360 degree feedback and performance appraisals both depend on the ability of respondents (often the line manager) to write great feedback comments.
I have been handling a number of debrief sessions recently and was interesting how reliant I was on the narrative feedback section of the 360 to give me an insight into the feedback. That led me to consider again - what makes good feedback?
Here are my thoughts on how to write comments when you are a respondent on 360 feeedback
Brendan
I have been handling a number of debrief sessions recently and was interesting how reliant I was on the narrative feedback section of the 360 to give me an insight into the feedback. That led me to consider again - what makes good feedback?
Here are my thoughts on how to write comments when you are a respondent on 360 feeedback
- The feedback should illuminate how you have scored a particular section.
- The feedback should provide some evidence or examples that illustrate the impact of the behaviour
- The feedback should generally be dispassionate - emotion often obscures meaning when read later
- The feedback should be relevant and timely. Rarely is it useful to be reminded of an event 12 months ago
- The feedback should be concise and to the point. Needless background information loses the message
- For me, I think feedback is better in the first person.
Brendan
Comments for Writing good 360 feedback