Specific Communication the Key to High Employee Morale
September 16, 2009 by Skip Weisman
Filed under Champion Communication
Ever notice how communication in the workplace sometimes is confusing or so non-specific that it forces stressful mind-reading scenarios?
Well, two client incidents this week reinforced in me the belief that one of the most important keys to creating and maintaining a high morale work environment and company culture is the simple concept of “specific communication.”
From frontline employees at a companywide workshop, some of whom were hired as recently as two weeks ago, to a business owner in a leadership position for 25 years, I experienced non-specific communication doing damage to employee morale.
In one instance a new hire was asked by the company owner to finalize a report, the conversation went like this:
New employee: When do you need this? (he said holding up the unfinished report)
Company Owner: NOW!
New employee: Well, I have some questions for you before I can move forward on putting this information together. If we sit down after your meeting this afternoon would by noon tomorrow be soon enough?
Company owner: Oh, sure that’s fine, I don’t need those items to be delivered until late next week.
Had the new employee not stood up for himself and asked for clarification to an unrealistic and unnecessary demand, it would have created tremendous stress and anxiety trying to meet an unrealistic demand. It would also have begun to develop low-trust and low-morale in the new employee.
For more examples of non-specific communication and how they can negatively impact employee morale and sabotage the desire to create a high-performance work environment read my latest article “How to Improve Employee Morale by Improving Organizational Communication” here.








