A leader’s guide to telling it like it is

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Leading Off

Brought to you by Liz Hilton Segel, chief client officer and managing partner, global industry practices, & Homayoun Hatami, managing partner, global client capabilities

An image linking to the web page “How to communicate effectively in times of uncertainty” on McKinsey.com.

In the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, many organizations were tasked with conveying complex and sometimes conflicting information to diverse audiences. We noted back then that “the fundamental tools of effective communication still work”: offering clear, simple, and frequent messages; choosing candor over charisma; and helping people build resilience to get through the crisis. Postpandemic, the same techniques can help leaders manage through uncertain times and gain the trust of employees and external stakeholders. Organizational changes can benefit from a well-planned communications strategy—for example, honest messaging can go a long way toward making business transformations successful. In challenging situations such as mergers, “communications should be genuine and transparent,” suggest McKinsey senior partner Oliver Engert and colleagues. “Employees value having difficult messages communicated in a direct way.”

An image linking to the web page “Author Talks: Am I making myself clear?” on McKinsey.com.

When BBC journalist Ros Atkins flunked an important job interview early in his career, he started thinking about how to communicate more systematically. “I hadn’t worked out a plan for that moment in the room,” he says in a discussion with McKinsey. “I hadn’t worked out the information I wanted to share or the questions I wanted to ask.” Years later, in his role at the BBC, he honed the art of conveying information with precision and confidence. Clear communication depends on expressing the details of a subject in “phrases and sentences and explanations that really feel contained, clear, and devoid of distraction,” says Atkins. It’s also essential to focus only on vital information in the workplace, he adds. “There are certain pieces of information that matter the most. These are things that we really want to get across. There is additional information we don’t really need to include, or very long sentences full of words we don’t really need to say.”

An image linking to the web page “The Compelling Communicator: An interview with McKinsey’s Julie Goran” on McKinsey.com.

Lead by communicating well.

— Edited by Rama Ramaswami, senior editor, New York

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by "McKinsey Leading Off" <publishing@email.mckinsey.com> - 02:06 - 30 Oct 2023