Coronavirus (COVID-19) communications support and templates: Internal communications

External communications are rightly a priority at the moment, given the necessity of providing information and reassurances to residents. However, it is vital that internal communications are not neglected. It can assist with both external communications and the mobilisation of the organisation.


Do not assume council staff will not be susceptible to stories and misinformation about COVID-19. Modern communication is engagement: your staff are an excellent way to pick up stories (both positive and negative), misinformation and real issues.  Simple processes and, in time, active initiatives to encourage factual and clear communication will reap dividends. 

Below are some suggestions for how to engage internally in a way that supports community activities:

  1. Clarity and consistency of message: Show you have a plan, name the plan and prioritise transparent communications. Provide regular, clear updates on progress across the organisation.
  1. Equip all councillors to play leadership roles: All councillors (majority and minority group members and those with a portfolio or frontline position) have a vital role to play and are well placed to act as key message carriers and connect mutual aid groups with local needs. To do this, it is essential that timely and accurate information is shared with all councillors to support them to respond to and reassure their residents. The LGA has produced guidance for councillors to help them adjust to their new role in the midst of this crisis.
  1. Provide visible internal leadership: Regular updates with a personal face, all-staff conferences and video messages can be effective at ensuring staff feel that the conditions and pressures they are experiencing are recognised.
  1. Use internal channels to ask for assistance: When putting requests out to the voluntary sector and public, also direct requests specifically to staff. While many staff have been redeployed or are working at capacity, they may well know others who have the ability and the desire to support community activities and mutual-help groups.
  1. Think about staff as residents and potential communicators: they can be key influencers and agents for pro-social behaviour if you ask them to help to promote positive messages and create processes for recognising and rewarding their efforts.
  1. Be agile: Don’t rely on one channel and think about the wider role of technology to be as quick and inclusive as possible. Use everything at your disposal, including email, Microsoft Teams, Zoom, WhatsApp groups, intranets, YouTube, and SMS.
  1. Clear lines of responsibility: Make sure someone has clear responsibility for actioning internal communication and ensure that there is both corporate and political authority behind it. This should cascade throughout the organisation.
  1. Feedback channels: Create a means by which colleagues and councillors can feedback insight, ideas and experiences (this is a great way to develop channels) so staff can feel part of a two-way process.

Here’s how councils are approaching the situation:


Useful tools

The LGA has produced guidance for councillors which highlights the role that individual ward councillors can play in supporting their communities through these difficult times.