How Do I Give Effective Feedback?
Giving feedback is one of the most powerful tools a leader, mentor, or peer can use to support growth and performance. Yet, it’s also one of the most challenging. Done poorly, feedback can feel personal or discouraging. Done well, it becomes a catalyst for insight, motivation, and change.
So how do you give feedback that actually helps?
1. Start with Clear Intent
Before speaking, ask yourself:
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What outcome do I want from this feedback?
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Am I trying to help this person grow, adjust, or reflect?
Feedback should always come from a place of support, not judgment. When your intention is clear, your delivery becomes more thoughtful—and better received.
2. Focus on Specific Behaviors, Not Personality
Effective feedback targets what someone did, not who they are.
Instead of:
❌ “You’re unreliable.”
Try:
✅ “I noticed the report was submitted a day late, and it impacted the timeline for the team.”
By keeping feedback objective and observable, you avoid defensiveness and open the door to constructive dialogue.
3. Use the SBI Framework
One widely used model for feedback is SBI:
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Situation: When and where did it happen?
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Behavior: What did the person do?
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Impact: How did it affect others, results, or you?
Example:
“In yesterday’s meeting (Situation), you cut off two colleagues mid-sentence (Behavior). It made it harder for the team to contribute and created tension (Impact).”
This method keeps the feedback grounded in facts and outcomes.
4. Balance Positive and Constructive Feedback
People need to hear what they’re doing well just as much as what to improve.
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Recognize small wins
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Reinforce helpful behaviors
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Offer constructive feedback as an invitation, not a correction
Balanced feedback builds trust and psychological safety, encouraging continued effort and improvement.
5. Invite Dialogue and Listen
Feedback shouldn’t be a monologue. After sharing:
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Ask how the person feels about the feedback
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Encourage their perspective
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Collaborate on next steps
This shifts the tone from evaluation to growth-oriented partnership.
6. Timing and Setting Matter
Choose a time when:
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Emotions are calm
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The setting is private (especially for sensitive feedback)
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There’s space for open conversation
Avoid giving critical feedback in public or under stress—this can damage trust.
7. Follow Up
Feedback is a conversation, not a one-time event.
Check in later:
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Has the behavior changed?
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What’s working better now?
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Are there new challenges?
Following up shows you care about their progress, not just their performance.
Conclusion
Giving effective feedback is a skill that combines clarity, care, and courage. By focusing on specific behaviors, staying constructive, and inviting open dialogue, your feedback becomes a tool for growth, not a source of fear.
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