GovLoop

Are You Giving Good Feedback?

We’ve all been in this situation—you’re called into your manager’s office for a conversation on your performance. They may skirt around some issues you’re having and offer half sincere recommendations on how you can improve. You’ll likely leave the office with more questions than answers and a little concerned about the feedback you just got. While many managers and employees are unsure of how to give and receive good feedback, the good news is that doing so is a relatively easy skill to learn.

So how exactly does an employee learn to give and receive good feedback? GovLoop sat down with Carolyn Mooney, Owner and Coach at Enough, LLC in the recent online training, “How to Give and Receive Feedback,” to learn how your agency can get the most out of feedback.

According to Mooney, feedback is simply, “information about a reaction to a product or a person’s performance on a task and should be used as a basis for improvement.” Essentially, feedback is providing a person with information they need to make themselves better. Mooney explained that there are three types of feedback: telling, training, and advising or mentoring.

Unfortunately, sentiments surrounding feedback are often negative. Mooney attributes this to managers and employees’ weaknesses in giving and receiving feedback. In order to counter this, feedback givers must always impart feedback based on one of the above three categories. Additionally, there must be a positive environment that embodies trust, respect, and safety for feedback to be positively given and received

While setting up the conditions to give or receive valuable feedback seems daunting, Mooney established a simple, six step procedure to create an environment conducive to feedback.

  1. Engage: Engage up, down, and across the workforce all year long.
  2. Baggage: Know where yourself and your employees are coming from and learn how to unload or work around baggage.
  3. Outline: Have a plan when going into a structured feedback session. No one likes a meeting without an agenda.
  4. Obstacles: As an employer, allow your employees to share with you what their obstacles are. As an employee, don’t be afraid to be up front with what your challenges are and what help you may need moving forward.
  5. Goals: Employees and supervisors both need goals for themselves and for their workforce.
  6. Help: Asking for help is a strength not a weakness. If you are an employee, let your supervisor know what help you may need to achieve your goals. As a supervisor, be prepared to ask your staff how you can help them.

Employing best feedback practices at your agency could be the difference between an empowered and motivated workforce and a begrudged and reluctant one. Mooney underscored that when employees receive good feedback, employee engagement rises, leading to more empowered and motivated employees. Additionally, feedback fosters real connections among coworkers and allows the entire workforce to feel valued. “When you have a feedback plan in place you have a process, path and framework to create a culture of feedback that fosters an overall better work environment,” she concluded.

For more information about the Next Generation of Government training summit, click here.

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