Feedback with Feeling
Feedback can be hard to give and hard to get. Almost everyone tenses up when the words “I have some feedback for you” are spoken. But in organisations where feedback is a part of the culture, people ask for feedback if it is not forthcoming.
It’s people’s feelings about feedback that is the problem. We all give ourselves feedback and instinctively know we would benefit from an outside view to make up for blind spots. The question is, feedback from whom?
How do you as a sales leader or salesperson become the person whose feedback is valued? How can you help create a culture where feedback is a core competency? Where there is trust? Sure, it would be great if executive leadership were the role models, and in some organisation that is the case. But the big factor is the role modelling — it starts with you asking for feedback and listening and incorporating what, after consideration, makes sense to you. When you ask for feedback, you lay the groundwork for giving feedback. And peer-to-peer feedback can be the most powerful in improving performance, but it is even less prevalent than feedback from sales managers to salespeople.
How you give feedback matters as much, and I truly think more, than the content of the feedback itself. How you deliver it determines how it is heard and felt. It is important to remember that feedback evokes emotions. The cognitive message is shaped by feelings — how you feel giving it and how the person feels receiving it.
Let’s recap guidelines you can put into practise immediately to make yourself feel good about giving and getting feedback and turning it into a competitive edge.
Content
Balance feedback with strengths and areas for improvement. No one is 100% and no one 0%; be specific; Focus on two strengths and two areas of improvement at most; Don’t forget praise; Increase positive feedback but have the courage to say what has to be said — be honest.
Feelings
Take you emotional temperature and if you are angry delay, Check out your intent — is it to help or “get him/her”; Be the model; Trust and be trustworthy; Respect confidentiality and privacy — close the door.
Process
Give feedback close to the event; Let them talk first and listen; Start on time; Avoid interruptions; End on an action step; Don’t be a go-between; Ask for feedback on the feedback you give; Ask for feedback for yourself.
Feedback with Feeling
Effective coaching is both cognitive and emotional. If your intent is to help, listen, and give balanced feedback, you almost can’t go wrong. Giving feedback is giving a gift. At Richardson Sales Performance, there was the joke that it was the gift that never stops giving because it was pretty constant. There is no question that feedback can have a positive impact on performance — but it can also have a negative impact. The feelings you have when you give feedback and your skill make a big difference in the impact your feedback has. You have what it takes to learn and teach and strengthen relationships, but keep in mind the cognitive and emotional side.
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