This Year, Resolve to Use Feedforward NOT Feedback

January 8, 2018

How to Keep the Ones You Love: The Number One Retention Strategy

Now that performance reviews are finally over, consider developing your people with the use of feedforward tools, not just feedback.

While feedback is an essential part of performance reviews and developing your people, consider using feedforward as another tool. While feedback can feel discouraging and negative – after all, we can’t change the past – feedforward can help people learn and grow in a way that lifts them up. When I coach executives, for example, they are frequently motivated to improve their performance.

The subject matter may be the same, yet the effect on

attitude and motivation is very different.

Yet when they receive feedback on past performance, you can see them becoming defensive and closed. Giving them suggestions about the future, however, can help them learn and grow in a way that limits the amount of energy wasted on defending and debating.

The subject matter may be the same, yet the effect on attitude and motivation is very different.

For example, I coached a leader who was typically late to meetings with her peers and sometime had to cancel meetings because she had overscheduled. I had received the feedback from those she worked with and she had even exhibited some of the same behavior in our sessions. I could have come down on her for being late or MIA with me, yet I sensed that would not get the result I wanted.

Instead, I asked her what her goals were for the next year. Not surprisingly, she mentioned being on time and not over scheduling. I offered several suggestions for managing her time more effectively in the future and mentioned that she could feel free to accept those she liked and throw the rest away. This worked because she could focus on future behavior, not past mistakes, as well as giving her some control over what changes she wanted to make.

What Should You Do?

While feedback and performance reviews will probably not go away, consider reframing your talk by focusing on the future. Take these steps:

  • Focus on future projects. Instead of a critique of a project, focus onFeedforwardimproving performance for future projects.
  • Offer options. Don’t give directives if you can avoid it. Consider yourself a coach with numerous tools you can offer and let them choose what will get them to their goals.
  • Treat people as adults. Most people know when they’ve made a mistake or need to improve performance. Ask them what their goals are and guide them toward solutions and problem solving, not just critiques.

 Did You Know

All of our leadership and management classes help you answer the question of how to make sure that people stay.

Call or write us at: 303-216-1020 or Lynne@workplacesthatwork.com

Learn more about our training offerings and check out our team members at:
 
Be sure to read Lynne’s book “We Need to Talk” – Tough Conversations with Your Employee and learn how to tackle any topic with sensitivity and smarts.
Workplaces That Work | (303) 216-1020 | lynne@workplacesthatwork.com
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