The Remote Team Feels Distant. A Podcast Can Change That.
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The average corporate email gets less than 20% open rates. The average podcast episode gets listened to — start to finish — by more than 80% of people who press play. If your most important internal messages are going out as emails, you are not communicating. You are hoping.
That gap is not a curiosity. It is a structural problem. And for distributed teams, the stakes of that gap are higher than most comms leaders want to admit.
The Real Reason Remote Teams Feel Disconnected
Most organizations respond to remote disconnection by adding more channels. A new Slack workspace. A team newsletter. A monthly all-hands recording posted to the intranet. None of it works, and the reason is not a lack of effort.
The medium is the problem. Email strips tone. Async video is technically flexible but cognitively exhausting — another screen, another thing to sit down and watch, another passive demand on attention that already feels rationed. Intranets are where important messages go to quietly disappear. The people who most need to feel included are the ones least likely to go hunting for content on a platform they log into twice a month.
Disconnection in distributed teams is not about information scarcity. Most remote employees have access to everything they need. What they are missing is something harder to schedule: the sense that the organization is human, that leadership has a pulse, that the people they work alongside are real.
That is a warmth problem. And warmth is not something a Confluence page can deliver.
What "Feeling Connected" Actually Requires
Psychological safety, trust, and belonging are not produced by information transfer. They come from repeated, human-feeling interactions that signal: there are people here who think and feel, and they are including you. For co-located teams, those signals happen constantly and invisibly — the hallway exchange, the way a manager's voice changes when she's excited about something, the ambient texture of a shared space.
For remote employees, that ambient texture does not exist. Every interaction is a scheduled, structured event. Every message is a text artifact. The emotional residue that co-location creates naturally has to be engineered deliberately — or it does not exist at all.
That is not a pessimistic view. It is an accurate one. And it is precisely why the format of internal communication matters as much as the content.
What Audio Does That Text and Video Cannot
Audio is processed differently by the brain than written text. When you read a message, you reconstruct it cognitively — inferring tone, guessing intent, doing interpretive work. When you hear a voice, you get the tone directly. Hesitation, warmth, humor, conviction — these are not written into audio, they are acoustically present in it.
This matters more than most internal comms professionals realize. A CEO's written update and that same CEO speaking into a microphone are not equivalent in their effect on listeners. The written version is a corporate artifact. The recorded version is a human being. The difference in psychological impact is substantial.
For branded podcasts and their audiences, this dynamic has been well-documented — audio's intimacy advantage is not sentiment, it is neuroscience. The same principle applies internally. A leader who wants their team to feel that leadership is accessible, honest, and human will do more with twenty minutes of audio than with a two-page written update.
There is also a mobility advantage that deserves more credit than it usually gets. Employees listen to internal podcasts while commuting, while exercising, while doing tasks that don't require active cognitive engagement. That means the content reaches them when they are already in a relatively relaxed, receptive state — not at the end of a meeting-saturated workday when one more screen interaction feels like an imposition.
Anecdotally, this is exactly what internal podcast listeners report. The content fits into their day rather than competing for a slot in it. That is not a minor usability improvement. It is a fundamental shift in how the content lands.
The Trust Signal That Only Voice Carries
There is something worth naming directly: vulnerability reads differently in audio. A leader who stumbles slightly over a word, who laughs at something unexpected, who sounds genuinely uncertain about a hard decision — those moments build trust in ways that polished written prose cannot replicate, because polish itself is a signal of emotional distance.
This is not an argument for unedited audio or for leaders being unprepared. It is an argument for recognizing that a certain quality of human presence — the kind that makes employees feel they are being spoken to rather than communicated at — is only available through voice.
For distributed organizations specifically, that matters because trust is expensive to build across distance. Every channel that makes leadership feel less human is a small erosion. Internal podcasting is one of the few formats that actively builds that trust back.
How Internal Podcasting Solves Each Layer of the Problem
The failure modes of remote communication — low open rates, information overload, leadership opacity, cultural drift — are not all the same problem. But internal podcasting addresses each of them through a different mechanism.
Low engagement: The completion rate advantage of audio over email is not a fluke. Audio is a lean-back format. It does not demand the same kind of active engagement that reading requires, and that means the psychological barrier to starting is lower. Once someone presses play and is genuinely interested, they finish. That is the behavior pattern that internal comms teams need.
Screen fatigue: Most employees are already at maximum screen hours by the time a workplace video or long-form document lands in their inbox. An audio episode does not add to that screen debt. It routes around it entirely. For teams that are genuinely burned out on synchronous video calls, an async audio format is not a compromise — it is a relief.
Change communication: This is the use case where internal podcasting earns its keep most clearly. When an organization is going through transformation — restructuring, rebranding, leadership changes, strategic shifts — the written memo is structurally inadequate. It is flat, it is hedged, and it invites the reader to fill the gaps with anxiety. Audio lets a leader speak with the full weight of their actual conviction. It communicates confidence or caution in the way that a memo never can. The tone is not inferred — it is heard.
Onboarding: New hires absorb an enormous amount of information in their first weeks, most of it procedural. What they struggle to absorb is culture — the unstated values, the way the organization thinks, the texture of how people interact. A structured onboarding podcast series, featuring real voices from across the organization, gives new employees access to culture before they have had the chance to experience it firsthand. That is a faster path to belonging than any handbook.
Leadership visibility: In large, distributed organizations, most employees have no direct relationship with senior leadership. They encounter leadership through artifacts — announcements, policies, recorded all-hands that feel more like broadcasts than conversations. A recurring internal podcast episode where leadership speaks informally, addresses real questions, and engages with the actual concerns of the business changes that dynamic. It makes leadership visible in a way that feels human rather than institutional.
Reaching Employees Who Aren't Looking for You
There is a version of internal communications that works fine for people who are already engaged. Those employees read the newsletter, attend the optional sessions, and follow the intranet announcements. They do not need a podcast to feel connected.
The harder problem is the employee who is drifting — who has stopped actively engaging with internal channels because the content does not feel worth the effort. That employee is not lost. They are just not being reached by the formats you are using.
An internal podcast, distributed through a channel employees actually use — whether that is a private RSS feed, a dedicated app, or even a simple sharing link — finds those employees in a different context. It does not require them to be in work mode. It reaches them in the moments when they are more open to input than they would be sitting at their desk.
This is not about tricking disengaged employees into consuming content. It is about meeting people where they actually are, with a format that is genuinely worth their time.
What a Well-Designed Internal Podcast Actually Looks Like
The worst internal podcasts are recorded all-hands meetings. The second worst are news-and-updates shows where someone reads internal announcements into a microphone. Both formats fail because they treat the audio channel as a delivery mechanism rather than as a medium with its own logic.
Audio rewards narrative. It rewards specificity. It rewards the kinds of conversations that reveal what people actually think, rather than what the organization officially believes. An internal podcast that features a frontline employee talking about how they navigated a real challenge is more culturally potent than twelve episodes of leadership messaging, because it signals that the organization considers all of its people to be worth hearing.
The format choices matter too. A 10-to-15-minute episode is easier to fit into a day than a 45-minute deep dive. A conversational structure is more listenable than a prepared monologue. Recurring segments — something that signals to listeners that there is a familiar structure waiting for them — build the kind of habitual engagement that a one-off broadcast never achieves.
Distributed teams also benefit from hearing voices from different parts of the organization. An internal show that only features headquarters voices will feel, to regional or international employees, like content that was not made for them. Deliberate geographic and functional diversity in episode subjects sends a clear signal about who counts.
For organizations thinking about internal communications as a strategic function rather than an administrative one, the connection to related questions is natural. If your employees are already tuning out your current channels, the issue is rarely message quality — it is format mismatch between how the content is delivered and how people are actually willing to receive it.
Starting Without Overthinking It
The most common reason organizations delay internal podcasting is perfectionism. They want a full content strategy, a branded show identity, professional-quality equipment, and executive buy-in before they record episode one. By the time all of that is in place, the window for the specific communication need has often closed.
A useful internal podcast does not need to be a polished production. It needs to be honest, well-paced, and built around content that employees actually care about. Production quality helps — poor audio is distracting and signals low effort — but the bar for internal shows is different from the bar for consumer audio.
What matters more than production values, at least initially, is consistency. A biweekly episode that shows up reliably does more for cultural cohesion than a quarterly special that feels like an event. Employees need to develop the habit of listening, and habits require repetition.
The strategy question — what job does this podcast do, for which audience, toward what result — is worth answering before you start rather than after. A show built around a clear purpose is easier to sustain, easier to measure, and easier to improve. That is not a bureaucratic requirement. It is the difference between a communications tool and a communications expense.
For distributed teams that have tried and failed with existing channels, internal podcasting is not another thing to add to the pile. It is a different kind of channel — one that was built for the way people actually engage with content when they are not required to.
That distinction is worth taking seriously.
Ready to build an internal podcast your team will actually listen to? Request a quote at jarpodcasts.com/request-a-quote/ and talk through what a purpose-built internal show could look like for your organization.