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In some companies, performance reviews and annual evaluations fill employees with a sense of dread or morbid anticipation.
What will they find out about their performance? How will they be rated? What ghosts from the past year will come back to haunt them?
The reason employees fear reviews so much is because their company doesnât have a good system for offering feedback.
Good feedback eliminates surprises. No one should be shocked when they sit down for their yearly review. If they are, that means thereâs a problem with the system of feedback in your company.
If you want your team to know where they standâââwhat they do well and where they can improveâââthen you have to develop a process for delivering real-time, continuous feedback.
The process itself will vary from company to company, but it should never leave team members feeling overly anxious.
Hereâs why a feedback process is a necessity for every startup:
Feedback helps you develop relationships.
You generally get the mostâââand the bestâââfeedback from people who work closely with you.
Thatâs because the more you get to know someone, and the closer your working relationship becomes, the easier it is for them to tell you the truth.
Good, open relationships develop when people feel comfortable telling each other what they really think. In a great work relationship, the person receiving feedback doesnât see it as criticism or an attack.
Instead, they see it as a giftâââsomeone is helping them out.
The person giving the feedback is protecting them, making sure they donât continue doing something that âis in their blind spot.â Meaning, it is something that others see, but you donât realize that youâre doing it.
A process for delivering feedback ensures your team can develop these close relationships, and everyone feels comfortable giving and receiving feedback.
Feedback shows you care about your team.
You shouldnât be afraid to listen to feedback from another team member. But you should be worried when they go silent.
People often think feedback and criticism are synonymous, but they arenât. Someone is taking time out of their day to give you feedback, help you grow, and show you where youâve gone wrongâââor what youâve done well. It should be positive and enlightening, even if itâs about a mistake you made.
If no one is taking the time to give feedback in a startup, thatâs an indication they donât care. They donât care enough to help the people around them grow and get better, and they donât care about bettering themselves. If your startup has a process for giving feedback constructively, you are helping people grow, learn how they can improve, and further develop themselves as a leader and manager.
I also love it when team members solicit feedback directly. Recently, someone on my team asked me a question about an event we held, âHow did you think it went?â It opened the dialogue, and we talked through what went well and what could be improved for next time.
It helps us understand our weaknesses.
Most of us are actually pretty terrible at evaluating our own performance.
At ThirdLove, we once had a situation where one of our senior team members was meeting with a potential vendor. And that team member was not acting as professionally as I would expect them to. They were being unusually aggressive with the vendor, and I was really uncomfortable listening to the conversation.
When I voiced my concerns after the meeting, that team member didnât initially know what I was talking about. They didnât realize how they were coming across until I pointed it out to them. The only way to communicate that and help them understand what happened was through feedback.
Without a good process for this, people never find out when theyâre doing something wrongâââwhich makes it incredibly difficult to grow.
Feedback improves the way we listen.
Good feedback demands that the person receiving it is open and engaged with the process. And that means listening to the feedback in a specific manner.
There are two kinds of listening: passive and reflective.
Passive listening essentially means youâre only listening to someone else in order to set up your next point. Youâre hearing what theyâre saying, but in your head, youâre trying to decide how youâll counter it or use it to build your own position.
Reflective listening is much different. In this type of listening, the person receiving feedback is open enough to information that they give it a chance to change their mind. If they hear a cogent argument, they can be swayed. They arenât so locked into their own opinion that they dismiss or manipulate what they hear.
Reflective listening is what everyone in your company should be striving for when they get feedback. No getting defensive or making excuses. Just an open acceptance ofâââand reflection onâââwhatâs being offered. The more you encourage this type of listening and feedback, the more your team improves.
Good feedback never stops. None of us ever get to the point where weâre doing everything perfectly and nothing could be better. Thereâs always room to grow. And with a strong process in place for feedback, your team will always feel like they can improve.
By Heidi Zak, Co-Founder and Co-CEO of ThirdLove. Originally published on Quora.For more trending tech answers from Quora, visit HackerNoon.com/quora.
Why Paying Attention to Feedback is Necessarry For Every Startup was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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