Internal communications professionals often sit in a uniquely difficult position during organisational change.
The hidden pressure behind organisational change
They are expected to support leadership, guide managers and reassure employees, while not always having full visibility themselves. In many organisations, internal comms teams are brought into conversations late, asked to manage highly sensitive messaging under pressure, or required to communicate decisions they may personally disagree with or feel emotionally affected by.
Yet despite this, they remain responsible for maintaining calm, clarity and trust. That role carries enormous emotional weight.
Internal comms teams are frequently exposed to information about restructures, redundancies, leadership tensions and organisational risks long before the wider workforce. They absorb the emotional reactions of employees, support leaders through challenging conversations and help shape narratives that can significantly impact morale.
At the same time, they may also be facing their own uncertainty.
During periods of transformation, communications functions themselves are often under review.
It creates a difficult contradiction: internal comms professionals are expected to support the wellbeing of others while quietly managing their own concerns around change and job security.
The emotional labour of internal communications
Unlike many operational roles, internal comms sits directly within the emotional atmosphere of an organisation. Teams are often the first to hear employee concerns, frustrations and fears. They help leaders prepare for difficult conversations and support managers through emotionally charged moments.
They are expected to remain calm, composed and solutions-focused regardless of the pressure around them. Over time, this pressure can take a significant toll.
The pressure to “hold it together” professionally while repeatedly communicating uncertainty can lead to burnout – particularly when the wellbeing of internal comms is overlooked.
Organisations cannot expect internal comms teams to continuously support others without also supporting them.
Why internal comms teams need greater support
If communication is critical to navigating change successfully, then the people delivering those communications need to support too.
That means:
- Involving internal comms earlier in strategic discussions
- Aligning leadership messaging more effectively
- Providing access to wellbeing support
- Recognising internal comms as emotionally demanding strategic work, not simply message delivery
Because ultimately, communication shapes how people experience change.
The lasting impact of organisational change
Employees may forget the details of a restructure or transformation programme over time, but they will remember how the organisation made them feel during it.
- Did leadership feel visible and human?
- Did communication feel honest?
- Did employees feel respected?
- Did managers feel equipped?
- Did people feel supported through uncertainty?
These questions shape an organisation’s culture long after the change itself has passed, and shape the respect for the organisations long after the employee has left.
Internal communications teams play a critical role in answering those questions positively. They help organisations communicate with empathy, maintain trust, and preserve connection during difficult periods.
But to continue doing that effectively, they also need support, recognition and care themselves. Because behind every carefully written update, leadership briefing and employee announcement is often a communications professional quietly carrying the emotional weight of the organisation too.
Navigating change together
Navigating change isn’t easy, but with experience supporting organisations through restructuring, cultural change, and complex internal communications, Alive understands the importance of clear, human communication.
If your organisation is managing change and looking for support bringing clarity, confidence and empathy to the process, we’d love to help.











