Giving constructive feedback to employees is a core skill of successful leaders. Underperforming teams need to understand your expectations, regardless of how difficult the conversation is. While the emotional burden weighs on your shoulders, you canât hold back these words.
The trick is to give this feedback in the right way.
So how do you give constructive feedback to employees that they will act upon?
I can tell you now that saying things like âDo better next time!â or âYou arenât meeting my expectations.â is not enough. To the person hearing your words, itâs like youâre clubbing them with disappointment.
To create positive change, we MUST do better as leaders.
In this guide, I will show you how to give constructive feedback that employees will positively appreciate. They will thank you for your thoughts. It requires you to give them a â ď¸Spadeâ ď¸.
Disclosure: This article includes affiliate links to any books I reference. I will receive a commission for any purchases.
Constructive Feedback Starts with Your Mindset
When giving constructive feedback to an employee, first ask yourself:
What is my goal with giving this feedback?
Do you want to show that you didnât like their work? They didnât meet your expectations? Do you just want to make the other person feel bad?
People wonât listen to you if your goal is to express dissatisfaction.
Constructive feedback that creates positive change comes from a place of growth. When you intend to help the person succeed, your words will leave an impact. Wanting to help others achieve their goals shows you care. This mindset makes them feel like youâre on their side.
Everyone has room to improve. Showing an authentic desire to help will leave a lasting impression.
Prevent Defensiveness to Your Constructive Feedback
Giving constructive feedback to employees requires more than saying the right words. The emotional response of the other person plays a significant factor. Think about when you learn youâre about to receive constructive feedback. What goes through your body?
Fear.
Uncertainty.
A fight-or-flight response.
These physical feelings are natural when one senses a threat to their survival. In the corporate world, those threats involve others thinking youâre not valuable.
Think about this feeling whenever you give constructive feedback. If you surprise them with your candid thoughts, a defensive response is natural. You surprised them with a potential threat to their job.
To solve this problem, let your employee know they are about to receive feedback. Then wait a moment.
These extra seconds will give them time for their body to respond and calm down. Having time to process these feelings will result in a better reception of your words.
Here are a few subtle ways you can give this space:
- Tell the person that you would like to give them feedback then walk to a room to have a private conversation.
- Message the person before you create a link to a video call. The extra minute of setup will give them space.
- Wait two or three seconds after telling them about your constructive feedback. Yes, the space is awkward, but the extra moment is needed.
The SBIR Framework Creates Effective Constructive Feedback
To organize my thoughts, I use the SBIR Framework.
This acronym defines the structure of how to deliver constructive feedback:
- Situation: State the specific situation where you observed the behavior.
- Behavior: Explain the precise behavior you saw.
- Impact: Describe the exact impact the personâs actions had on you.
- Request: State the explicit request you would like to make of the person.
I love this framework as a way to give feedback. SBIRâs format forces you to explain the contextual information you observed. You need to define the situation, the specific behavior, and how it directly affected you. Iâve had positive success with the people who receive feedback in this form.
Letâs look at an example from the wonderful show Ted Lasso.
Example: Constructive Feedback in Ted Lasso
Ted Lasso is a great show to learn how to be a successful leader. Itâs no surprise that there are numerous examples of giving constructive feedback.
In this scene, Roy Kent is giving constructive feedback to Jamie Tartt requesting him and others to stop bullying Nate. Letâs take a watch:
Video: Roy Kent tells Jamie Tartt to stop bullying Nate
This is how Roy uses the SBIR method to give effective feedback:
- Situation: Roy explains that Jamie has a lot of influence over the team and other players look up to him.
- Behavior: The players pick on Nate and Jamie laughs at the bullying.
- Impact: The other players think itâs ok to pick on Nate.
- Request: Roy stares at Jamie, showing his disapproval. This silence is his request to have Jamie tell others to stop bullying Nate.
This is an important moment of leadership for Roy. He confronts an influential teammate and requests Jamie to improve. Roy uses specific details of the negative behavior to explain the impact.
Unfortunately, Jamie does not act upon this, but thatâs part of his story arc of growth.
Stop âŁď¸ClubbingâŁď¸ People, Give Them a â ď¸Spadeâ ď¸
Right â the whole spade metaphor. Itâs a similar mindset to how I approach giving positive feedback to colleagues.
You see, Iâm not talking about shovels. Iâm talking about suits of cards.
(Trust me â I have a point to this)
When it comes to negative feedback, we have two types: Clubs and Spades.
âŁď¸ClubsâŁď¸ feel like youâre being hit with a blunt object. You feel bad, you know you need to overcome something, but where do you start? This is constructive feedback that has no detail, itâs not specific. Giving clubs results in your employees feeling like they are underperforming. They want to improve but have no idea how to do it.
Instead, give a â ď¸Spadeâ ď¸. Spades help others grow their garden of skills. Yes, it will take a lot of work and time. You need to dig holes and attend to the seeds of new abilities. A spade makes it easier to start. This constructive feedback is specific. Itâs actionable. Sure, it may hurt at first, but at least people will know what to do.
So with these details, you can now ask yourself before you give negative feedback:
Am I giving constructive feedback thatâs a club or spade?
People can do amazing things with spades.
More Examples of Giving Constructive Feedback to Employees
đ Example 1: A Lack of Status Updates from an Underperforming Employee
Hi Steve,
I know youâve been working on that difficult library upgrade the past month. I see youâre committing updates to our code repository. This is great, but Iâve noticed youâre not giving regular updates to the team. The lack of status updates can lead to uncertainty. People wonât know your capacity to take on new work. They wonât know when you will complete your work. Going forward, can you provide a high-level update at the weekly team meeting?
đ Example 2: Too Many Bugs Needs Effective Feedback
Hey Avery,
Iâve seen that the team has been working hard to hit your projectâs deadline. Unfortunately, Iâve been seeing few bad habits from the team. There are a lack of unit tests and quicker reviews in the teamâs pull requests.
For the changes that touch existing code, Iâve seen an increase in customer-facing bugs. I would like you and the team to write unit tests when touching existing code. Then, after you complete the project, do a review of the bugs and identify common causes that we need to address.
đŚšââď¸ Example 3: Giving Difficult Feedback to a Manager that Steals Ideas
Hi Dale,
At todayâs design review, I noticed that Susan expressed the hamburger menu idea. A bit later, I saw you repeat the same idea but did not attribute the original idea to her.
You may not be aware youâre doing this, but there is an impact on this behavior. Over time, this behavior will lead others to not value oneâs work as much. I would like you to practice attributing the ideas you repeat back to the original person. Not only will this help others, but will increase the respect they have for you.
Conclusion
Providing constructive feedback to employees is important to helping your teams grow.
Put yourself in the mindset to help others become more successful.
Help your employee prepare for feedback by letting them know ahead of time.
With the SBIR Framework, your feedback will be contextual and actionable. Use specific details to ensure that your employee understands your notes.
In summary, stop clubbing people with blunt criticism. Give them a spade of constructive feedback to help them grow their skills.
Whatâs been the most difficult constructive feedback youâve given to an employee? Let me know on Twitter or LinkedIn.
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