How to Leverage Change Communication Best Practices When Workplace Change Is Unwelcome
Change management consultants consistently observe that organizational change is rarely embraced with enthusiasm in the workplace. More often, employees experience uncertainty — worrying about:
Effective change leaders and experienced people managers recognize that change resistance is not simply a communication problem; it is an emotional response to:
As a result, they prioritize frequent, two-way, honest and transparent communication throughout the change process, grounded in proven change communication best practices.
However, organizational culture assessment data continues to show a persistent gap: employees regularly report that they are not receiving the level of information they need — or the clarity they expect — during times of change. This disconnect:
That doesn’t mean overwhelming employees with dense, jargon-heavy corporate messaging. Instead, communication should be clear, relevant, and grounded in what employees actually need to understand, decide, and do in their day-to-day work.
Drawing on insights from microlearning specialists and supported by data from our change management simulation, research on organizations undergoing major restructuring consistently reveals that the most successful communication strategies share five core elements. Use these change communication best practices to ensure leaders are not only communicating more, but communicating with precision, clarity, and impact.
By consistently applying these five elements, leaders move beyond transactional messaging and create communication that builds trust, reduces uncertainty, and accelerates adoption.
The Bottom Line
Change communication is not about increasing volume — it is about increasing relevance, timing, and emotional intelligence. Organizations that master the “why,” communicate early and often, translate impact clearly, maintain steady information flow, and validate human responses are far more likely to sustain alignment through disruption. The difference between resistance and engagement often comes down to how well leaders communicate when it matters most.
To learn more about how to communicate change to stakeholders, download The Science-Backed Way leaders Should View Change Leadership Communications

Tristam Brown is an executive business consultant and organizational development expert with more than three decades of experience helping organizations accelerate performance, build high-impact teams, and turn strategy into execution. As CEO of LSA Global, he works with leaders to get and stay aligned™ through research-backed strategy, culture, and talent solutions that produce measurable, business-critical results. See full bio.
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