Who said what? A simple formula for understanding any message

By Koffi |

June 14, 2026 |

Before you react to a message, pause and ask five simple questions:

Who said it?
What did they say?
What channel did they use?
Who were they speaking to?
What effect did it have?

That is the heart of Lasswell’s model of communication, one of the simplest and most useful tools for understanding messages.

Harold D. Lasswell introduced this model in 1948 in his essay, The Structure and Function of Communication in Society. His famous formula was:

Who says what, in which channel, to whom, with what effect?

At first, that sounds almost too simple. But it is powerful.

You can use Lasswell’s model to understand a speech, sermon, advertisement, text message, social media post, news story, political campaign, family conversation, or business announcement.

In plain English, this model helps us slow down and ask: What is really happening in this message?

Why this theory matters

Most people react to messages too quickly.

Someone posts something online, and we immediately feel angry.
A leader sends an email, and we assume their intention.
A news headline appears, and we accept the story without questioning it.
A family member says something short, and we read a whole meaning into it.

Lasswell’s model gives us a pause button.

Instead of only asking, “Do I agree with this?” we learn to ask better questions:

Who is speaking?
Is it a friend, expert, stranger, influencer, journalist, salesperson, pastor, politician, or family member?

What are they saying?
What is the actual message, not just the emotion around it?

What channel are they using?
Is it a private conversation, text, email, video, podcast, news article, advertisement, or social media post?

Who is the audience?
Is the message meant for children, voters, customers, employees, church members, patients, or the general public?

What effect does it create?
Does it inform, persuade, entertain, confuse, divide, comfort, pressure, or inspire?

That is why this model is so useful. It turns communication from something we simply experience into something we can examine.

The five par`ts of Lasswell’s model

1. Who?

The first question is about the sender. The same words can feel very different depending on who says them.

For example, consider this sentence:

“You need to change.”

If a trusted mentor says it, you may receive it as guidance.
If a critic says it, you may receive it as judgment.
If a doctor says it, you may hear it as urgent advice.
If a stranger says it online, you may dismiss it completely.

The speaker’s credibility, relationship, authority, motive, and history all affect how the message is received.

Before reacting, ask: Who is speaking, and why might they be saying this?

2. Says what?

This part focuses on the content of the message.

But content is not only the words. It also includes emphasis, order, tone, repetition, and what is left unsaid.

For example, imagine two headlines:

“Company cuts 500 jobs”
“Company restructures to remain competitive”

Both may describe the same event, but they create different feelings. One emphasizes loss. The other emphasizes strategy.

Ask: What is the actual message? What is being emphasized? What is missing?

3. In which channel?

The channel is the medium used to deliver the message.

A message sent by text is not experienced the same way as a face-to-face conversation. A public announcement is not the same as a private meeting. A short video is not the same as a detailed report.

The channels we use shape the meaning of what we say.

A breakup by text feels different from a breakup in person.
A company layoff announced by email feels different from a live meeting.
A prayer request shared privately feels different from one posted publicly.
A political idea in a meme feels different from the same idea in a long essay.

The channel can make a message feel warmer, colder, more urgent, more distant, more official, or more emotional.

Ask: Was this the right channel for this message?

4. To whom?

Every message has an audience.

It’s not always easy to discern who the intended audience is. Sometimes it’s fairly obvious and other times not so.

A politician may appear to answer a reporter, but the real audience may be voters.
A social media post may seem personal, but it may be crafted for approval.
A company memo may speak to employees, but also reassure investors.
A parent may correct one child while actually sending a message to the whole family.

Knowing the audience helps you understand why the message was shaped the way it was.

Ask: Who was this message really meant to reach?

5. With what effect?

This part focuses on the result of the message.

Did it change someone’s mind?
Did it create trust?
Did it create fear?
Did it lead to action?
Did it start conflict?
Did it bring clarity?
Did it make people feel seen?

This matters because communication is not only about intention. It is also about impact.

You may intend to encourage someone, but they may feel pressured.
You may intend to be honest, but they may feel attacked.
You may intend to be funny, but someone else may feel embarrassed.

Lasswell’s model reminds us to look at the effect, not just the message.

Ask: What happened because this message was sent?

Everyday example: a workplace email

Imagine a manager sends this email:

“Everyone needs to improve their communication immediately. Too many mistakes are happening.”

Using Lasswell’s model, we can break it down:

Who? The manager.

Says what? The team’s communication is poor and needs to improve.

In which channel? Email.

To whom? The whole team.

With what effect? Some employees may feel anxious, blamed, or unclear about what to fix.

Now imagine the manager says this instead in a team meeting:

“I’ve noticed we are missing details during handoffs. Let’s create a clearer process so fewer things fall through the cracks.”

Same general issue. Different wording. Different channel. Different effect.

The first message may create defensiveness. The second message may create teamwork. That is Lasswell’s model in action.

How to use Lasswell’s model today

Use this model before sending or reacting to an important message.

Before you send a message, ask:

Who am I in this situation?
Am I speaking as a parent, leader, friend, expert, customer, or peer?

What exactly am I trying to say?
Can I make the message clearer?

What channel fits best?
Should this be a text, call, meeting, email, or face-to-face conversation?

Who needs to hear this?
Is this for one person, a small group, or a public audience?

What effect do I want?
Do I want to inform, correct, comfort, inspire, persuade, or invite action?

Before you react to a message, ask:

Who is behind this message?
What are they really saying?
Why did they choose this channel?
Who are they trying to reach?
What effect is this having on me?

These questions can protect you from manipulation, misunderstanding, emotional reactions, and rushed judgment.

Watch out for this limitation

Lasswell’s model is useful, but it is also simple.

It can make communication look like a one-way process: one person sends a message, another person receives it, and an effect follows.

Real communication is often messier than that.

People interrupt.
Tone changes meaning.
Feedback reshapes the conversation.
Relationships carry history.
Culture affects interpretation.
The receiver is not a passive participant.

So use Lasswell’s model as a starting tool, not the whole toolbox.

It is excellent for analyzing messages.
It is less complete for understanding deep, emotional, back-and-forth conversations.

One thing to remember

Lasswell’s model teaches us that every message has a source, content, channel, audience, and effect.

When you understand those five pieces, you become a better listener, speaker, leader, parent, citizen, and media consumer.

Before you believe, share, forward, confront, or respond, pause and ask:

Who said what, through which channel, to whom, and with what effect?

That one question can make you wiser in almost every communication situation.

Use this theory today

Choose one message you received recently: a text, email, sermon, news story, social media post, or conversation.

Then ask:

Who said it?
What exactly did they say?
What channel did they use?
Who was the intended audience?
What effect did it have on me?

Reflection question

Where in your life are you reacting to a message before fully understanding who sent it, what it said, who it was meant for, and what effect it created?

Broken expectation Aburi Botanical Garden

When expectations are broken, people start looking for meaning

Expectancy violations theory explains why people react strongly when someone behaves differently than expected. A delayed reply, unexpected compliment, sudden silence, broken promise, or surprising act of kindness can change how we see a person. This article shows how expectations shape communication, why violations can feel positive or negative, and how wiser responses can prevent misunderstanding and build trust.

Boundaries, Aburi Botanical Garden

Boundaries change when private information is shared

Communication privacy management theory explains why sharing private information creates responsibility for both the speaker and the listener. Through a story about a confidence repeated without permission, this article explores boundaries, ownership, disclosure rules, and trust. It shows how clear expectations can protect relationships, and why even well-meant sharing can cause damage when private information is no longer handled carefully together.

Tension, Frankfurt, Germany

Tension does not mean your relationship is failing

Relational dialectics theory explains why healthy relationships still contain tension. People want closeness and independence, honesty and privacy, stability and change. Most often, they want all of these contradicting items at the same time. This article shows how competing needs do not automatically signal failure. When people name the tension, listen carefully, and negotiate wisely, relationships can become more honest, flexible, and enduring over time.

Fairness

Fairness is the quiet question inside every relationship

Social exchange theory explains why relationships feel strong when effort, care, respect, and support move in both directions. Through an everyday story, this article explores fairness, emotional costs and rewards, personal expectations, and the quiet comparisons people make when deciding whether a relationship still feels healthy, worthwhile, and sustainable over time.

Trust bottle

How trust grows one layer at a time

Social penetration theory explains how trust grows through gradual, reciprocal self-disclosure. Relationships usually move from safe topics toward deeper feelings, values, fears, and hopes as people learn they can rely on one another. This article shows why intimacy needs time, why oversharing can backfire, and how thoughtful questions and appropriate openness can help relationships deepen without forcing closeness too soon.

Uncertainty

How uncertainty shapes every first conversation

Uncertainty reduction theory explains why first meetings can feel like investigations. We ask questions, watch behavior, and search for common ground because uncertainty makes it difficult to know what comes next. This article shows how curiosity, observation, and honest conversation help strangers become more predictable and how rushing for certainty can sometimes create the very misunderstandings we hoped to avoid.