Launching an internal campaign always feels a bit like packing for a holiday in a hurry.
You know you’ve forgotten something. You just don’t know what yet.
Deadlines creep closer. Stakeholders want updates. Someone asks for “just one more tweak.” And suddenly you’re about to hit launch with a tiny voice in your head whispering:
Have we actually thought this through?
Over the years, we’ve seen brilliant ideas fall flat – not because the idea was wrong, but because the basics got lost in the rush.
So before any campaign goes live, we run through a simple checklist. Nothing complicated. Just the questions that stop good ideas becoming forgettable ones.
Here it is.
1. The purpose check
What are we actually trying to make happen?
Not what are we talking about or what are we announcing. What are we trying to change?
Campaigns often start with topics:
“We need to talk about wellbeing.”
“We need to promote the new system.”
But topics don’t drive action. Outcomes do.
Before anything else, ask:
- What’s the one outcome we want?
- What do we want people to do?
- How will we know if it worked?
- What would success look like in the real world?
If you can’t explain the campaign in one sentence, chances are your audience won’t get it either.
Clarity here makes everything else easier.
2. The audience check
Who actually needs to care about this?
“Everyone” isn’t an audience. It’s wishful thinking.
Different teams live in different realities. What matters to someone on the frontline is rarely the same as what matters to someone at head office.
So before creating anything, ask:
- Who really needs to see this?
- What matters to them day-to-day?
- What might stop them paying attention?
- Where will they realistically see it?
Sometimes this step reveals something surprising:
You don’t need one campaign. You need several smaller ones, each speaking to a different group.
And those almost always work better.
3. The message check
Are we saying this in a way humans understand?
This is where things often get… wordy.
Everyone wants their detail included, their nuance captured, and their paragraph protected. But your audience isn’t reading with the same enthusiasm.
They’re busy – distracted and skimming.
So test your message:
- Can we explain this simply?
- Would someone actually say this out loud?
- Is there one clear headline idea?
- Are we trying to say too much?
Corporate language has a sneaky way of sounding official while saying very little.
Plain language isn’t dumbing things down. It’s opening things up.
4. The channel check
Are we showing up where people actually look?
Not where we hope they look, but where they genuinely do.
Email is useful. Intranets have their place. Posters can work wonders. But only if they’re chosen on purpose – not out of habit.
Ask:
- Where will this realistically be seen?
- Do we need more than one channel?
- Are we repeating the message enough?
- Are visuals helping people understand faster?
The strongest campaigns rarely rely on one moment. They build familiarity over time.
And familiarity builds action.
5. The timing check
Is this landing at the right moment?
Even the best campaign can struggle if it lands during chaos like busy seasons, competing announcements or major organisation changes.
All of these can quietly bury your message.
Before launch, check:
- What else is happening at the same time?
- Are we clashing with anything big?
- Do we have enough runway to build awareness?
- Are stakeholders aligned on timing?
Timing doesn’t just affect visibility. It affects energy. And energy matters more than most people realise.
6. The design check
Is the design helping – or just decorating?
Design isn’t about making things look fancy, but it’s about making things make sense.
Good design answers questions before they’re asked. It guides the eye. It makes the important bits impossible to miss.
Ask:
- Is the key message obvious at a glance?
- Are visuals simplifying the message?
- Is branding consistent?
Could we remove anything to make this clearer?
Often, the biggest design improvement is subtraction.
Less clutter. More clarity.
7. The ready-to-go check
Are we actually ready to press launch?
This is the final deep breath moment and the moment to double-check the things that are easy to overlook.
Before going live:
- Have all stakeholders signed off?
- Are links working?
- Are assets tested?
- Are channels scheduled?
- Is follow-up planned?
Because launch day isn’t the finish line – it’s the starting point.
Final thought
Campaigns rarely fail because the idea wasn’t good enough. They fail because something small (but important) got missed along the way.
A simple checklist won’t make your campaign perfect, but it will make it stronger.
And that’s usually the difference between noise and impact.











