effort delivers far more value than an email message.

9. Create opportunities for two-way communications

You need to ensure your communications plan includes opportunities for two-way communication. For example, having executives and senior leaders communicate directly with people in small-group forums gives the participants the opportunity to share their concerns, provide feedback, and ask questions. Two-way communications lead to greater support and commitment for the change and allow preferred senders to answer questions in real time.

10. Evaluate the effectiveness of your communication messages

Communications should not be viewed as an activity to plan, deliver, and then check off the list of work to be done. The desired outcome of change-related communications is to ensure that impacted individuals and groups are well informed about a change and are committed to adopting in in their daily work. You need to evaluate if your audience is hearing and properly interpreting the messages you send. Use a combination of post-communication surveys, focus groups, and individual interviews to assess the effectiveness of the communications and then take adaptive actions if necessary.

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Tim Creasey

Tim Creasey

Tim Creasey is Prosci’s Chief Innovation Officer and a globally recognized leader in Change Management. Their work forms the basis of the world's largest body of knowledge on managing the people side of change to deliver organizational results.

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