The research, which surveyed 4,500 office workers across six countries, reveals that younger workers prefer communications with more visual content — such as screenshots, screencasts, images, gifs, and short videos — when compared to other generations in the workforce. They are twice as likely as Baby Boomers to use images and video to communicate in their own time outside of work (58% vs. 28%). And they are twice as likely to want more visual communications at work (43% compared to 19%).
Wendy Hamilton, CEO at TechSmith, comments:
“Social platforms like Facebook and Instagram, which rely heavily on visual content for engagement, are the go-to way of connecting outside of work because this is how people prefer to communicate. Not only that, using images, screencasts and videos in workplace communications makes it easier to get a message across clearly and concisely.
“With millennials making up the largest generation in the workforce and Generation Z now moving through organisations too, it’s time leaders sat up and adapted to their new, image-hungry audiences.”
Despite these findings, the research also shows that most employees believe their workplaces focus heavily on text-only email for internal communications. In fact, 47% of millennials say their company relies on plain-text email to communicate, with 44% saying their company's communications are outdated.
Other key findings confirm the demand for more visual content:
The research shows outdated communication has real-world consequences, sometimes leading to poor motivation and morale. Despite spending fewer years in the workforce, millennials are more likely than other generations to have been demotivated by poor company communications (43% compared to 35% of Gen X and 27% of baby boomers).
Adding visual content to company communications can sound daunting, especially for those who are new to creating images and video, there are a number of simple ways to get started.
Wendy Hamilton, CEO at TechSmith, comments:
“If you’re new to creating visual content, the key is to start small. Don’t overwhelm yourself or your employees by requiring all messages to include visuals. You could start by taking screenshots and marking them up to show changes you’d like to see on the company website, or make a short screencast video of how to access your new online HR system, etc. As you learn how simple it can be, I think you’ll find an organic and natural path to discovering how visuals can help your business better communicate.”
Here comes the science
Businesses that fail to unlock the value of visual communications seriously risk holding back productivity and engagement levels.
New scientific research reveals that communications that include visual content such as screenshots, screencasts, or videos are better, faster and more engaging than plain text for nearly all employees — not just millennials.
Wendy Hamilton, CEO at TechSmith, comments:
“When compounded per employee over every hour of every work day, the time and productivity that can be saved by communicating visually truly begins to add up.”
Dr. Alastair Goode, who led the scientific research, adds:
“More than half the human brain is involved in visual processing so visuals play a huge role in our ability to communicate. This research shows that, in a business scenario, visual communication prompts a deeper level of understanding and a more engaging experience for audiences.”
“With our propensity for visualization, it is no surprise that infographics, screenshots, screencasts, gifs, and short videos have become so popular — and also means people are becoming more accustomed to absorbing information visually than ever before.”