This is a refresh of the article Giving Feedback that I blogged back in 2007. Giving feedback is a lot more challenging in practice than it seems. It requires attitude, timing and technique.
Let’s look at attitude first: What’s the purpose in giving someone feedback? To let off steam? Then, I button my lips. To put someone down? Button lips. To appear knowing? Lips. If I am interested in improving the working relationship,alerting someone to a potential blind spot, and improving team productivity, I can give feedback. If the time is right.
Now timing: Have we enough time for a conversation? Feedback is not done while passing by on the corridor. Is the other person open to feedback? Perhaps, they’re having a bad day and are not in the mood. If they don’t say yes, I let them live without my observation for a little bit longer.
So far, so easy. Now comes the tricky bit: technique. how I give feedback in three steps
1. I describe what I observed,
2. its effect on me, and
3. what I expect in the future.
The first step is a challenge, because most people state their interpretation or judgement of what happened, not thebehaviour itself. The statement needs to be clear (anything else will trigger defensiveness) and about soemthing in the recent past (or else the person may have forgotten the incident).
For example, “your presentation was terrible” is not feedback, it’s a put-down. “When you present your conclusions before you show the supporting data, I feel confused and frustrated. In future, I expect you to show the data first” is feedback.
“You ran that meeting brilliantly” is praise, not feedback. While the receiver basks in the glow of praise for a while, they may be none the wiser what it is they did that helped them to run the meeting so well. “The way you summarised the discussion at regular intervals in yesterday’s meeting helped me follow the complicated discussion more easily and to reach a decision. I’ve heard similar comments from other participants. Please keep it up!” That’s feedback.
In the first case, the recipient knows what they need to consider improving; in the second, they know where one of their skills lies. There is no substitute for practice when it comes to feedback.
Photo: Bartco
To give a feedback there are 2 reasons:
1. You would like to improve in communication and in “polite” describtion of the disadvantages
2. to help other people
[…] It’s important regularly to give your staff feedback on their performance – this is one of the key contributing factors to high energy levels at work. I’ve written a blog article on how to give feedback. […]
[…] way to collect is to obtain feedback from others. Another way is to learn or cultivate the habit of observing your own behaviour and […]
[…] blogged before about how to give feedback using a three-step model. The first step involves being able to state clearly what behaviour one has observed from the […]
[…] to criticize ideas. However, it’s less productive to criticize behavior. Here’s an article on how to give feedback that helps you to avoid the criticism trap when talking to people about their […]