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How to streamline internal communications with video recordings in Loom

Key takeaways

  • Short Loom videos give your team a faster, clearer way to share updates without clogging inboxes or calendars.
  • When you identify where communication stalls, you can swap those pain points for quick video updates.
  • Storing recordings in shared workspaces means team members can find what they need without chasing down information.
  • Team members watch and respond to videos on their own time, which keeps projects on track without scheduling headaches.
  • A few simple habits, like keeping recordings under five minutes and focusing on one topic, make your internal communications more effective.

Every team deals with communication slowdowns. Maybe it's the daily standup that eats up 30 minutes when a two-minute update would do the job, or the three-paragraph email explaining a process that would take 60 seconds to walk through on screen. These small inefficiencies stack up and create real bottlenecks that slow down projects and frustrate people.

Video messaging for internal communications helps solve this problem. Instead of writing a lengthy Slack thread or hopping on another Zoom call, you can simply record a short Loom video to capture exactly what you need to say. This allows you to convey context that Slack messages lack, such as visuals and tone, and prevent important details from being forgotten in meetings.

The steps below walk you through how to use Loom to improve your internal communications.


5 steps to master internal communications and reduce bottlenecks

Use these five steps to improve internal communication and keep work moving without unnecessary delays.

Step 1. Identify your communication bottlenecks

Before you start recording, take a step back and figure out where your team loses time. Look at the types of messages that cause the most friction. These are the ones that require back-and-forth, get misunderstood, or pull people into meetings that didn't need to happen.

Common areas where internal communications break down include:

  • Status updates and check-ins: Recurring meetings that exist only to share progress can often be replaced with a recorded update that everyone watches when it's convenient.
  • Process explanations: Written instructions for multi-step workflows tend to get long and confusing, especially when visuals would clarify things instantly.
  • Feedback and reviews: Typing out detailed feedback on a design, document, or project plan takes time and often loses the nuance that a screen recording would capture in minutes.

Once you know where the slowdowns are, decide which messages would work better as video. Not everything needs a recording. For example, simple yes-or-no questions still belong in chat. But anything that requires showing or walking someone through something is a strong candidate.

Step 2. Use Loom to record short, focused videos

The best Loom videos are concise, cover one topic, and get straight to the point. Aim for two to five minutes. This amount of time is long enough to be thorough but short enough that people actually watch the whole thing.

Loom's screen recorder makes this easy. You can share your screen, your camera, or both at once, which means you can talk through a spreadsheet, demo a feature, or walk through a process while your team sees exactly what you see.

Here are a few things to keep in mind while recording:

  • Start with the purpose: Let viewers know what the video covers and why it matters in the first 10 seconds so they can decide whether it's relevant to them right now.
  • Use screen sharing for context: Showing your screen while you explain something cuts down on misunderstandings and eliminates the back-and-forth that text-based instructions often require.
  • End with a clear next step: Tell viewers what you need from them so nothing falls through the cracks. Whether that's a response, a task, or just an acknowledgment.
     

Step 3. Store the Loom videos in a shared workspace for easy access

The easier it is for people to find a video, the more likely they are to use it instead of defaulting to a meeting or a long email thread. Once you start building a library of recordings, you need a system for keeping them organized. The goal is to organize internal communications so team members can locate what they need without digging through old threads or asking someone to resend a link.

Set up a structure that makes sense for your team. That might mean creating separate folders by department so every group has a dedicated space for their recordings. You could also organize by topic, grouping videos under subjects like onboarding, product updates, or process documentation so people can browse by what they're looking for instead of who recorded it.

For the most important or frequently referenced videos, pin them in a shared Slack channel or project management tool so they're always easy to grab.

Step 4. Integrate the videos with existing tools to reduce context switching

Your team already has a set of internal communications tools they rely on daily. Instead of making people jump to a separate platform every time they need to watch a video, bring the videos to them.

Loom integrates with tools like Slack, Jira, and Confluence, so you can embed recordings directly where your team is already working. A developer can watch a bug report walkthrough right inside the Jira ticket, or a manager can review a video presentation without leaving Confluence.

When the video lives inside the tool where the related work happens, people don't have to hop between apps to get the full picture. They see the visual explanation right alongside the project details, which means fewer follow-up questions and quicker decisions. Everything — tasks, context, and video explanations — stays in one place, so nothing gets lost in translation.

Step 5. Encourage asynchronous communication to keep collaboration efficient

One of the biggest advantages of using Loom for internal communications is that it supports asynchronous communication. Not everyone needs to be available at the same time for information to flow smoothly. When you record a video update instead of hosting a live meeting, people can watch it whenever it fits their schedule.

This is useful for distributed teams working across time zones. Instead of trying to find a meeting slot that works for everyone, you can adopt async work with Loom and make sure the whole team stays informed regardless of where or when they work.

To keep async collaboration productive, encourage your team to use Loom's comment and reaction features. Viewers can leave timestamped comments on specific parts of a video, which creates a focused discussion thread without requiring a separate meeting.


What are examples of internal communications you can record with Loom?

Loom works for just about any message that's easier to show than explain. Here are some of the most common recordings teams create:

  • Project updates: Share progress, blockers, and next steps in a quick recording that stakeholders can watch on their own time.
  • Onboarding instructions: Walk new hires through tools, processes, and team norms with training videos they can revisit as they get up to speed.
  • Process walkthroughs: Show exactly how to complete a workflow, file a request, or use a piece of software step by step.
  • Meeting recaps: Summarize decisions and action items from a meeting so people who couldn't attend still have full context.
  • Team announcements: Share company news, policy changes, or team milestones in a format that feels more personal than a mass email.
  • Tool demos: Record quick explanations of new features or software updates so your team knows how to use them without scheduling a training session.

Best practices for creating productive videos with Loom

Not all videos are equally effective. The recordings that get watched, understood, and acted on tend to follow a few common patterns. Keep these tips in mind:

  • Stick to one topic per video: Covering too much in a single recording dilutes the message and makes it harder for viewers to find specific information later.
  • Keep it under five minutes: Shorter videos get higher completion rates, and they force you to focus on what actually matters.
  • Use clear audio: Find a quiet space, use a decent microphone, and speak at a natural pace.
  • Add a call to action: Whether you need a response, approval, or just confirmation that someone watched, say so at the end.
  • Include visual cues: Highlight, annotate, or zoom in on the areas of your screen that matter most so viewers aren't guessing where to look.
  • Title and describe your videos well: A descriptive title and a one-sentence summary help people decide whether a video is relevant before they press play.

Make team communications easier and more efficient

Improving your internal communications doesn't require a massive overhaul. Start by encouraging your team to use Loom for the updates and explanations that eat up the most time, like project check-ins, process walkthroughs, and feedback sessions. 

As adoption picks up, review how your team is using video on a regular basis. Look at which recordings get the most views, where people are still defaulting to meetings, and whether your video library is reducing the bottlenecks you identified at the start.