viva engage
93 TopicsCustomer spotlight: How Foot Locker turned AI curiosity into adoption
When organizations talk about AI adoption, the conversation often starts with technology. At Foot Locker, it started with people. Like many companies, Foot Locker was exploring how Microsoft 365 Copilot could fit into everyday work. Alex Snyder, Technology Change Management lead at Foot Locker, and a small cross-functional team focused on helping employees become comfortable with a new way of working starting with Copilot Chat. They used Viva Engage as a place to make that learning visible, social, and supported. Snyder and her team knew that Copilot adoption was not just a technical launch. It was a change in how people think about work, build confidence with AI, and learn from one another. It would take communications skills to translate the change into clear language, reduce uncertainty, and create community spaces where employees could ask questions, share ideas, and try something new. Start with confidence, not complexity Early in the journey, Snyder and the team recognized that employees needed more than access to AI tools. They needed space to learn, experiment, and ask questions. For Snyder, that perspective came naturally. Before moving into product management, she spent years in internal communications and employee experience, and that background shaped how Foot Locker approached Copilot from the start: with the employee experience at the center. "This is not a tool rollout. This is a different way of thinking about work." — Alex Snyder, Product Manager for Microsoft 365, Foot Locker Instead of leading with technical capabilities, the team focused on helping employees understand what AI could do for them. Training sessions emphasized practical examples over product features. Communications avoided jargon. Security guidance was clear and simple. "We removed fear and demystified AI. People felt safe to try it." — Alex Snyder Make learning social A key part of the strategy was giving employees a place to learn from one another. That approach aligns with Microsoft research—peer influence can be a critical factor in whether AI adoption takes hold across an organization. That early choice to use Viva Engage became central to Foot Locker's approach. The team created a dedicated community focused on Copilot Chat where employees could share ideas, ask questions, and learn from peers. "Let community do what communications can't," Snyder said. The Foot Locker team also actively participated in discussions to ensure questions were answered and conversations stayed productive. Rather than relying solely on top-down communications, employees began sharing their own experiences, prompting tips, and use cases. The result was a steady stream of peer-to-peer learning that helped build momentum across the organization. Give people one place to start Alongside the community, Foot Locker created a centralized AI hub in SharePoint that brought together guidance, training resources, security information, prompt examples, and FAQs. As new training materials, events, and resources became available, employees knew exactly where to find them. The team also kept training intentionally simple. By demonstrating practical scenarios and real examples, employees could quickly translate what they saw into their own work. "We didn't focus on everything Copilot could do," Snyder said. "We focused on what someone needed to know to start experimenting." — Alex Snyder Build momentum before you scale Within six months, more than 25% of Foot Locker employees had adopted Copilot Chat, and usage continued to grow. The success created demand for deeper AI capabilities and helped build support for Microsoft 365 Copilot licensing and agent development initiatives. Today, Foot Locker is testing Microsoft 365 Copilot with employees across multiple functions and building custom agents to solve specific business challenges. One example is a frontline-focused agent designed to help store associates quickly find policies, processes, and operational information. "Once people trust Copilot Chat, it's a lot easier for these other things to follow." — Alex Snyder What communicators can take from Foot Locker For communicators looking to support AI adoption, Snyder's advice is straightforward: "Don't wait for something to be perfect. Just start somewhere." Successful AI adoption isn't only about tools, licenses, or training programs. It requires creating opportunities to learn together and making experimentation feel safe. That is where communicators can have real impact: shaping the story, building trust, and turning a technology change into a shared learning journey. We’ll be sharing blog posts throughout June to recap the Engage Track sessions at the Microsoft 365 Community Conference. Follow along on the Viva Engage Blog | Microsoft Community Hub, and learn about all the new and coming soon experiences in Engage that we highlighted at the conference.25Views0likes0CommentsCustomer spotlight: Less inbox, more connection at Nuveen
Helping leaders reach employees in new ways At the Microsoft 365 Community Conference, we explored a challenge many communicators are dealing with right now: employees are surrounded by nonstop signals—email, chats, meetings, and posts—and important messages get lost in the noise. Dan Mulcahey, VP, Internal Comms at Nuveen, a TIAA company, joined us to share how he and his team are evolving their communications approach using Viva Engage to make messages more relevant, visible, and engaging over time. Mulcahey highlighted how moving away from email to Engage marked a strategic shift in how leaders communicate and build connection with employees. Why email wasn’t enough The Nuveen comms team looked at the reality: email volume was high, open rates were going down, and leaders needed a better way to reach employees. From there, they piloted Engage, proved reach first, and built confidence over time. Reach came quickly, while engagement required more patience. “We proved the reach first… But you need patience for the engagement.” — Dan Mulcahey, VP, Internal Comms, Nuveen Create for the channel One of the biggest lessons from Nuveen was that communicators can’t just copy email content into a social channel and expect different results. The team had to create content for the medium. For example, Nuveen’s CEO launched a recurring “Fun with Facts” series that used humor and short videos to make even routine topics, like compliance training, more engaging. That shift in content style reflects a broader change toward making communications feel more like what people already consume outside of work: more visual, more direct, and more conversational. What people experience on social platforms and consumer apps shapes what they expect at work, and internal communications need to keep up. “People don’t come to work and suddenly turn off their brain. They don’t forget the platforms they use in the real world.” — Dan Mulcahey Mulcahey reported that since June 2023, for a business unit of around 3,700 employees, that approach generated 2.5 million impressions, 25.5K reactions, and 2K comments on Engage, along with what the team described as “one executive team of believers.” In a video shared during the session, Josh Shamansky, Chief Human Resources Officer, said Engage had become central not only to communications distribution strategy, but also to content development. He also shared that employees and leaders were engaging in ways that email and the intranet could not support in the same way. “Viva Engage has become the most important channel for leaders and employees to stay connected across the organization. It is hard to remember that we did it any other way.” — Josh Shamansky, Chief Human Resources Officer, Nuveen Start small, build momentum The Nuveen team described a phased journey that started small in one business area, expanded to a 3,700+ person Nuveen business unit community, then grew to 10 more communities before expanding to the TIAA all-company level. They focused first on the parts of the organization most ready to adopt, used those wins as proof points, and let leadership advocacy help the model spread. Mulcahey and members of his team — Chris Dickey, Comms Business Partner, and Chris Martin, Communications Operations Lead — talked openly about the importance of “starting small and sending wins up the chain,” democratizing communications operations, and enabling non-communicators to help carry the story forward. That meant communicators weren’t the only people creating momentum: leaders, advocates, and business-area contributors became part of the engine. That matters even more in an AI era, where the opportunity isn’t just to create more content faster, but to build more distributed participation around the messages that matter. If there is one takeaway, it’s this: relevance comes from building communications that fit the channel, reflect how people consume content, and unfold over time in a way employees can follow. We’ll be sharing more blog posts throughout June to recap the Engage Track sessions at the Microsoft 365 Community Conference. Follow along on the Viva Engage Blog | Microsoft Community Hub, and learn about all the new and coming soon experiences in Engage that we highlighted at the conference.140Views0likes0CommentsPlanning for Communities in Teams: What Admins and Communicators Should Do Next
Imagine if employees could spend less time sorting through messages and more time engaging with what actually matters, whether it’s a leadership update, a company announcement, or an important change…all in one place where they can understand, react, and respond. Communities are becoming a more visible part of Teams, making now the right time for admins and communicators to align on readiness, governance, and content. This 3-step post helps you plan your rollout: How to get ready How to reset All Company How to address concerns about noise as adoption grows You’ll also learn the key decisions admins and corporate communications teams should make to ensure Communities add clarity, not noise as adoption increases. And in case you missed it, the Teams blog covers what’s new and why it matters. (If you haven’t read the announcement yet, start here: Introducing communities in Teams: Unifying company communication and connection) What’s changing... and what’s not What’s new: Communities are easier to discover and access in Teams Visibility of posts and announcements increases What’s not changing: Governance is still in your control Communities still follow your existing structure and purpose The opportunity isn’t to rebuild everything, it’s to refine what already works. Start from where you are We recognize that not every customer is starting from the same place. For organizations already using Viva Engage, Communities in Teams is less about reinventing your strategy and more about extending it into the flow of everyday work. Communities are now easier to find and engage with inside Teams, raising the stakes for clarity, governance, and content design. As access becomes simpler and participation grows, it’s important to have your policies, onboarding, and launch plan in place. "Bringing our Viva Engage communities into Teams was an instant win for our organization. By standardizing on a single pane of glass, inside of Teams, we've made it easier and more enjoyable for staff to communicate with other, using a trusted tool that requires no additional enablement overhead. Cognizant has over 350,000 employees - and managing communities at scale requires us to leverage Viva Engage - by now having those live inside of Teams, we get the best of both worlds: the ability to participate in communities with 30k+ employees while still maintaining the notification and organization we've come to depend upon inside of ad-hoc Teams groups and more traditional Teams channels. This further reinforced the idea that Viva Engage Communities are where work gets done - they aren't an optional location for employees - and staying on top of groups and communities together helps make us better at supporting our clients! Best of all - we like to say we "drink our own champagne" here at Cognizant - we can now go to those clients and use our story to show them how an integrated Teams/Viva environment can drive positive business outcomes and enhanced employee experiences." Reed Wiedower, Cognizant, Innovation and Enablement Leader If you are new to Viva Engage, or have not used it strategically in some time, start by defining a few high-value communities, setting clear governance, and giving employees simple guidance on where to go, what to expect, and how to engage. Start by understanding where your organization is today: What governance looks like the next 30 days: Revisit All Company and determine if its purpose or usage should change. Define “official communities” strategy. Start with a small set (e.g., employee news, leadership updates, IT help, communities of practice), seed them with content, and actively promote them. Establish a naming convention to support discovery as Communities become visible in Teams. Define governance and moderation: who creates communities, who can post announcements, and how moderation works. Communicate these changes to community admins and encourage them to activate or refresh key communities. Not using Viva Engage yet? Start here. If you’re unsure where to start, start small: define the purpose, set expectations, and publish a simple guide for employees on how to follow, post, and manage notifications. With a few well-run communities in place, you’ll have the proof, and the playbook, to expand with confidence. Once you’ve defined your starting point and aligned on governance, the next critical step is resetting how your most visible community, All Company, should be used. If you need more guidance or a starting point, check out the Communities in Teams Playbook! Reset All Company for the Teams experience As Communities become more visible in Teams, All Company becomes even more important. This is the moment to reset its purpose: one place for company-wide updates that matter to everyone. For Admins (IT / Network Admins): Set the guardrails Your role isn’t just to enable Communities, it’s to prevent noise before it starts. Start here: Limit who can post (e.g., Corp Comms + delegated leadership voices) Document what qualifies as a post vs. what belongs elsewhere Define when announcements should be used (not every post needs one) For Corporate Comms: Reset how you use All Company Think of All Company as your broadcast + engagement layer inside Teams. Use it for: Leadership narratives and context (not just links) Major moments that need visibility and dialogue Posts that invite reaction, questions, and discussion Decide: What qualifies as a new post vs. a reply Who moderates, and when to step in Expected cadence (not every update = an announcement) Write for Teams behavior: Lead with “what this means” (not just “what’s new”) Keep posts scannable (short, clear, structured) Use announcements sparingly—overuse reduces trust Once All Company is clearly defined, look for follow-on communities (like Copilot Adoption Community) where more targeted conversations can happen. Address concerns about noise early As Communities expand in Teams, one concern comes up quickly: Will this create more noise? Done right, the answer is no. Start with this mindset: more posts ≠ more value. Engagement doesn’t mean more content. It means more relevant content, in the right place. If everything is posted everywhere, or if everything is an announcement employees will tune out. Admins: Control where content shows up Next Steps: Ensure communities are purpose-driven (not duplicates of the same topic) Guide teams to use the right community for the right audience Review the Governance of the network and Watch session: Mastering admin and governance in Viva Engage for community management, moderation capabilities and more. Review moderation and theme moderation in Viva Engage Corporate Comms: Be intentional with reach More visibility is powerful, but only when used carefully. Clarity reduces noise more than volume control ever will. Reminders: Use announcements for high-signal moments only Reserve broad reach for content that applies to most employees Let smaller or targeted communities carry more specific conversations The goal is trust, not volume As Communities become easier to access in Teams, the priority is making them feel useful, intentional, and worth employees’ attention. Done well, Communities don’t add noise, they make important communication easier to find, easier to understand, and easier to trust. Continue the journey Join Us live via Start Strong Webinar Deep Dive with the Engage Masterclass Series Modern Employee and Corp Comms Resources Click Through Demo Join our customer community! PS. Want access now? Communities in Teams is available now for Engage customers who opt into public preview, with no migration required. All existing community content, permissions, and governance settings carry over automatically. Review the network and tenant requirements to ensure your network meets the criteria. Make sure the engage experiences in Teams toggle is on for your tenant. Opt-in to the public preview through Teams. Learn more about the full experience for communities in Teams.905Views2likes1CommentWhat’s new and next in Engage: June 2026
Stay up to date with the latest innovations coming to Viva Engage in June 2026. This update highlights new capabilities designed to enhance community engagement, streamline leadership communication, and empower employees to connect, share, and collaborate more effectively across your organization.813Views3likes0CommentsAnnouncing Copilot in Viva Engage
Copilot in Viva Engage will help inspire and aid leaders to connect with their employees more effectively through assistive prompts, inclusive communications, and valuable insights – well suited for sharing news, celebrating milestones, and helping build dialogue with employees around important topics.38KViews13likes14CommentsNot an FTE. How can I get access to Amplify ?
I am an external worker supporting EMEA DCOPs. I was trying to use Amplify for some of my team's needs as we seem to be doubling up on work by not using a single tool but I have no access to create campaign on Amplify. How can I request access? Thank you.Leadership communication in the flow of work
Leadership today is less about occasional broadcasts and more about consistent, credible presence. Employees expect leaders to: Provide clarity amid constant change Show follow-through, not just direction Communicate in ways that feel human and accessible Why this matters This playbook scales based on a leader’s scope and audience size – from company-wide executives to function and team leaders. Research from Engage UX Researcher Paula Wellings, shared during our Masterclass series, outlines what employees expect from leader communications. This research (and our internal experience) consistently show that visible, two-way leadership communication is a key driver of trust, engagement, and successful change. When leaders participate directly, downstream employee engagement increases. Ongoing dialogue—through posts, responses, and visible follow-through—is the foundation of leadership presence on Engage. Structured moments such as ask-me-anything (AMA) sessions and organization-wide events can reinforce that dialogue and deepen trust at scale. At the same time, leaders face real constraints: limited time, channel overload, and high scrutiny. Engage is designed to help leaders communicate once, in the right place, and stay visible in the flow of work without adding meetings or increasing email. Where Engage fits in the flow of work Leaders communicate across many channels today, including email, meetings, and the intranet. Each has a role, but not all support visibility, persistence, or two-way engagement at scale. Engage is designed for leadership communication that benefits from reach, context, and dialogue—where updates need to travel beyond immediate teams and employees can respond, not just receive. Read about Microsoft executive Ravi Vedula’s Viva Engage adoption journey, and chart your own course. Choosing the right surface based on intent Engage gives leaders two complementary avenues for communication. Each serves a different leadership intent. The choice between storyline and communities depends on the leader’s scope, audience size, and communication intent. Storyline Storyline enables leaders to reach both their intended audience and people across teams and hierarchies, making it well suited for visibility, alignment, and leadership presence. Share perspectives, priorities, or decisions Recognize people or progress publicly Cascade or amplify important updates Close the loop in a visible way Communities Communities bring together people organized around a shared variable (org, role, region, topic). They typically feature multiple voices, curated content, and ongoing discussion aligned to the purpose of the community. Use communities when you want to: Engage a specific group or function Invite discussion, Q&A, or feedback Go deeper on a topic over time Build shared understanding within a domain Communities are ideal when the goal is conversation rather than broadcast. How leaders typically use both Leaders do not choose between storyline and communities based on title or level. They choose based on audience scope and communication intent. Storyline is typically used when the goal is broader visibility: Sharing perspective or context that benefits cross-team awareness Reinforcing leadership presence beyond a single org Public recognition or commentary that should travel widely Communities are typically used when the goal is focused dialogue: Communicating with a defined audience (org, region, function, topic) Hosting discussion aligned to the purpose of that group Sustaining ongoing conversations within a curated space In practice, leaders often use both surfaces together — for example, sharing a visible update on storyline and continuing deeper discussion within a community. Leadership presence isn’t just posting Leaders often pair posting with lightweight engagement—replying to comments, acknowledging questions, or reacting—to reinforce trust and dialogue. Building blocks for effective leadership communication To ensure clarity and reach, two things need to be in place: Leader identification Leaders must be identified as such in the system. This enables: Appropriate visibility across Engage Access to leader-level insights and analytics A consistent experience for audiences This ensures that leadership communication is surfaced and measured correctly. Delegates enabled Leaders can designate delegates to support their communication on Engage. Delegation is about support, not outsourcing leadership voice. Delegates can: Draft posts on behalf of the leader Publish updates with the leader’s voice and attribution Help manage cadence, timing, and follow-up Help leaders stay engaged by surfacing conversations, questions, and moments worth responding to This allows leaders to maintain an authentic presence while scaling communication – especially during busy periods or major moments. Audiences built in (no set up required) Engage provides built-in audiences based on organizational data, such as the reporting hierarchy, so leaders can reach the right people by default from their Storylines. Leaders and delegates can define audiences when they publish, with no setup required. Audiences provide: A built-in followership Confidence that messages are seen Less reliance on follow-up email Clear expectations for who an update is for Core leadership use cases Engage helps leaders put leadership behaviors into practice in a way that’s visible, consistent, and part of the flow of work. Narrate what’s happening Share priorities, decisions, and context at the appropriate scope so teams stay aligned. Keep updates concise and focused on what changed, why it matters, and what’s next. Acknowledge people and progress Recognize wins, milestones, and contributions publicly to reinforce morale and culture. Specific recognition lands better than generic praise. Call out teams, behaviors, or moments. Close the loop Reflect back what you heard, what changed, and what’s next. This is a key driver of trust. Follow-up posts that reflect what you heard build trust and increase engagement. Even brief responses signal listening and build credibility, especially during change or uncertainty. Host interactive leadership moments In addition to ongoing posts and dialogue, leaders strengthen trust through live and structured interaction. Ask-me-anything (AMA) sessions and broadcast events are powerful ways to: Provide clarity in moments of change Address questions transparently and at scale Demonstrate accountability Reinforce alignment across teams A common pattern is to use Engage end-to-end: Solicit questions in advance on storyline or in communities Host the live broadcast event Follow up with key takeaways or clarifications Interactive moments often become anchor points in a leader’s communication strategy, complementing regular posts and dialog. For setup guidance and event mechanics, refer to Ask me anything events in Engage. Measuring leadership impact Engage provides leadership analytics to help leaders understand how their communications land. Leaders and delegates can view: Reach: how many people saw a post Engagement: reaction, replies, and sentiment to understand the tone and quality of responses, not just volume. Conversation signal: whether people are responding, not just reacting Trends over time: consistency and momentum in leadership communication These insights are not about scoring or ranking leaders. They are designed to help leaders: Understand what resonates Know when follow-up is needed Communicate with more intention over time Leaders who consistently respond and engage tend to see stronger momentum over time, not just higher reach. Getting started (10 minutes) Choose the right surface: Storyline for broad context and visibility Communities for focused dialogue Confirm your audience and delegates Writing guidance: Quality over quantity: Consistency matters more than volume. One thoughtful post a month is better than frequent updates if there isn’t something meaningful to say. Sound human: write conversationally. Share perspectives – not corporate language. Be timely and relevant: Address what’s top of mind for your audience right now. Invite engagement: Ask a question or prompt reflection when appropriate. Use visuals when possible: Images or short videos help posts stand out and travel further. Choose the right tone: Use announcements, polls, or praise intentionally based on your goal. Plan time to engage after posting: even a few replies can meaningfully increase trust and participation. Example posts that leaders can model Employees value leaders who show up, respond, and follow through — not just those who post. Team recognition: “Proud of the team for delivering this milestone. The collaboration across groups really showed up in the final result. Thank you for the focus and persistence.” Leadership reflection: “This month I’ve been reflecting on how we balance speed with quality. Both matter, and I’m encouraged by the conversations I’m seeing across the org.” Amplifying an announcement: “Today’s company announcement is an important step forward. I appreciate the work behind it and encourage everyone to take a look at the full update.” Culture and values: “One thing I consistently see here is people showing up for each other. Those moments define our culture more than any slide ever could.” Change and transparency: “As we move through this transition, I want to acknowledge the adaptability I’m seeing across teams. I’m committed to keeping communication open as we go.” The bigger picture When leaders use Engage intentionally: Important context travels faster Teams feel more informed and connected Reliance on broadcast email goes down Leadership presence becomes more continuous and human Note: Storyline announcements, targeting, the ability to identify leaders, some advanced analytics, and related capabilities described in this blog post are available with a Premium Viva Engage license (for example, Viva Employee Communications & Communities or Viva Suite). Resources Case study: Authentic leadership at scale Identify and manage leaders View analytics for posts and engagement Leadership corner Engage adoption resources403Views0likes0CommentsRelevance is the new reach: modern leadership communications in Viva Engage
Leadership communication has never been more important... Or more complex. Leaders want to communicate clearly and consistently, but every message comes with a risk. Broadcast it broadly, and employees tune out. Narrow it manually, and someone important gets left out. This isn’t a leadership or strategy gap. It’s a tooling gap. Most platforms still force you to choose between reach and relevance. But research from Viva Engage UX Researcher Paula Wellings, shared during Viva Engage Masterclass Season Two: Session 3 – Campaigns & Storytelling, confirms what corporate communicators have long suspected: Employees don't ignore leadership communication because they're disengaged. They ignore it because it doesn't apply to them. When messages aren't tied to an employee's role, location, or reporting chain, they're not just ignored. They create active disengagement and information anxiety. That's why precision targeting is no longer optional. It's a prerequisite for engagement. That insight is exactly why Viva Engage is investing in a next generation of capabilities designed specifically for leadership communication through Storyline. How Storyline targeting changes the game By enabling Leaders, and their Delegates, to define audiences directly at publish time using existing organizational attributes like reporting chain, department, or role, Storyline announcements make it easier to confidently notify the right audience without relying on static distribution lists or organization‑wide alerts. This allows leadership teams to move from volume‑based communication to relevance‑based reach — ensuring that the most important updates are delivered with precision, not noise. Storyline announcements = Precision, not volume Real‑world example: targeted HR updates without the overhead Scenario: HR needs to share a benefits update that applies only to employees in the United States. Before Build and maintain a US-only distribution list Or send org-wide and create confusion for EMEA/APAC teams Rely on email, with no visibility into reach or engagement With Storyline announcements: Select Country = United States at publish time 2,400 relevant employees notified automatically, with optional notification channel delivery customization (Engage, e-mail, Teams) Engagement tracked through analytics No list management required Targeting isn’t just about who sees a message, it’s also about how they’re notified and whether that audience can be reused. With Storyline Announcements, leaders and their delegates can customize notification channels and save audiences for reuse, making repeat communications faster and more consistent over time. And soon with smart notifications for Storylines, Engage will send alerts to an employee’s preferred delivery channel first, helping reduce duplicate notifications across Teams, email, and Engage. Why use Storyline announcements (instead of sending another email)? Storyline gives Leaders a direct, measurable channel for communicating with their audiences, while still supporting dialogue and participation. Unlike email broadcasts, Storyline posts: Appear across Teams, Outlook, mobile, and desktop Support engagement and feedback Can be measured using audience analytics Allow Delegates to manage communications on behalf of the Leader Leaders’ Storyline posts can complement community‑based communications, and the same principle applies more broadly across corporate communications: the best tool depends on both the audience and the level of amplification a message needs. Cascading messages with added relevance Reinforcing organizational priorities Sharing context and perspective Building leadership visibility and authenticity This makes Storyline an ideal channel for business updates, organizational changes, initiative rollouts, policy notifications, campaign reinforcement, event reminders, or action‑oriented leadership messages - all delivered to the people who actually need them. To explore these upcoming Storyline announcement targeting capabilities, sign up for the public preview and read more about Storyline announcements. Another way to increase reach without extra noise Featured conversations offer another way to increase reach without adding noise. For posts in public communities, communicators can now choose whether to feature a conversation to everyone in the network or to community members only. That makes featuring a useful option when the goal is to increase visibility without defaulting to a broad notification for every message. Featured conversations and storyline announcements are separate capabilities in Viva Engage, but they reflect the same principle: giving communicators more control over how broadly a message is amplified. Storyline announcements remain the right fit for targeted leader communications, while featured conversations give corporate communicators another way to match reach to relevance in community-based campaigns and updates. Learn more about featuring a conversation in Viva Engage. How analytics help communicators measure leader reach Analytics in Viva Engage help communicators understand whether a message reached the right audience and resonated once it got there. Understand a post’s reach across audiences and platforms Measure reactions, replies, and shares to understand engagement Extract important themes and sentiment from comments Now, the Frequent contributors leaderboard view in network analytics can help communicators understand which leaders’ posts are catching employee attention and compare engagement trends across leaders and top creators. Note: Storyline announcements, targeting, frequent contributors, and related capabilities described in this blog post are available with a Premium Viva Engage license (for example, Viva Employee Communications & Communities or Viva Suite).383Views0likes0Comments