Many learning and development (L&D) programmes fail – not because the content is poor, but because they’re disconnected from how employees actually receive information day to day. Internal communications is the missing link. When learning is treated like a campaign, reinforced through regular messaging, and measured alongside engagement signals, it becomes part of how people work – not an isolated task to complete.
In this post, we’ll take a look at the importance of internal comms, why L&D overlooks it and what we can do to make it a priority.
Most organisations invest heavily in learning content, whether that’s elearning courses, live workshops or on-demand microlearning, but overlook how that content reaches employees. But creating the content itself is only half the battle – thinking about how to deliver it to the right people at the right time and get them to engage is just as important.
Otherwise:
This happens because training often lives in a separate system, with separate messaging, separate timing and separate priorities from internal communications. If your HR team is sending out a monthly email newsletter or managers are adding company updates to the intranet, but your learning lives over on your LMS, it’s easy to see how it can be overlooked.
In reality, employees experience everything – updates, priorities, culture and learning – through the same channels. If learning isn’t integrated into those channels, it gets ignored. Let’s take a look at how a few simple tweaks to your internal comms can completely transform your learner engagement and L&D success.
At its core, learning is a behaviour change exercise, and behaviour change depends on consistent exposure, relevance and reinforcement.
Without strong internal comms:
Even the best-designed learning programme will struggle if it relies on a single announcement or a one-off push – especially if that’s an easily missed ‘There’s a new course available on the LMS’ email. In marketing, it’s widely accepted that it takes around 13 touchpoints for someone to recognise your message or product, so it stands to reason that a single email won’t be enough to make a splash with your learners.
Internal comms bridges this gap by:
In other words, communication turns learning from an event into an experience, and helps build a continuous learning culture through constant reinforcement and drip-feeding of learning content.
One of the most effective ways to connect comms and L&D is to treat learning like a campaign, not a rollout.
Think about how new films are promoted. You might see interviews with the actors, trailers in the cinema, billboards, digital ads and promotional partnerships. A single email or message would never do all the heavy lifting – instead, a multi-channel campaign boosts awareness, creates hype and reminds people to book their tickets.
This approach should inspire your internal comms for learning launches. Instead of:
'Here’s a new course. Please complete it', think about building a structured campaign with phases, messaging and multiple touchpoints to maximise learner engagement.
A campaign-style launch might include:
This approach mirrors how marketing teams drive engagement, and it works just as well internally.
It also solves a key problem: employees rarely act on the first message they see. Campaigns create the repetition needed for action, and act as a constant reminder to register for or complete their learning.
Learning doesn’t stick after one interaction. It requires reinforcement – ideally embedded into the flow of everyday work.
This is where internal comms plays a critical role.
A reinforcement loop looks like this:
Reinforcement through comms could look like:
Over time, this creates familiarity, and familiarity drives behaviour change.
To make this more concrete, here are a few ways organisations successfully combine internal comms and L&D:
Result: Employees not only complete training, but actively use the knowledge.
Result: Compliance becomes part of the organisation’s continuous learning culture, not just a tick-box exercise.
Result: Behaviour change is visible and sustained over time.
If internal comms is the missing link, measurement needs to reflect that. Traditional L&D vanity metrics (like completion rates) only tell part of the story, and they almost always miss the full benefit of comprehensive internal comms.
To understand the real impact of learning, organisations should look at:
Want to measure behavioural signals from your own learning programmes? Claim your free 30-day Helix trial to get started.
When comms and learning are aligned, these metrics start to tell a cohesive story, linking awareness, learner engagement and behaviour change. Once you have this story, it’s much easier to achieve faster buy-in and learner engagement for your next initiative, as learners know your learning programmes are worth engaging with.
L&D doesn’t operate in isolation, and it shouldn’t communicate that way either.
When internal comms and learning work together, training becomes something employees see, hear and experience consistently. That’s what turns knowledge into action, and action into real business results.
The #1 most important thing to consider when planning your internal comms for learning is 'What's in it for me?' with regard to your learners. Think about why they should care about your new learning programme (and no, 'because it's compliance training and legally you have to do it' isn't good enough motivation!), then meet them where they are to deliver the message.
And comms is never a 'one-and-done' job. A single email might prompt 5% of your learners to act, but consistent, personalised reminders that get to the heart of why your learning exists and why it's worth taking the time to engage will see learner engagement creep up for sustained, long-term success and better learning ROI.