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Ten steps to impactful reward communications

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It’s a busy time for reward, and that means it’s a busy time for communicating about reward to employees.  Whether it’s sharing your gender pay gap numbers, explaining the implications of the national living wage, launching a new benefits offering or running your annual pay review, communicating your plans with employees in a straightforward but engaging way is absolutely key.  Here are my tips to help you get it right …

1. Who are you talking to?  Who are all the groups of people you need to talk to? Who will be directly impacted, who do you need to help deliver your message and who should you keep in the loop? While you are identifying the different groups think about who they are, how they may feel about the changes and how they are personally impacted.

2. Make it personal. Technology now allows us to communicate personally, both in the way we address a mass message eg Dear Lucy, but also in the way we present information. Entering an intranet site should be a personal experience you should see information that is relevant to you – my job role, my department etc not bland, blanket mass message relevant to no-one.  If you don’t you won’t be seen as a cost saver, you’ll be seen as lazy and as a company that doesn’t care.

3. Create a vision. The day to day operational messages and information that your employees need to receive to do their job will be more interesting, relevant and better received if they have context.  So, share your vision. We know that to create engagement you need leadership and leaders are visionary.  Explain the long-game, the goals and objectives of the company, what is the business plan. Not in detail but the highlights and big picture

4. Be clear about what you want to say.  Think about the messages, but get to the point and make it relevant.  Think about it in their terms (put yourself in their shoes) what’s important to them, what do they care about.

5. Start today.  The error many businesses make is to wait … we don’t have all the answers yet, we need things to be a bit more concrete before we communicate.  This is a mistake. If there is a gap in your communications it will be filled – and not by you.  Start talking, you really don’t need the whole picture to be in place, share what you know now and add to it or change it if that’s what’s needed.

6. Create a conversation. One of the biggest changes in communication and marketing is the way we involve people.  Reviews on retail sites, comments on blogs and social media have been the catalyst to the biggest change to business communications in recent years. If we embrace a real dialogue with our customers and clients then we should afford our staff the same treatment. Involve them, allow them to collaborate with the business, communicate across the hierarchy and comment.

7. Keep talking.  Once you’ve created the vision and shared the story, keep talking.  Keep your employees updated with relevant information, changes and information.  Ask for opinion and their help with a project.  Keep the communication flowing …

8. Make it stimulating (be creative). You are competing with so many other communications and messages. Your employees will no doubt have a smart phone, access to facebook and other social media during their lunch break, as well as the traditional advertising channels out there.  Work and home life has become blurred and you need to get their attention.  Treat your employees as you would your customers, market to them. Be creative, entertaining, stimulating, thought provoking or, if appropriate, funny.  For example announce a new member of the leadership team to the company on Youtube.  Create a video of them talking about themselves and showing their personality.  Far better than a bland written announcement.

9. Diversity and variety. Use a variety of media to get your message across. The Intranet is a great place to store all the detailed information, but use other media to support it. How about a blog written by a member of the project team (peer-to-peer communication).  Brown bag lunches with the leadership team that allow informal discussion and jump the traditional hierarchical divide. Virtual reality and gaming are the latest learning approaches but equally they can be used to modernise and create a stimulating fun way to engage employees in a creative way.

10. My final point is to show respect.  By following these rules and making a message personal and relevant you are showing respect to the people you are communicating with.  If not, you are wasting valuable time and resources.  If you write 1000 words and share it with 100 people it will take just over 8.5 hours of their time to read – more than 1 day’s work.  Is what you’re saying worth it?

If you need help with your reward communications or gender pay narrative, please get in touch 020 8038 9763.

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