An Analysis Of The Relationship Between Internal Communication Frequency And Employee Performance: A Case Study Of The Ghana Maritime Authority
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UniMAC
Abstract
This study examines the relationship between internal communication frequency and employee
performance at the Ghana Maritime Authority (GMA). Utilizing a quantitative approach with a
descriptive and correlational survey design, data were collected from 100 staff members via
stratified random sampling. A structured questionnaire measured perceptions of communication
frequency and self-reported performance indicators. Statistical analyses, including Pearson
correlation and multiple regression, were conducted using SPSS. The findings reveal a strong,
positive, and statistically significant relationship between internal communication frequency and
employee performance, with communication frequency accounting for a substantial portion of the
variance in performance outcomes. Employees who experienced more frequent and regular
communication reported higher levels of task clarity, timeliness, quality of work, and overall
engagement. The study concludes that consistent, transparent, and well-structured internal
communication is a critical driver of employee efficiency, motivation, and alignment with
organizational goals within the safety-sensitive and regulatory context of GMA.
Recommendations include institutionalizing routine multi-channel communication, enhancing
two-way enhancing feedback mechanisms, and providing supervisory training to sustain and
improve performance. This research contributes to the limited empirical literature on
communication frequency in Ghana’s public sector, offering practical insights for organizational
effectiveness.
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