DraftInternalISO 9001ISO 14001ISO 27001

SW-IMS-PRO-007

Communication Procedure

Version

1.0

Owner

IMS Owner

Effective Date

[TBD]

Review Date

[TBD]

Communication Procedure

Document ID: SW-IMS-PRO-007-v1.0
Effective Date: [TBD]
Review Date: [TBD]
Owner: IMS Owner
Approved by: [TBD]

1. Purpose

This procedure defines how Swedwise manages internal and external communication to ensure:

  • Relevant information reaches the right people at the right time
  • Stakeholders are informed about IMS performance and changes
  • Communication channels are appropriate and effective
  • Customer and supplier communication is professional and consistent
  • Crisis and incident communication is timely and coordinated
  • Feedback from interested parties is captured and addressed

2. Scope

This procedure covers:

Internal Communication:

  • IMS policies, procedures, and changes
  • Management decisions and strategic direction
  • Performance against objectives
  • Incident notifications and alerts
  • Training and awareness communications
  • Meeting structures and forums

External Communication:

  • Customer communication (service delivery, incidents, changes)
  • Supplier and partner communication
  • Regulatory and authority communication
  • Certification body communication
  • Media and public communication (crisis)
  • Interested party communication (environmental, community)

3. Definitions

Term Definition
Internal Communication Communication among Swedwise employees and management.
External Communication Communication with parties outside Swedwise (customers, suppliers, authorities).
Interested Party Person or organization that can affect, be affected by, or perceive itself to be affected by Swedwise's activities.
Stakeholder Synonym for interested party.
Crisis Communication Urgent communication during significant incidents or emergencies.
Communication Channel Medium or method used for communication (email, meeting, platform, etc.).
Controlled Communication Formal communication requiring approval or following defined process.

4. Communication Principles

All Swedwise communication follows these principles:

Clarity: Use clear, concise language appropriate to the audience
Timeliness: Communicate at the right time - neither too early nor too late
Relevance: Share information with those who need it, avoid over-communication
Accuracy: Ensure information is correct and factual
Transparency: Be open and honest; admit when information is incomplete
Consistency: Align messages across channels and over time
Two-Way: Enable feedback and dialogue, not just broadcasting
Cultural Fit: Align with "Make Time For The Good" values and learning organization culture

5. Internal Communication

5.1 Internal Communication Channels

Swedwise uses the following internal communication channels:

Channel Purpose Frequency Owner Audience
All-Hands Meetings Company updates, strategic direction, performance Quarterly CEO All staff
Management Team Meetings Strategic decisions, resource allocation, policy approval Bi-weekly CEO Management Team
Department Meetings Operational coordination, team updates, planning Weekly or bi-weekly Department Head Department members
Discipline Forums Technical knowledge sharing, problem-solving Monthly Forum Lead Forum members
Email Announcements Policy changes, important notices, event invitations As needed Varies Targeted or all staff
Intranet / Collaboration Platform Document access, reference information, async updates Continuous IMS Owner / IT All staff
Team Chat (e.g., Teams/Slack) Daily coordination, quick questions, informal updates Continuous Self-organized Varies by channel
1-on-1 Meetings Performance coaching, individual development, feedback Monthly or as needed Manager Individual employee

Selection Guidance:

  • Urgent or critical: Email + chat + phone/video call
  • Complex topics requiring discussion: Meeting (video/in-person)
  • Reference information: Intranet/document repository
  • Quick coordination: Chat

Policy and Procedure Updates

When IMS policies or procedures are created or updated:

Step 1: Draft Approval

  • IMS Owner or document owner completes draft
  • Reviewed and approved per Document Control Procedure (SW-IMS-PRO-001)

Step 2: Communication Plan

  • Determine audience (all staff, specific roles, specific departments)
  • Assess impact (minor update vs. significant change requiring training)
  • Select communication channels

Step 3: Notification

  • Email announcement to affected audience with:
    • Summary of change and reason
    • Link to updated document
    • Effective date
    • Contact for questions
    • Training requirements (if applicable)
  • Post on intranet/document repository
  • Mention in next department meeting or all-hands if significant

Step 4: Confirmation and Training

  • Acknowledgment required for critical policy changes (email confirmation or training completion)
  • Training session scheduled if change is complex or affects many
  • Follow-up reminders for non-responders

Responsibility: IMS Owner coordinates; document owner provides content.

Management Review Results

After each Management Review (see SW-IMS-PRO-005):

Communicate:

  • Summary of IMS performance (objectives, metrics, audit results)
  • Key decisions made (policy changes, resource allocation, priorities)
  • Actions assigned (what, who, when)
  • Opportunities for improvement

Audience: All staff (summary); specific teams (detailed action items)

Channel: Email summary + all-hands meeting highlight + intranet posting

Timing: Within 2 weeks of management review meeting

Responsibility: IMS Owner prepares summary; CEO or management representative delivers.

Incident and Non-Conformity Communication

When significant incidents or non-conformities occur:

Immediate Notification (within 1 hour for critical incidents):

  • Notify affected staff and management
  • Provide initial assessment and containment actions
  • Set expectation for updates
  • Use email + chat + phone for urgency

Ongoing Updates (during incident response):

  • Regular status updates (frequency based on severity)
  • When resolved, communicate resolution and lessons learned
  • Transparency about impact and corrective actions

Post-Incident Communication:

  • Lessons learned shared with relevant teams
  • Process improvements communicated
  • Recognition for effective response (positive reinforcement)

Responsibility: Incident Manager (see SW-IMS-PRO-003); IMS Owner for IMS-wide lessons.

Objective and Performance Communication

Quarterly Performance Updates:

  • Progress toward IMS objectives
  • Key performance indicators (quality, environmental, security)
  • Trends and areas of concern
  • Successes and wins (celebrate progress)

Channel: All-hands meeting + email summary + intranet dashboard (if available)

Responsibility: IMS Owner compiles; CEO or department heads present.

5.3 Strategic and Operational Communication

Management Team to Organization

All-Hands Quarterly Meetings include:

  • Business performance and financial overview
  • Strategic initiatives and priorities
  • Organizational changes (structure, roles, new services)
  • Market updates and customer wins
  • Recognition and celebrations
  • Q&A session (open dialogue)

Format: Video conference (all locations); recorded for later viewing

Preparation: CEO sets agenda; management team contributes content; IMS Owner includes IMS update.

Department Communication

Department Meetings (weekly or bi-weekly) cover:

  • Project status and customer updates
  • Resource allocation and scheduling
  • Operational issues and problem-solving
  • Policy/procedure updates relevant to department
  • Training and development opportunities
  • Individual recognitions and team wins

Format: Video conference or in-person; informal but structured

Responsibility: Department Head facilitates.

Discipline Forum Communication

Monthly Forum Sessions provide:

  • Technical deep-dives and case studies
  • Vendor updates and new features
  • Problem-solving and peer support
  • Certification and training coordination
  • Knowledge repository updates

Format: Virtual or in-person; presentation + discussion

Responsibility: Forum Lead organizes; members contribute.

5.4 Employee Feedback Mechanisms

Two-way communication is essential. Employees can provide feedback through:

Formal Channels:

  • Annual employee surveys (engagement, satisfaction, suggestions)
  • Performance review discussions (1-on-1 with manager)
  • Management review input (solicit improvement suggestions)
  • Internal audit interviews (confidential feedback on IMS)

Informal Channels:

  • Direct conversation with manager or leadership (open-door policy)
  • Improvement suggestion form (SW-IMS-FRM-002)
  • Team retrospectives (project or sprint reviews)
  • Discipline forum discussions

Anonymous Channel:

  • Anonymous suggestion box or online form
  • For sensitive issues or whistleblowing (if needed)

Response Commitment:

  • Formal suggestions acknowledged within 5 business days
  • Decision or action communicated within 30 days
  • Aggregate feedback shared (e.g., "Based on employee feedback, we are...")

Responsibility: IMS Owner manages improvement suggestions; HR manages employee surveys; managers handle 1-on-1 feedback.

5.5 New Employee Communication

New employees receive communication during onboarding (see SW-IMS-PRO-006):

  • Welcome package (company overview, values, org chart, key contacts)
  • IMS overview and mandatory training
  • How to access documents and policies
  • Communication channels and norms (chat etiquette, meeting culture)
  • Who to ask for help (manager, mentor, HR, IMS Owner)

Responsibility: HR coordinates logistics; manager provides role-specific orientation; IMS Owner provides IMS materials.

6. External Communication

6.1 Customer Communication

Service Delivery Communication

Project Kickoff and Onboarding:

  • Project manager or consultant introduces Swedwise approach
  • Establishes communication plan (frequency, channels, contacts)
  • Sets expectations (response times, escalation paths)

Ongoing Project Communication:

  • Regular status updates (weekly or as agreed)
  • Issue and risk escalation (proactive, not reactive)
  • Change requests and approvals (documented)
  • Milestone and deliverable confirmations

Service Completion:

  • Handover documentation and knowledge transfer
  • Satisfaction feedback request
  • Closure communication and invoice

Responsibility: Project Manager or Consultant (customer-facing role).

SaaS Service Customer Communication

For Swedwise Communications SaaS service:

Onboarding Communication:

  • Welcome email with service overview and contacts
  • Onboarding schedule and expectations
  • Platform access and credentials
  • Support channel information

Operational Communication:

  • Service status updates (if issues or maintenance)
  • Performance reports (monthly or quarterly SLA reports)
  • Feature updates and enhancements
  • Security advisories (if relevant)

Support Communication:

  • Ticket acknowledgment (within SLA - 15 minutes for critical)
  • Status updates during incident resolution
  • Resolution notification and closure
  • Satisfaction survey post-resolution

Planned Maintenance:

  • Advance notice (minimum 5 business days for planned maintenance)
  • Maintenance window details (date, time, duration, expected impact)
  • Reminder 24 hours before maintenance
  • Completion notification

Responsibility: SaaS Operations Manager; Customer Success team.

Customer Incident Communication

When incidents affect customers (service outage, data issue, security event):

Immediate Notification (within SLA - e.g., 15 minutes for critical):

  • Acknowledge incident
  • Initial assessment of impact
  • Expected resolution timeline (or next update time)
  • Workarounds if available

Ongoing Updates:

  • Regular updates (every 1-2 hours for critical; every 4 hours for major)
  • Progress on resolution
  • Revised timelines if resolution delayed

Resolution Communication:

  • Confirmation service restored
  • Root cause summary (brief, customer-appropriate)
  • Preventive actions to avoid recurrence
  • Apology and acknowledgment of impact
  • Compensation or credit (if contractually required)

Post-Incident Review (for major incidents):

  • Detailed incident report (if customer requests)
  • Lessons learned and improvements

Responsibility: Incident Manager coordinates; Customer Success communicates to customer; management involved for major incidents.

6.2 Supplier and Partner Communication

Routine Supplier Communication

Onboarding:

  • Supplier requirements and expectations (quality, security, environmental)
  • Communication and escalation contacts
  • Performance review schedule

Ongoing:

  • Regular check-ins (quarterly or as agreed)
  • Performance feedback (based on evaluations - see supplier management procedure)
  • Change requests and order communications
  • Issue escalation (service quality, delivery delays)

Review:

  • Annual supplier performance review
  • Contract renewal discussions
  • Improvement opportunities (collaborative)

Responsibility: Department Head or Procurement Lead (if designated); IMS Owner for IMS-related supplier requirements.

Critical Supplier Communication (e.g., OpenText, Cloud Provider)

Strategic Suppliers require elevated communication:

  • Executive-level relationship management
  • Quarterly business reviews
  • Advance notice of major changes (on both sides)
  • Collaborative roadmap planning
  • Joint customer success initiatives

Responsibility: CEO or Management Team member for strategic relationships; operational teams for day-to-day.

6.3 Regulatory and Authority Communication

Proactive Compliance Communication

Regulatory Reporting:

  • Required reports submitted on time (environmental, tax, labor, etc.)
  • Accurate and complete information
  • Retention of submission records

Regulatory Inquiries:

  • Respond promptly and professionally
  • Coordinate response (IMS Owner + legal/external advisor if needed)
  • Provide requested documentation
  • Follow up as required

Responsibility: IMS Owner coordinates; CEO or Management Team approves formal responses; external advisors consulted for legal/complex matters.

Incident Reporting to Authorities

Data Breaches (GDPR):

  • If personal data breach likely to result in risk to individuals:
    • Notify Swedish Data Protection Authority (IMY) within 72 hours
    • Notify affected data subjects without undue delay (if high risk)
    • Document breach details (who, what, when, impact, response)
  • Follow GDPR breach notification requirements
  • Template and process documented in Incident Management Procedure (SW-IMS-PRO-003)

Environmental Incidents:

  • If significant environmental impact occurs (spill, contamination, etc.):
    • Notify relevant environmental authority
    • Document incident and response
    • Cooperate with investigation
  • (Note: Low likelihood for Swedwise office-based operations)

Other Incidents:

  • Serious workplace injury: Notify Arbetsmiljöverket (Work Environment Authority) if applicable
  • Financial irregularities: Notify Skatteverket (Tax Agency) if fraud suspected

Responsibility: CISO for data breaches; Environmental Lead for environmental incidents; CEO for other regulatory reporting; always consult legal advisor for significant incidents.

6.4 Certification Body Communication

ISO Certification Audits:

  • Coordinate audit scheduling (annual surveillance, recertification)
  • Provide requested documentation and evidence
  • Facilitate auditor access to staff, facilities, systems
  • Respond to non-conformities and observations
  • Maintain certification records

Ongoing Communication:

  • Notify certification body of significant organizational changes (ownership, scope, locations)
  • Request guidance on interpretation of standards (if needed)
  • Submit corrective action evidence post-audit

Responsibility: IMS Owner is primary liaison with certification body; CEO approves significant communications.

6.5 Crisis and Media Communication

Crisis Definition: Significant incident threatening reputation, operations, or safety:

  • Major data breach or security incident
  • Severe service outage affecting multiple customers
  • Legal or regulatory action
  • Negative media attention
  • Workplace emergency

Crisis Communication Protocol:

Step 1: Activate Crisis Team

  • CEO, affected department heads, IMS Owner, CISO (as relevant)
  • Determine if external advisors needed (legal, PR)

Step 2: Internal Communication

  • Brief all staff on situation (facts, response, what to say/not say)
  • Designate spokesperson (typically CEO)
  • Instruct staff to refer media inquiries to spokesperson

Step 3: External Communication

  • Customers: Proactive notification with facts, impact, actions
  • Media: Prepared statement (if media inquiry); proactive release (if warranted)
  • Authorities: Notification if required
  • Partners/suppliers: Inform if they are affected or need to respond

Step 4: Ongoing Management

  • Regular internal updates to staff
  • Monitor media and social media
  • Update external communications as situation evolves
  • Document all communications for post-crisis review

Step 5: Post-Crisis Communication

  • Resolution announcement
  • Lessons learned (internal)
  • Reputation repair actions (if needed)

Key Principles:

  • Speed: Communicate quickly with initial facts; avoid information vacuum
  • Honesty: Admit what is known and unknown; never mislead
  • Empathy: Acknowledge impact and concern; apologize where appropriate
  • Control: Single spokesperson; consistent message

Responsibility: CEO leads crisis communication; IMS Owner supports; external advisors engaged as needed.

6.6 Interested Party Communication (Environmental and Social)

Environmental Interested Parties:

  • Local community (if office impacts neighbors)
  • Environmental advocacy groups (if relevant)
  • Industry environmental initiatives

Communication Topics:

  • Environmental policy and commitments
  • Carbon footprint and reduction initiatives
  • Waste management and recycling efforts
  • Participation in environmental programs

Channels:

  • Website (public environmental policy and performance)
  • Sustainability report (annual or biennial, if published)
  • Direct engagement (if specific inquiries or partnerships)

Responsibility: Environmental Lead prepares content; CEO approves public communications; Marketing/Communications handles website publication.

Social Responsibility:

  • Community involvement (sponsorships, volunteering)
  • Diversity and inclusion initiatives
  • Ethical business practices

Communication: Via website, social media, or direct outreach as appropriate.

7. Communication Planning for Significant Changes

When significant changes occur (new service, office relocation, major policy change, organizational restructure):

Step 1: Develop Communication Plan

Define:

  • What: Key messages (what is changing, why, when, impact)
  • Who: Audiences (staff, customers, suppliers, public) and priority order
  • When: Timeline and sequencing (who learns first, when to announce publicly)
  • How: Channels and methods for each audience
  • Who Communicates: Spokesperson or responsible person
  • Feedback: How to capture and address questions/concerns

Step 2: Execute Communication Plan

  • Typically: Internal before external (staff learn first)
  • Typically: Affected parties before general announcement
  • Prepare FAQs and talking points
  • Ensure consistent messaging across channels

Step 3: Monitor and Adjust

  • Track feedback and questions
  • Address misinformation or concerns
  • Adjust messaging if needed
  • Confirm understanding (especially internal)

Responsibility: Change initiator (e.g., CEO for strategic change, IMS Owner for IMS change) creates plan; relevant parties execute; IMS Owner provides template and guidance.

8. Communication Matrix - Interested Parties

Interested Party Interest/Expectation Communication Topics Frequency Channel Responsible
Customers Service quality, reliability, security, value Project status, incidents, changes, performance reports, invoicing Ongoing, per agreement Email, meetings, portal, phone Customer Success, Project Managers
Employees Job security, development, fair treatment, voice Strategy, performance, policies, changes, recognition Ongoing, regular meetings Email, meetings, intranet, chat Management, IMS Owner, Managers
Management Team Business performance, compliance, risk Financial results, IMS performance, risks, decisions needed Weekly, quarterly Meetings, reports CEO, IMS Owner, Dept Heads
Suppliers/Partners Fair contracts, timely payment, collaboration Orders, performance, issues, opportunities As needed, quarterly reviews Email, meetings, phone Procurement, Dept Heads
Certification Body IMS compliance, evidence Audit findings, corrective actions, organizational changes Annual audits, as needed Email, audit portal, meetings IMS Owner
Regulatory Authorities Legal compliance Required reports, incident notifications, responses to inquiries As required by law Official channels, email IMS Owner, CEO, Legal Advisor
Shareholders/Owners Financial return, growth, risk management Financial performance, strategic direction, major decisions Quarterly, annually Board meetings, reports CEO, CFO
Local Community Environmental impact, good neighbor Environmental performance, community involvement Annually, as needed Website, direct engagement Environmental Lead, CEO
Job Candidates Employer brand, opportunities Culture, values, job openings, employee value proposition Ongoing Website, job ads, social media, interviews HR, Managers
Media Newsworthy developments Company news, crisis response, thought leadership As warranted Press releases, interviews, social media CEO, Marketing/Comms

9. Communication Effectiveness Evaluation

Communication effectiveness is evaluated through:

Feedback Mechanisms:

  • Employee surveys (do you feel well-informed? Can you find information you need?)
  • Customer satisfaction surveys (communication quality)
  • Internal audit interviews (were you aware of policy X?)
  • Incident reviews (was communication timely and clear?)

Metrics:

  • Email open rates (for important announcements)
  • Intranet page views (are people accessing documents?)
  • Meeting attendance (engagement in forums, all-hands)
  • Time to acknowledge critical communications (for mandatory acknowledgments)
  • Misunderstandings or repeated questions (indicates unclear communication)

Continuous Improvement:

  • Annual review of communication channels and effectiveness
  • Adjust frequency, format, or channels based on feedback
  • Incorporate lessons from communication failures (e.g., incident where stakeholders felt uninformed)

Responsibility: IMS Owner evaluates internal communication effectiveness; Customer Success evaluates customer communication; report findings in management review.

10. Roles and Responsibilities

Role Responsibilities
CEO - Lead all-hands meetings and strategic communication
- Approve major external communications
- Serve as primary spokesperson in crisis
- Ensure communication aligns with "Make Time For The Good" values
Management Team - Communicate decisions and strategic direction
- Cascade information to departments
- Provide input for all-hands meetings
- Approve communications affecting their areas
IMS Owner - Coordinate IMS-related internal communication
- Communicate policy/procedure updates
- Prepare IMS performance summaries
- Liaison with certification body
- Maintain this procedure
- Evaluate communication effectiveness
Department Heads - Facilitate department meetings
- Cascade information from management team
- Communicate operational updates to team
- Manage customer/supplier communication for their areas
Discipline Forum Leads - Facilitate monthly forum sessions
- Communicate technical updates to forum members
- Coordinate with IMS Owner on training and knowledge sharing
Customer Success / Project Managers - Primary customer communication for projects and services
- Escalate customer issues and feedback
- Ensure consistent, professional customer communication
CISO - Communicate security incidents and advisories
- Lead communication for data breach notifications
- Coordinate security-related external communication
Environmental Lead - Communicate environmental performance and initiatives
- Engage with environmental interested parties
HR (if designated) - Coordinate employee engagement surveys
- Manage candidate and recruitment communication
- Support onboarding communication
All Employees - Read and acknowledge important communications
- Provide feedback through designated channels
- Represent Swedwise professionally in external communication
- Escalate questions or concerns to manager or IMS Owner

11. Communication Tools and Platforms

Current tools (update as platforms change):

Tool Purpose Owner/Administrator
Email (Microsoft 365) Formal announcements, external communication IT / IMS Owner
Microsoft Teams Team chat, video meetings, collaboration IT
SharePoint / OneDrive Document repository, intranet IT / IMS Owner
[TBD - CRM] Customer communication tracking Sales / Customer Success
[TBD - Ticketing System] Customer support communication SaaS Operations / Support
[TBD - Project Management Tool] Project communication and status Project Managers
Phone System Voice communication, urgent contact IT
Website Public information, marketing, recruitment Marketing / IT

Access and Training: All employees trained on communication tools during onboarding; IT provides support and updates.

12. Records to Maintain

Record Retention Period Location Owner
All-hands meeting agendas and notes 3 years [TBD] CEO / IMS Owner
Management team meeting minutes 5 years [TBD] CEO
IMS communication announcements (policy updates) 3 years [TBD] IMS Owner
Customer communication (project status, incidents) Duration of contract + 3 years [TBD - CRM] Customer Success
Regulatory communication and reports 7 years or as required by law [TBD] IMS Owner / CEO
Incident communication logs 5 years [TBD] Incident Manager
Crisis communication records 7 years [TBD] CEO
Employee survey results 5 years [TBD] HR / IMS Owner
Certification body correspondence Duration of certification + 3 years [TBD] IMS Owner

14. Continuous Improvement

This procedure is subject to continuous improvement based on:

  • Communication effectiveness evaluation results
  • Employee and customer feedback
  • Incident reviews highlighting communication gaps
  • Audit findings
  • Best practice benchmarking

Suggestions for improvement should be submitted to the IMS Owner.


Appendix A: Communication Plan Template

Use this template for significant changes or initiatives:

Initiative/Change: _______________________

Communication Objective: What do we want audiences to know, feel, or do?


Audience Analysis

Audience Key Messages Concerns/Questions to Address Desired Outcome

Communication Schedule

Date/Timing Audience Message/Content Channel Responsible Status

Feedback and Q&A Plan

  • How will we capture questions? _______________________
  • Who will respond? _______________________
  • Response timeline? _______________________

Success Criteria

How will we know communication was effective?



Appendix B: Crisis Communication Checklist

When a crisis occurs, follow this checklist:

Immediate (within 1 hour):

  • Activate crisis team (CEO, relevant heads, IMS Owner, CISO, advisors)
  • Assess situation (facts, impact, duration, stakeholders affected)
  • Determine if external advisors needed (legal, PR)
  • Brief internal team (management and affected staff)
  • Designate spokesperson (typically CEO)
  • Prepare holding statement (acknowledge awareness, investigating)

Within 4 hours:

  • Communicate to directly affected parties (customers, suppliers, employees)
  • Prepare FAQ for staff (what to say, what not to say)
  • Monitor media and social media for coverage
  • Respond to media inquiries (via spokesperson only)
  • Notify authorities if legally required

Ongoing (during crisis):

  • Regular internal updates to staff (daily or more frequent)
  • Regular external updates to affected parties
  • Log all communications (who, when, what, channel)
  • Adjust messaging based on new information
  • Coordinate with partners/suppliers as needed

Post-Crisis (within 1 week of resolution):

  • Resolution announcement (internal and external)
  • Post-crisis review meeting (what went well, what to improve)
  • Update crisis communication procedure based on lessons learned
  • Reputation repair actions (if needed)
  • Document crisis and response in records

Document Control

Version Date Author Changes
1.0 [TBD] [Author] Initial release

Approval

Role Name Signature Date
IMS Owner
CEO
Management Team Representative