Beyond the buzz: 2025 predictions for real impact in internal comms and employee experience
As we look to 2025, it’s tempting to dive into the same old trends everyone seems to discuss. But let’s be honest: Trends can sometimes feel like yesterday’s news and don’t always offer the value you need to navigate real change.
So, instead of just riding the wave of what’s “trendy,” we’re bringing you something more valuable: predictions. Our top Firstup internal communication and employee experience (EX) experts aren’t just following the crowd; they’re forecasting the game-changing shifts you?actually?need to prepare for in 2025.
Forget about buzzwords and empty trends. Let’s talk about what’s coming and how you can future-proof your strategy to stay connected with your workforce in ways that matter.
Get ready to leave trends in the dust and embrace what’s next!
Executives engage more, authentically
With only 50% of employees thoroughly reading messages sent from leaders and only 20% strongly agreeing that their leaders communicate effectively (Gallup), we’re starting to see more executives embrace interactive, authentic ways to communicate with employees and stakeholders — a trend I expect to grow in popularity in 2025 and beyond.
While communicators will still be called on to assist, frame, and plan for leader communications, the most savvy execs are increasingly carving out time to actively participate — on their own — in ways that showcase their unique perspectives and personalities.
Gone are the days of long-form CEO letters or formal messages fully ghostwritten by communicators. Today’s leaders are partnering with comms professionals to map out strategic plans and produce video updates using their mobile devices. They are enthusiastically hosting “Ask Me Anything” interactive Q&A sessions done in chat style, through video, or in place of formal town halls. They are also using snapshots and quick videos to recognize employees doing great work and then sharing on an internal platform.
For example, in his long-running “Marc’s Whirld” topic in Firstup, Whirlpool CEO Marc Bitzer gives video answers to employee questions, spotlights workers in photos from different locations, and posts quarterly updates. Regional managers at Raising Cane’s Chicken Fingers upload videos (shot on their phones), sharing updates with team members who missed in-person operations huddles.
As more leaders adopt dynamic, authentic communication styles, they’re building trust and fostering a culture of transparency and engagement across all levels of the organization. By embracing authenticity and connecting directly with employees, executives turn once-distant leadership roles into relatable, approachable sources of inspiration and guidance. This approach feels timely and essential in a fast-paced, increasingly digital world.
The AI gap widens
My prediction is the gap between employees leveraging AI and those who don’t will explode, with brutal consequences for the unprepared.?Gallup?reports that only 25% of U.S. workers use AI, while the remaining 75% risk being left in the dust. As AI becomes more and more deeply integrated into work, those using it now will become exponentially more productive, innovative, and valuable. Meanwhile, the majority who resist or lag in adopting AI will find themselves at a severe disadvantage, mired in outdated processes and not keeping pace.
AI at work is a seismic event rapidly reshaping the professional landscape. The AI-enabled minority will surge ahead in influence, pay, and opportunities, while non-adopters risk being relegated to a professional no-man’s land. Companies that fail to push for widespread AI adoption will have a divided workforce: a small elite of AI users driving innovation and value and a larger group of non-adopters slowly becoming irrelevant. The consequences of this divide will ripple through organizations and industries, creating a new hierarchy based on AI proficiency.
However, this divide also presents an opportunity for proactive individuals and organizations to take charge of shaping a more inclusive AI-driven future. The key lies in building a continuous learning and adaptability culture, where AI is leveraged to increase employee contributions rather than replace them entirely. The challenge now is to ensure that AI adoption is widespread, ethical, and geared toward collective progress. The AI revolution in the workplace is inevitable — the question is, will you be at the forefront of this transformation or risk being left behind in a rapidly evolving professional landscape?
Email is here to stay
While we all love new technologies, email isn’t going anywhere — it remains the #1 way to reach employees, with 94% of internal communicators using it as their primary channel. While other channels are essential, especially for reaching deskless workers, email is still king, and it’s time to improve it. The future lies in personalization, which can boost email engagement by up to 200%. Whether it’s as simple as adding an employee’s name to the email or as advanced as sending timely messages based on life and work events, internal communicators should take a page from consumer marketing.
My prediction is that organizations start catching up to what marketing teams have already mastered: sending information at the right time in a personalized way. Think about how, when you’re expecting a baby, your inbox and social feeds are flooded with relevant content. The same should happen internally. If you’re going out on paternity leave, you should receive all the necessary information — like steps for adding a baby to your benefits plan, forms to complete, paternal benefits, and available resources — right when you need it.
While large organizations may need time to implement this level of personalization, my prediction and hope are that we’ll see more personalized, relevant emails because, like it or not, email isn’t going anywhere, but it should definitely be more personalized and, thus, more effective.
Data-driven HR and communications strategies take center stage
When I joined Firstup in 2018, communicators were excited—and sometimes a bit overwhelmed—just to have any data on the effectiveness of their communications. Fast-forward to 2024, and not only is engagement data expected, but communicators now have access to advanced data and insights about their employee-facing communications and initiatives.
As data becomes more widely available across all types of communications and employee engagement touchpoints, communicators can quantify the impact of a strong employee experience and demonstrate how their work drives executive-level business outcomes. The advancement of communications data and people analytics provides HR and communications teams with concrete data to back up their expertise, transforming intuition into measurable results and strategic insights.
Employee experience data is available in near-real time, providing rapid insights that allow for quick adjustments — something that traditional lagging indicators like employee Net Promoter Scores (eNPS) or attrition rates can’t offer. Employee behavior and engagement data provide a powerful signal about their priorities and what those employees need to succeed in their roles. While starting to dig into this data may feel intimidating for those who prefer Word over Excel, understanding what’s essential to the business can guide your approach. For example, you can now show that 80% of employees watched the latest CEO video — and that they’re far more likely to watch the whole thing if it’s 3 minutes long instead of 10 minutes.
“If we try to measure engagement with a point-in-time survey, you can’t catch it. We’re always looking for higher-velocity data streams.”— Richard Rosenow, VP, People Analytics Strategy, One Model
You're not alone if your insights and reporting don't feel fully developed yet. In a recent Firstup webinar,?Simply Scientific: Measuring Your Internal Comms, 50% of respondents said their communications measurement data needs improvement, and another 43% said it could be better.
To get started, use AI (a familiar trend!) to identify opportunities within your existing data. Focus on areas that align with key company initiatives, such as enhancing employee experience or supporting compliance, and then determine how communications can contribute positively. Revisit these metrics monthly or quarterly to track the impact of your efforts.
Using data to support a communications strategy showcases the effectiveness of the work and highlights its alignment with executive priorities. By combining data with communication skills, professionals can build a powerful narrative around their impact and emphasize the strategic role of communications in achieving business objectives.
The intranet takes a back seat
I’ve said it once, and I’ll say it again: The intranet is dead. Sure, an intranet project is something concrete you can do to solve the ambiguous, monstrous effort of “improving employee experience,” but an intranet project alone will always fall short.
I predict that more companies will abandon putting all their eggs in the intranet basket in favor of an omnichannel employee experience strategy.
Intranets prioritize the desk-based worker experience. Frontline workers—who are arguably the heartbeat of any organization—are highly disconnected from technology, especially technology that requires access via a workstation. For our customers with large frontline workforces, we tend to see channels like Microsoft Teams (mobile), push notifications, or micro apps—widgets into other end channels, like digital signs or a frontline worker device—have the highest traffic. Unsurprisingly, web traffic on the intranet is lowest.
Not only do intranets fall flat for frontline; it assumes even your desk-based workers prefer seeking out a web-based experience for company information. If we’ve learned anything from our friends in marketing, each person has particular behavioral preferences. At this stage, many communications teams have done some persona-based work, which highlights that employee groups have different preferences. They have different things they need to do their job; they access information at different times of day, and they have different channel preferences (yes, folks, they have preferences beyond an intranet).
Firstup customers with the highest average monthly reach and engagement have used more than persona-based insights to create an employee experience strategy. Still, they use Firstup’s Intelligent Delivery platform to deliver hyper-personalization at scale. The platform’s machine learning continually gets more intelligent. It adjusts when and how it provides communication based on that employee’s behavior, which means I may get a push notification at 3 p.m. Eastern. In comparison, my colleague gets an email at 4 p.m. Eastern.
“Intelligent communication is at the heart of an irresistible employee experience for essential deskless workers and their deskbound colleagues alike.” — Josh Bersin, HR Industry Analyst
I’ll end by saying I share all of this with love. I have worked on and owned many intranet projects. I’ve given blood, sweat, and tears only to realize that if you build it, they won’t always come. So, in 2025, let’s say cheers to moving beyond a central hub and joining our marketing friends in the world of an omnichannel experience.
This article appears on the Firstup Resource Center.
Freelance writer for brands building better workplaces ??? Creative content about internal communication, change management, productivity, culture & more ?? Also writing my newsletter, Time Intentional ???
2 个月I love the idea of executives carving out time to actively participate in communications without needing excessive polishing or formal ghostwritten messages from communicators. I hope to see a lot more of this! I’ve never considered intranets in the sense that using one assumes that deskless workers would prefer to access important information on a computer. That’s an excellent callout and a reason to restate the value of learning about and understanding your audience.