What if standard ideas about how to give feedback are simply wrong? We've been thinking about how to radically flip the standard approach.
Most conversations around feedback recommend giving feedback as some positive points mixed with some areas for development. Or even downright negative observations.
But my colleague Anne Dhir and I would like to put forward the idea that focusing primarily on people’s strengths allows them to work from a place of power, making for better, happier teams.
Let’s look into it.
When we talk about giving feedback, most of us have been taught these two approaches:
It sounds balanced and feels kind.
But in practice people receiving feedback like this tend to focus on the negative and development areas. It’s sometimes as if that’s all they’ve really heard.
If we focus on our weaknesses, we are all working from a position of ‘lacking’.
If we focus on strengths, we can pair up with people who have strengths in the areas where we have weaknesses, and the whole team is stronger for it.
We need to be aware of our weaknesses because we can learn to work around, or with them.
There might be weaknesses that you might never be able to address, and you’ll always need support with. And that’s OK.
Listening to positive feedback is hard.
Some people lap it up, print it, frame it and put it up on the wall. For others, it’s uncomfortable. We squirm and move the conversation on.
That means we don’t spend enough time deepening our understanding of our strengths, and how we could expand them.
Here are 5 things people might do in response to positive feedback, starting with the least helpful:
With practice you might be able to skip 1 and 2 and start with number 3.
Next, let’s have 5 things you might say in response to positive feedback:
You can train yourself to say things like this instead of “Oh, it was nothing!” or “Really? I thought I was terrible.”
And, finally, here are 5 ways you can give positive feedback that make it easier for people to accept:
It’s all and well to have a culture statement and values on your website. What matters is how they are implemented in practice.
Giving feedback, allowing people to bring the best of themselves, and supporting people to keep developing their strengths, is a vital part of bringing values to life.
To help you, we’ve put together a tool to help collate feedback and map it to company values, which Anne has shared on LinkedIn.