Official communication in the right channel, with evidence when it matters
Publish communications by area, unit, role, team, or journey and track reading when operations need to treat content as official.
This module is usually the entry point when the main pain is noise across channels, wrong audiences, different journeys, and little visibility into reading.
Example of segmented publishing by area with clearer context for each audience.
Main pain
The problem is rarely lack of channels
In most scenarios, the company already has too many channels. What is missing is criteria to communicate what matters.
Critical notice lost inside message volume
When everything is published to everyone, criticality is lost and reaction time slows down.
Different audiences receiving the same text
Unit, shift, role, and area need different cuts for communication to make sense.
No visible history of who read it
When content is critical, leadership needs to see pending actions rather than just publish.
How it works
How governed communication reduces noise and rework
Segmentation, priority, journey, and history are what turn a post into official communication.
Publish by context
Distribute communications by area, unit, role, or team without manual duplication.
Highlight what is critical
Use prominence, priority, and confirmed reading when the message needs operational attention.
Track history and pending items
Register who received, read, or still needs to handle that content.
What changes
What HR, communications, and leadership start controlling
When official communication enters the right system, the company stops depending on operational improvisation.
Less noise across parallel channels
The official channel gains clarity and reduces dependence on informal shortcuts.
More autonomy for HR and communications
Business areas can update content without giving up rules and history.
Visibility when the notice requires evidence
Reading and acknowledgment provide evidence when a communication requires confirmation.
Best fit
Where this module usually enters first
Companies with distributed audiences and different levels of content criticality tend to feel this gain faster.
Shift-based operations
Plants, maintenance, and frontline teams
Multiple units
Branches, sites, clinics, or mobile units
Critical content
Protocols, urgent notices, and mandatory policies
Supported scenarios
Typical scenarios for this module
Critical communications gain operational context, a defined audience, and reading evidence when needed.
Communication by unit and shift
Without exposing audiences that do not need that update.
Confirmed reading for critical alerts
When the notice cannot stay mixed with the rest of the feed.
Editorial routine without daily IT dependency
With publishing, review, and history in the same flow.
FAQ
Common questions about Communication
Objective answers about targeting, reading, and connection to the official channel.
What does the Communication module include?
The module brings together communication publishing, context-based targeting, critical content highlighting, confirmed reading, and history and pending-item tracking.
Can communications target units, areas, or roles?
Yes. Publishing can use company context to deliver content to the defined audience without duplicating work across parallel channels.
When should confirmed reading be used?
It fits when critical communication requires visibility into who received, read, or still needs to handle the content.
How does Communication connect to the Intranet?
The Intranet serves as the official channel and brings together navigation, people, and context. Communication uses that structure to publish to the right audience and retain history in one environment.
Want to see how communication fits your scenario?
The guided demo shows exactly how segmentation, priority, and confirmed reading work for your type of operation.