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How physical space affects communication isn’t something most people think about—but it’s happening the moment someone walks through your door.
Communication doesn’t start when you speak.
It starts the moment someone enters your space.
In communication theory, proxemics refers to how physical space influences how people perceive and interact with an environment. It’s not about words—it’s about what the space itself is saying.
Most organizations don’t think about this at all.
They focus on what they say: their website, their emails, their social media.
Meanwhile, the physical environment is sending signals of its own.
Over the past couple weeks, I found myself noticing this more than usual — probably because I’ve been spending so much time thinking about my own space. I stopped into a coffee shop where most of the tables were sticky and covered in crumbs. Last week, I drove past a computer repair shop with an LED sign in the window (the company’s own NAME!), half the letters burned out. And this morning, I passed an insurance office with a row of houseplants in the front window—about a third of them dead or dying.
None of these are “messages” in the formal sense, but they communicate anyway.
They suggest:
People don’t analyze these signals; they absorb them. And once that impression is formed, everything else you say has to work harder to overcome it.
This doesn’t require perfection. It requires awareness. What does your space say before you say anything at all. If the answer isn’t clear, it’s worth taking a closer look.