Jonathan Justus
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Why 44% of Employees Tune Out — Even When the Volume Is Right

By Jonathan Justus | jonnynow.com | 21 June 2026

Here is a finding that should unsettle anyone who measures communication by output: when Korbyt, Reworked and ICology surveyed more than 1,100 workers for their 2026 report Better Signals, Less Noise: The State of Workplace Communication, half said the number of messages they received was "about right" — yet 44% admitted they still tune out. The problem, in other words, is not volume. People are not drowning; they are quietly switching off.

That distinction matters because it breaks the reflex most organisations reach for. The same study found that 89% of workers are only moderately confident they are not missing important updates. When people stop noticing they have disengaged, your satisfaction scores begin to lie to you. Sending less will not fix it, and sending more certainly will not. What changes the picture is signal — messages that are timely, clear and worth the reader's attention.

Colleagues gathered around a table in a working meeting

Photo by Dylan Gillis on Unsplash

Tuning out is not the same as overload

Overload is loud and obvious; people complain about it. Passive disengagement is silent, and far harder to detect. The Korbyt research shows what actually pulls attention back: 57% of workers engage when a message is timely or urgent, and 56% engage when a clear action is required. Everything else — the round-robin all-staff email, the update that could have gone to anyone — slides past unread. The report offers a test worth pinning above every desk: before you press send, you should be able to finish the sentence, "After reading this, employees will ___." If you cannot, the message is not ready.

People trust the sender, not the channel

The most striking number in the study is about credibility. Some 73% of workers say the single biggest factor in whether they trust a message is who it comes from. "From the Leadership Team" does not clear the bar; people trust people, not titles. This is why direct managers matter more than any polished broadcast. Employees consistently trust their own manager above any executive or corporate channel, which means a communication strategy that bypasses managers is building on sand. Equip your managers to add context and cascade meaning, and the trust deficit starts to close. Skip them, and no amount of design polish will compensate.

Key statistic: 73% of workers say the identity of the sender is the top factor in whether they trust a message. (Korbyt / Reworked / ICology, State of Workplace Communication, 2026)

Let AI subtract, not add

There is a warning here for the age of generative tools. A striking 92% of workers agree that AI should reduce information overload, not increase message volume — and 45% already question a message's accuracy the moment they suspect a machine wrote it. The lesson is plain: use AI to summarise, deduplicate and prioritise, not to manufacture more content that sounds as though it came from a template. The organisations that win attention in 2026 will treat AI as an editor and a filter, never as a prolific author. Clarity, not quantity, is the discipline that earns a hearing.

What ties these threads together is a single shift in mindset. Communication is not something you have done once you have sent it; it is something that has happened only once it has landed. That demands fewer, sharper messages, signed by a credible human, aimed at a clear outcome. It is a craft — and like any craft, it can be learned and practised deliberately.

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If your messages are landing flat — read but not acted upon, sent but not trusted — the fix is rarely more volume. It is sharper signal. Elevana's PRO Communicator programme helps professionals and leaders build exactly that: the clarity, credibility and structure that make people stop tuning out and start paying attention.

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Attention is not won by speaking more. It is earned by being worth hearing.

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