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Giving and receiving constructive feedback is incredibly important to furthering your personal and professional goals in life. While it may be awkward or challenging to deliver and receive, it’s critical in moving the needle to reach your goals. I recently finished up “Daring Greatly” by Brene Brown, which is timely for this article. In her book, she describes why it’s so hard for people to give/receive feedback with these 2 points:
Giving Feedback
I saw a post on LinkedIn by Taylor Howard that I thought summed it up quite nicely:
If you’re nervous to give a direct report criticism, try this:
Ask yourself “why now?”
Have an example of your own failure
Prepare your talking points
Deliver it in less than 60 seconds
Leave some things unsaid
Bring solutions
End the conversation on excitement for the future
Be prepared. Be friendly. Be concise.
Other tips:
Receiving Feedback
The best way to avoid being caught off guard with negative feedback is to continually ask for feedback. Even better – show your work. Don’t spend 3 days straight on a project without coming up for air. Do 5% of it and then make sure it is what your manager is expecting.
Ask your manager what you can do to make their job easier. If you finished a successful project or closed a deal, ask your manager or peers what you could have done differently to make things more efficient.
Remember: performance reviews should not be the first time you are hearing things you could be approving upon. Feedback is a continuous process and should be discussed in 1:1s, team and company meetings at a regular cadence.
If you have any questions or would like to chat further, feel free to reach me at natalie@hirewell.com
Repeat after me: do not talk politics at work. Or on LinkedIn.
Or in job interviews. Or on first dates. Or at Thanksgiving dinner.
Unfortunately for those of us in the business world, 2025 ruined it. There’s just no way around the fact that tariffs are the issue driving the business climate right now. Every client, candidate, and partner is asking about it—or struggling because of it.
So maybe, just maybe, talking policy isn’t just okay—it’s necessary. Dare I say, productive.
So get ready for a little nuance from Jeff Smith and James Hornick in The 10 Minute Talent Rant, Episode 107, “Talk Policy, Not Politics”
Episode 107