The average corporate email open rate hovers around 65% on a good day. That number sounds defensible until you account for how much of what gets opened is actually read, retained, or acted on. Organizations are making consequential announcements, trying to build culture across time zones, and hoping to keep hybrid teams aligned — all through the same medium people use to unsubscribe from pizza promotions.
The problem isn't the writing. The problem is the format.
The Internal Comms Problem Is a Format Problem, Not a Quality Problem
When internal communications fail, the instinct is to fix the content: sharpen the copy, redesign the template, adopt a new intranet platform. These changes produce marginal improvements at best because they treat a structural problem as a craft problem.
Traditional internal comms formats — emails, PDFs, intranet posts — require one specific behavior from employees: stop, sit, and read. That's a high-friction request in a high-distraction environment. It competes directly with every other demand on someone's attention during the workday. And for distributed teams or frontline workers who aren't anchored to a desk, the ask becomes even harder to fulfill.
The issue isn't that employees are disengaged. It's that the format is fighting human behavior instead of working with it. Any communication strategy that depends on people voluntarily pausing their actual work to consume static text is structurally disadvantaged. Audio isn't a trend that solves this — it's a format that's built differently from the ground up.
Why Audio Reaches Employees Where Other Formats Can't
Podcasts travel. That's not a metaphor — it's a behavioral fact. A commute, a morning routine, a walk between meetings, the gym before work: these are genuinely attention-available moments that no email will ever reach. Audio is the only internal communications format that works completely off-screen and doesn't compete with the rest of the inbox.
The behavioral advantage is real and worth taking seriously. When someone puts on headphones to listen to an internal podcast episode during their commute, they're giving that content something almost no corporate communication receives: relaxed, undivided attention. They're not scanning. They're not toggling between tabs. They're listening.
This also means audio can carry a different kind of content. The tone of a senior leader speaking candidly about a company direction, the texture of a colleague's experience during a difficult transition, the warmth of a culture story — these things translate through voice in ways that a well-crafted subject line simply cannot replicate. The format doesn't just deliver information differently. It creates a different relationship between the speaker and the listener.
For distributed teams especially, this matters enormously. When employees are spread across cities, countries, or time zones, shared audio becomes one of the few mechanisms that can make a workplace feel like one place. If this resonates with a challenge your organization is facing, The Remote Team Feels Distant. A Podcast Can Change That. covers the dynamic in detail.
Five Use Cases Where Internal Podcasts Actually Move the Needle
Internal podcasts aren't a monolithic category. The format works across a range of organizational challenges, and the use case shapes what the show should sound like, how long it should run, and how it should be distributed. Here are the five where audio consistently outperforms the alternatives.
Onboarding. New hires are trying to absorb culture, values, and context at the same time they're learning systems and meeting people. A written handbook covers the what. An internal podcast can cover the why — through the voices of founders, long-tenured employees, or team leaders speaking candidly about what actually matters here. Crucially, the audio format lets new employees listen at their own pace, returning to episodes that are relevant to where they are in the onboarding journey.
Culture and Belonging. In hybrid and distributed workplaces, culture doesn't happen by accident. It has to be deliberately communicated. An internal podcast surfaces the voices and stories that make a workplace real — employee spotlights, behind-the-scenes perspectives, honest conversations about what the organization stands for. This is especially effective for organizations with large frontline workforces who don't sit in Slack channels or see the same internal feeds as office-based employees.
Change Communication. This is where the format advantage is sharpest. When organizations go through restructuring, leadership transitions, strategy shifts, or policy changes, email tends to announce. Audio can explain. The difference between