The role of a communications practitioner has changed significantly. For many teams, especially leaner ones, their remit now stretches far beyond reputation management, press releases, and speeches. Communicators today are expected to manage an expanding mix of platforms, each with its own tone, format, and audience expectations.
One moment, the task is drafting a keynote speech for senior leadership. The next, it is writing a social media caption that needs clarity, personality, and impact within a limited character count.
The challenge is no longer just producing content- it is knowing how to adapt quickly, switch voices, and keep communication meaningful across increasingly crowded channels.
More platforms do not always mean better communication
Many communications teams feel pressure to be everywhere. A common question from management is: “Why aren’t we on this platform too?”
It is easy to assume that every new platform is an opportunity, especially when opening an account costs little or nothing. But more platforms do not automatically lead to stronger communication. In some cases, focus is far more effective than visibility across every channel.
Successful communication is not about being the loudest. It is about understanding what resonates with your audience and being intentional about how your organisation shows up.
Whether a team publishes content daily or weekly, consistency often matters more than volume.
Structure protects creativity
Burnout may be difficult to avoid entirely in communications, but poor systems make it worse.
In my experience, exhaustion rarely comes from a lack of creativity. More often than not, it comes from unclear planning, constant reactive work, and the pressure of juggling multiple demands at once.
Over time, a few practical habits have helped me manage the pace of content production more sustainably.
Plan before you publish
Before creating content, plan the bigger picture. This could take the form of quarterly planning, campaign blocks, or a yearly content calendar. The format matters less than having a clear system that gives teams direction without making the work rigid.
For communications teams working across hybrid or remote environments, a shared media schedule becomes even more important. It provides visibility across the team and reduces the repeated question of “What’s up next?”
A simple dashboard or content schedule can help teams:
In communications, structure creates a breathing room, and that space matters.
Build repeatable content pillars
One practical habit is to create a content collection built around recurring themes or pillars.
For example, different weeks of the month might focus on leadership, workplace culture, customer stories, food, artisans, or community initiatives. The themes will vary depending on the organisation, but the principle remains the same: recurring pillars reduce the pressure of starting from scratch every time.
With a framework in place, teams move from producing content reactively to building a more sustainable storytelling system.
Use themed dates carefully
International and national observances can be useful anchors for timely content.
Dates such as International Women’s Day, World Environment Day, or even lighter moments like Donut Day can create opportunities for engagement. Public service reminders, community updates, and social awareness messaging can also resonate well.
The key is relevance. Not every trending date requires a brand response. If the connection feels forced, audiences will notice. Participation should add value, not simply visibility.
Listening is still underrated
Communicators can end up spending too much time trying to predict what will perform well or what might “go viral”. But in reality, virality is difficult to engineer. Timing, context, and unpredictability often plays a larger role than strategy alone.
A more useful starting point is listening. Whether its by running polls, reading comments, or by starting conversations- ask yourself what your audience actually need, what information they find useful, and how they'd want brands to engage with them.
For example, if the content theme is travel, the focus should not only be on promotion. Communicators should consider what would improve the audience’s experience, answer their concerns, or make decisions easier.
Listening and research remains some of the most valuable skills in communications, even if they are often overlooked in the race for clicks and constant output.
Use trends and AI as support, not strategy
Trends can be useful, but they should support the brand rather than define it. If participation feels forced, it probably is.
The same applies to AI. It can be valuable for brainstorming, research, and structuring ideas, but it should support a communicator’s thinking rather than replace it.
Whether a platform or tool is free or paid, the value comes from understanding how to use it well. Tools may lighten the workload, but the judgement behind the communication still matters most.
Good systems reduce unnecessary pressure
One of the biggest lessons communications work has taught me is that organisation reduces avoidable stress. A strong content system, whether built through a spreadsheet, planner, or publishing platform, helps teams stay aligned and reduces last-minute scrambling.
Micromanagement is often a symptom of unclear planning. Without a shared source of reference, teams and stakeholders lose visibility into what is planned, approved or still in progress.
Many platforms already offer built-in scheduling tools. Use them. Protecting time and energy is part of doing the work well.
Stay structured, but stay adaptable
Planning should never make communications teams inflexible. There must always be room for ad hoc opportunities, breaking developments, and real-time responses. A crisis, policy announcement, or major global event can make carefully planned content irrelevant overnight.
That is the nature of communications work. The goal is not simply to keep producing content- it is to build systems that allow the work to remain thoughtful, relevant, and sustainable over time.
In a profession built around constant output, structure is not a limitation- it is what gives communicators the space to think clearly, respond meaningfully, and continue doing the work well.
Perspectives' is a Telum Media submitted article series, where diverse viewpoints spark thought-provoking conversations about the role of PR and communications in today's world. This Perspectives piece was submitted by Cassie Forsythe, Senior Sales & Marketing Manager at Sri Pelancongan Sabah.
Cassie has more than 15 years of experience in communications, marketing and destination promotion. She has led media relations, digital communications and international marketing initiatives across the tourism sector, having held senior roles at Sri Pelancongan Sabah, Sabah Tourism Board and Star Media Radio Group.