Why some organizations misunderstand the discipline entirely.
Companies think they understand change communications.
Many don’t.
They think it’s:
- sending updates
- building slide decks
- drafting FAQs
- announcing timelines
- creating town hall scripts
- managing “the narrative”
Some organizations treat it primarily as a messaging function.
And that’s often where transformation efforts start to struggle.
Because change communications is not about messaging.
It’s about alignment.
And the difference between those two things determines whether change becomes executable or exhausting.
What Companies Think Change Communications Is
In many organizations, change communications is treated as a downstream activity.
A decision gets made.
Then someone says:
“Let’s have comms draft something.”
The communications team receives:
- a half-formed strategy
- incomplete decisions
- unresolved trade-offs
- and a tight timeline
Their job often becomes translating partially formed decisions into something understandable.
But clarity cannot be layered on top of misalignment.
It has to be designed into the system.
When change communications is reduced to messaging, it becomes reactive.
When it’s treated as structural work, it becomes strategic.
The Core Misunderstanding
Most organizations think change communications is about explaining change.
It isn’t.
It’s about reducing friction so people can execute change without constant clarification.
That’s a structural problem.
Not a writing problem.
If managers are:
- interpreting change differently
- escalating avoidable decisions
- waiting for direction
- or repeating questions
The issue isn’t tone.
It’s architecture.
What Change Communications Actually Is
At its core, change communications is the discipline of designing shared understanding at scale.
That includes:
- narrative coherence
- expectation clarity
- emotional grounding
- decision permission
- reinforcement rhythm
It’s the work of answering, repeatedly and consistently:
- Where are we?
- What’s changing?
- Why does it matter?
- What’s expected of me?
- What happens next?
If those answers aren’t consistent across leadership layers, change fractures.
Why Messaging Alone Fails
You can send beautifully written emails.
You can host polished town halls.
You can build comprehensive FAQs.
And still fail.
Because people don’t change behavior based on information alone.
They change behavior when:
- uncertainty is contained
- expectations are specific
- leaders reinforce the same story
- decision boundaries are clear
- emotional disruption is acknowledged
Messaging informs.
Structure enables.
Change communications lives in structure.
The Real Work of Change Communications
Here’s what high-functioning change communications actually looks like.
1️⃣ It Shapes the Narrative Before It’s Published
Change communicators should be in the room before the announcement.
Not to wordsmith slides.
But to pressure-test clarity:
- Are leaders using the same language?
- Is the rationale coherent?
- Are trade-offs acknowledged?
- Is ownership defined?
- Is the sequencing intentional?
If narrative integrity isn’t built upstream, it can’t be repaired downstream.
2️⃣ It Designs for Human Processing
Humans don’t process change linearly.
They process it emotionally first, cognitively second.
If communication skips emotional grounding, resistance rises even when the strategy is sound.
Change communications must:
- acknowledge impact
- normalize uncertainty
- provide stability anchors
- pace information appropriately
This isn’t soft work.
It’s cognitive design.
3️⃣ It Creates Predictable Rhythm
Random updates create anxiety.
Predictable cadence creates safety.
High-functioning change communications establishes:
- when updates happen
- what those updates include
- how questions are surfaced
- how leaders reinforce consistency
Rhythm reduces rumor.
Consistency builds trust.
4️⃣ It Clarifies Decision Permission
This is one of the most overlooked dimensions of change communications.
People need to know:
- what they can now decide independently
- what requires escalation
- what behaviors are no longer supported
- what “good” looks like in the new state
If decision boundaries are vague, execution slows.
Clarity accelerates change because it reduces hesitation.
5️⃣ It Measures Understanding — Not Output
Most organizations measure:
- emails sent
- sessions delivered
- decks created
None of those indicate alignment.
Real change communications measures:
- message consistency across leaders
- reduction in repeated questions
- faster decision cycles
- behavioral adoption
- fewer escalations
If understanding isn’t tested, alignment is assumed.
And assumption is expensive.
Why Some Companies Undervalue Change Communications
Because when it works, it’s invisible.
There are:
- fewer crises
- fewer clarification meetings
- fewer escalations
- fewer reactive messages
It looks like things are simply… working.
But when change communications is weak, leaders feel it immediately.
They spend time repeating themselves.
They get pulled into avoidable conflicts.
They experience “change fatigue” from managing confusion.
Change communications is not a cosmetic layer.
It’s a structural stabilizer.
What Happens When It’s Done Well
When change communications is designed intentionally:
- Leaders speak with one voice.
- Managers feel equipped.
- Employees understand expectations.
- Decisions stabilize.
- Momentum builds.
- Trust deepens.
Not because change is easy.
But because it’s navigable.
Final Thought
Change communications is not about “getting the message out.”
It’s about making change usable.
It’s about ensuring that when strategy moves, understanding moves with it.
And when understanding moves, behavior follows.
If organizations want change to stick, they don’t need louder messaging.
They need architectural clarity.
That’s what change communications actually is.
About Ana Magana
Ana Magana is a strategic communications and change management consultant based in Calgary, Alberta. She helps organizations navigate complexity with structure, rhythm, and human-centered clarity through her signature Clarity Framework™.
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