Jonathan Justus
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Why Poor Communication Costs Firms $1.2 Trillion a Year

By Jonathan Justus | jonnynow.com | 2 June 2026

Business team collaborating around a table during a workplace meeting, discussing ideas with open laptops and documents

Photo: Headway via Unsplash (free to use)

Ineffective communication drains roughly US$1.2 trillion from American businesses each year, according to the State of Business Communication report published by Grammarly and The Harris Poll. The same research found that three in four business leaders waste significant time and energy untangling avoidable misunderstandings — a productivity tax that quietly erodes performance long before any deal collapses or project stalls.

The finding reframes a problem that organisations have long treated as a soft skill. Communication, the data suggests, is not a matter of personality or polish. It is an operational variable with a measurable price, and in 2026 that price is climbing as hybrid working, asynchronous messaging and AI-generated content multiply the channels through which meaning can be lost.

The cost of being misunderstood

The scale of the problem is broad. A poll of more than 1,400 employees, executives and educators conducted by Fierce, Inc. found that 86% blamed workplace failures on poor communication or collaboration. Separate workplace analyses compiled in 2026 estimate that ineffective communication costs between US$10,000 and US$55,000 per employee each year, depending on seniority, with wasted time consistently cited as the single largest consequence.

Grammarly and The Harris Poll calculated that resolving miscommunication consumes close to a full working day every week for the average knowledge worker. Multiplied across a department, that is not friction — it is lost capacity that no recruitment drive can recover.

Key statistic: 75% of business leaders say they spend too much time and energy resolving avoidable miscommunications, according to Grammarly and The Harris Poll.

Clarity beats volume

The instinctive response to confusion is to communicate more — more meetings, more updates, more messages. The evidence points the other way. Researchers consistently find that the volume of communication correlates poorly with its effectiveness, while precision and structure correlate strongly. Teams that align on a single source of truth and a shared vocabulary spend less time clarifying and more time executing.

Disciplined communicators tend to share three habits: they lead with the conclusion rather than burying it, they tailor the message to what the listener already knows, and they confirm understanding rather than assuming it. None requires charisma. Each can be trained.

Influence is earned in the edit

Influence, in professional settings, rarely flows from volume or seniority. It accrues to those whose messages are easiest to act on. The work of persuasion happens largely before a word is spoken — in deciding what to leave out. A recommendation stripped to its essentials travels further than a comprehensive briefing that demands the reader assemble the argument themselves.

This is why the most influential professionals often appear to say less. They have done the editing in advance, sparing colleagues the cognitive cost of decoding. In a working culture saturated with information, restraint has become a competitive advantage.

Watch: how great communicators inspire action

Simon Sinek's analysis of why some leaders and organisations command outsized influence remains a useful primer on structuring a message so that it persuades rather than merely informs.

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Elevana's PRO Communicator programme trains professionals to write, present and lead conversations with the clarity that turns information into influence — covering structured messaging, client communication and persuasive professional writing.

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In a market drowning in messages, the professionals who win are not those who say the most — but those who are understood the fastest.

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