December 1, 2025

Struggling with productivity and attrition? Rethink your corporate communications, finds Staffbase

3 min read

Businesses are obsessed with productivity in 2025, a year that has been filled with economic uncertainty and volatility.

They are turning to AI as a silver bullet to improve employee productivity – however, a new report by employee experience platform Staffbase found that internal communications could be a crucial piece of the productivity puzzle.

Staffbase surveyed 3,500 individuals in Australia, Austria, Germany, Switzerland, the UK and the US; the research found that 63% saw direct correlation between good internal communications and their productivity.

In addition, 67% said internal communications affected their motivation to do their best work, while 63% said that poor international see poor internal communications as driving them to look for a new job.

In fact, Staffbase data found that internal communications was a larger cause of attrition than paid time off, personal safety and the company’s stance on social issues.

Beyond this, the research showed that 76% of respondents said they were satisfied by their relationships with co-workers and 71% were happy about vacation policies, just two in five (42%) were impressed by the quality of communication they received from their employer.

One in four also reported feeling excluded from important organizational changes, while just 19% said they were unclear about their employer’s vision and strategy.

Clearly companies are falling short when it comes to corporate communications.

Something needs to change; where should organizations, and specifically HR leaders, focus their attention? UNLEASH digs into the data exclusively with Staffbase’s Global Chief People Officer Neil Morrison.

HR: Equip managers to lead communication in a clear & consistent way

Staffbase’s report finds that good communication starts with managers and supervisors – they are the most trusted source of information (57%), compared to intranet (51%), emails or memos (50%), newsletters (44%) and employee apps (41%).

These stats are consistent across the regions that Staffbase surveyed.

Therefore, there’s a real lesson for HR teams to really “equip your managers properly”, in the words of Morrison.

This is particularly important for organizations with frontline, non-desk workers – they feel less well informed than their desk-based colleagues (48% vs 65%).

Morrison tells UNLEASH: “Stop treating non-desk employees as an afterthought.

“If 21% of your workforce never hears from senior leadership, you've got a fundamental problem.

“Invest in the channels that actually reach people where they work.”

Clarity is also a key piece of the successful communication puzzle – focus on that, not volume.

“Leadership communication needs to help people understand where the organization is going and why it matters.