How to nurture feedback culture

How to nurture feedback culture

One of the greatest tasks of a leader is the competence and commitment development of the team members who are in charge of guiding and leading the team. This is the most noble, as well as the most responsible function of a leader. The main tool used for the achievement of the aforementioned advantages is feedback, that is, providing information on the manner and outcomes of work. Nevertheless, the most common obstacle in the development of team members is inadequate and insufficient provision of feedback, as well as its negative perception, according to which feedback is considered a trigger for stress. The above-mentioned reasons are exactly why I am often contacted by clients asking about the organisation of trainings aimed to strengthen the feedback culture.

The following guidelines will help you to strengthen the feedback culture in your organisation and to provide a healthy work atmosphere which will help each team member to feel noticed and have the opportunity to make progress and reach their full potential.

 

Feedback, anytime and anywhere

When clients come and see me for the first time, while attending feedback training, I notice that feedback is not an integral part of their daily business communication, but that it happens either when given by periodic organisational processes or when too many situations have accumulated that needed to be resolved much sooner, which generates a huge amount of stress to both the leader and the team member. The first and basic guideline in developing feedback culture is to encourage feedback to become an integral part of everyday business interactions. This creates an atmosphere in which your team members are used to being noticed, but also used to the fact that feedback is no longer a trigger for stress, but an integral part of cooperation.

 

Feedback, for better or for worse

I often notice that feedback is more often given when things are not done in a way that is considered well enough, and less often when someone is doing their job well. Feedback is equally as important in both of these examples — in situations where team members are doing their job successfully, as well as in situations when they are not doing their job as efficiently as needed. This creates an optimal balance in assessing the perception of feedback because your team members will probably think the following: “If my leader respects and praises my quality work, and equally emphasises its shortcomings, their judgements are based on good reasoning.”

 

Always keep feedback specific

My clients often complain that they cannot give praise to everybody and all the time for every assignment that they perform in a quality manner. And that is not the point. Constant praise is not what feedback is about. Team members need to be monitored and observed, in order to clearly define activities, methods and behaviours that lead to satisfactory results in case of decent work performance, progress, additional effort or proactivity. Then, feedback is provided in a timely manner, but it also enables positive practices to be established and team members to be able to apply them in a faster and easier way.

 

Negative feedback must be constructive

The type of feedback that makes things difficult to most people is the one in which insufficient work must be communicated to a team member. Our discomfort in the mentioned situation is carried into the conversation and makes an already demanding communication even more difficult. In such cases, we often express ourselves awkwardly, and the team member in question may experience feedback as a form of attack on their person and their personality. To give sovereign and calm negative feedback, striving not to be perceived as an attack but as a constructive criticism (which is what you actually wanted to achieve), check out the following tips:

 

1. Specify a certain behaviour or activity:

  • explain a certain behaviour or activity of a certain person which was seen as less than satisfactory as precisely as possible;
  • state exactly what this person had done without making judgements regarding their intentions and labelling them.

 

2. Clearly define the effect of the mentioned behaviour or activity:

  • explain the reason due to which a certain behaviour or activity do not meet your expectations;
  • explain the consequences of a certain behaviour or activity on job performance, team members and business.

 

3. Specify exactly what you would like for this person to change in their behaviour:

  • suggest the ways in which progress can be made as clearly and specifically as possible.

 

4. Ask questions like:

  • How do you view this situation?
  • What do you think was efficient, and what can be improved?
  • Do you have any ideas on how to make in more efficient in the future?

 

The greatest thing that a leader can give to their team members is the feedback on what they are doing right and what they can improve. This is how you build the self-confidence and competence of the people you lead on a solid foundation and strengthen their motivation to realise their potential, providing them with timely and clearly defined guidelines.

 

Want to learn how to give and receive effective feedback and/or create and strengthen a feedback culture in your organization?

 

Schedule your consultation with Ana

Want to Communicate Better? Try Conversational Agility

Want to Communicate Better? Try Conversational Agility

If you want to be successful in business, you need to hone your communication skills first. All great leaders are agile communicators. But what does it mean to be an agile communicator nowadays? It means taking the words into your own hands, truly connecting with people, making others believe in your ideas and vision, and engaging them to jointly work towards achieving a certain purpose.

Today’s world brims with interactions that often occur simultaneously through various communication channels. This produces numerous communication barriers that repeatedly constrain us. The three most common communication obstacles in business are:

 

1. Assumptions

Too many things are presumed, and not a lot is communicated. We forget that each of us has our own perspective, which means that sometimes we might interpret the same words differently. For example, when you tell someone that something needs to be done urgently, you may think that “urgent” means that a task should be completed within an hour, and to someone, that same term may mean a few hours.

2. Misaligned Expectations

How often do we try to ensure that our mutual expectations align? Consider this example: an employee is tasked with writing a report on market trends. The manager expects a detailed report with analyses and actionable insights but doesn’t communicate this to the employee. Meanwhile, the employee believes they should provide a thorough report but without any analyses or suggestions. The result? The manager is disappointed, and the employee doesn’t understand what went wrong.

3. Poor Listening Skills

We are impatient in conversations: we do not listen in order to understand but to assess other’s attitudes in relation to our own. This is why our responses aim to negate what is being said, and we listen only to counter and state our case. Our attention is fragmented; we are constantly checking our phones, even during meetings or presentations, yet we still believe we’re listening effectively. No matter how much we educate ourselves and learn about the importance of listening, we do not apply it efficiently enough while conversing.

Such conversations often result in misunderstandings, untenable agreements, and unproductive and even strained business relationships.

Though we all truly want to and are wired to connect with others and work together, we often find ourselves in the so-called communication vacuum, which becomes a dominant and inescapable pattern. We try to solve the problem the same way we created it – by using the same communication patterns – but we expect different outcomes.

 

What Is Conversational Agility and Why Is It Important?

 

To overcome these communication challenges, we need to bridge the gap between “how I see things” and “how you see things.” The Conversational Agility Method is a powerful tool for doing just that. It is an approach I created myself, and it encompasses the following skills: perceiving, connecting, understanding, and steering the communication in the desired direction. This method can be easily applied in any conversation and leads to visible improvement quickly. It starts by raising the level of trust between you and the receiver and results in high-quality, productive interactions. Applying agility in today’s conversations full of rapid changes inevitably leads to creating healthier and more resilient relationships.

 

4 Key Steps to Navigate Any Conversation with Agility

 

First, we need to learn to properly observe both ourselves and the receiver so that we can promptly interpret our own and their communication patterns. Then, we should learn to adapt our communication pattern to the receivers in a constructive way, while simultaneously maintaining our assertiveness. Lastly, we should gain an understanding of how to strategically steer the conversation toward achieving a mutually beneficial objective.

 

 

Step 1: OBSERVE

The key to establishing a successful connection, as well as understanding and cooperation, is creating trust among the receivers. Trust is a matter of perception. When two people start interacting, our brain “scans” the receiver’s communication pattern and based on that determines whether to trust them or not. On a subconscious level, we first perceive how someone looks, then how they speak, and only then what they say. It is therefore important to analyse all levels of communication while observing the receiver – not just what he or she says, but also how he or she says it.

Step 2: DIAGNOSE

In this step, we have to become communication detectives and interpret and meaningfully connect all the elements we observed in the first step. How does the receiver react? How do they understand the message? What is their stance on the topic? How do they feel at the moment? What makes them uncomfortable or nervous? We can gather these insights primarily from non-verbal cues and tone of voice. Body language often reveals our true intentions. Our aim is to analyse how and to what extent the receiver’s message is aligned with how they convey it.

Great communicators know how to interpret others’ body language, but agile communicators use this knowledge to control their own body language so as not to send out unwanted signals, as well as to steer and anticipate the direction of the conversation effectively.

Step 3: ADAPT

In the third step, it is essential to put yourself in the receiver’s shoes, to explore their point of view and see the situation through their eyes – what they are thinking and feeling and the reasons behind it. Understanding others’ perspectives and adapting to them makes it possible for us to empathise with the receiver.

The fastest way to develop empathy is through active listening. “If you wish to persuade someone, you need to understand them. To understand them, you need to listen with genuine empathy.” This is a quote by Richard Branson who often points out that listening to customers is one of the reasons why his company is so successful. This is why it is necessary to always diligently work on improving your active listening skills.

Step 4: STEER

In the final step, you are ready to steer the conversation in the desired direction. On the path to achieving mutually beneficial objectives, purpose will be your guiding star. Shape the conversation’s purpose in a way that helps the other person see their role and the shared benefits, and bring the discussion back to this purpose whenever it veers off track. Ask questions to guide the receiver toward desired insights and shared goals. Do not forget to occasionally acknowledge each person’s contribution to the process and celebrate the positive collaboration dynamic. Positive reinforcement is one of the most effective practices in communication, as people tend to mirror it in their own behaviour almost instantly.

 

4 Agile Techniques You Can Apply in Any Conversation

 

  • Focus on the present in order to hear and observe what your receivers are saying and how they are saying it.
  • Give your receivers feedback, showing that you have understood both what they said, and how they feel. That way you are giving them one more opportunity to further express themselves or to rephrase what was said, giving you in turn the opportunity to confirm that you have understood them correctly.
  • Ask open questions in order to discover the receiver’s problems, aspirations, and wishes, which will enable you to become more familiar with them.
  • If you want receivers to have opinions that match yours, do not just state them. Instead, ask leading questions that will make the receiver come to the desired conclusions.

 

Although we, humankind, are meant to connect and work with others through communication, we often underuse this potential. I urge you to take words into your own hands and use the Conversational Agility Model to fully activate your communication potential and become a true communication leader, rather than a follower of situations that do not benefit you.

Interested in how Conversational Agility can enhance your business communication?

Schedule your consultation with Ana