For most of the last two decades, the dominant way large companies communicated with their employees was through email. Quarterly all-hands updates, leadership memos, strategic announcements. The format was efficient on paper. It was also catastrophically ineffective at penetrating the inbox of a workforce that had been trained to skim and delete. By 2020, the open rates on internal company email had collapsed to numbers most external marketing teams would refuse to publish.
The replacement format has emerged quietly. The internal company podcast is now a standard piece of infrastructure inside large and mid-market organisations, and it works for a reason that surprised the communications field. Employees do not read company communications. They do listen to them, particularly during commutes, walks and the dead time between meetings. The format meets attention where attention actually exists.
The numbers from organisations that have rolled out an internal company podcast are consistent. Completion rates run far higher than email open rates. Strategic message retention measured in follow-up surveys is several times better than written equivalents. Sentiment around leadership rises measurably, particularly in distributed workforces where the executive bench would otherwise be experienced through filtered text.
The infrastructure problem that held this back for years has been resolved. Posting sensitive internal content on a public podcast platform is unacceptable for most companies. A purpose-built internal podcast platform handles authentication through the company identity provider, gates audiences by region, department or seniority, and produces analytics that respect employment confidentiality.
The use cases have widened beyond executive communications. Sales enablement audio briefs replace deck-heavy training. Compliance updates that legal teams genuinely need employees to hear get listened to rather than skimmed. Customer-story episodes bring the voice of the field into engineering and product ears. Onboarding audio cuts the time new joiners spend wading through written wiki content.
The aesthetic that works internally is conversational and lightly produced. Employees can tell the difference between content made for them and content broadcast at them, and the latter gets ignored quickly. The companies running effective internal podcasts have learned to keep the production light and the voices recognisable.
The strategic implication is that the all-hands email is no longer the centre of internal communications. The audio layer that surrounds it carries most of the actual message penetration. For communications leaders, the operational question has shifted from whether to launch one to how quickly the transition can be completed.
FAQ
Are internal podcasts only relevant for large companies? The format scales down well to mid-market organisations, particularly those with distributed or remote workforces.
How long should internal episodes typically run? Most successful programs settle between ten and twenty-five minutes per episode.
Does internal podcasting require professional production? No. Light editing and clean audio capture are usually sufficient. Over-production reduces authenticity.
How is content kept private to employees? Enterprise platforms authenticate listeners through the company identity provider and gate access by audience segment.






