How do we best give challenging feedback to others? What are the little tips and techniques that can make the difference between having our message heard and understood rather than triggering a defensive and hostile reaction? Recently, I learnt a new coaching tip on this topic which surprised me through its simplicity and its impact. In this week’s challenging coaching blog, I will share this tip with you and explain how to use it in your coaching and leadership roles.

coaching feedback

A few weeks ago I was attending a training course in the US as part of my induction into a new role as Group Chair for Vistage – the world’s largest CEO organisation.  It was a fascinating week for all sort of reasons and, on the Tuesday afternoon, we had a session on giving challenging feedback, or ‘carefrontation’ as it was called by our facilitators. Now Ian and I have done a lot of work on feedback over the years and we devote a chapter to it in our own book so I wasn’t expecting any dramatic revelations. Sure enough the session started with sound advice I had come across many times before including a five step model for giving feedback similar to the one Ian and I recommend in challenging coaching. We then moved on to look at eight words that should be avoided in giving challenging feedback and that is where things got very interesting.

The eight words to avoid were revealed as:-

Some of these I immediately recognised as ‘no-go’ areas such as ‘never’,'always’,'why’ and ‘should’. I have often been taught that these generalised and accusative words will provoke a defensive and hostile reaction. However, it was the last two words that caught my eye. How can you possibly deliver feedback without using the words ‘you’ and ‘your’? What purpose could there be in missing out these words? My colleagues in the group had similar reservations and a noisy debate struck up. Our facilitators brought the debate to a halt through a demonstration where they contrasted the following two pieces offeedback:-

The second statement misses out the use of ‘you’ or ‘your’ and I was struck by how different it landed with the receiver of the feedback.  We next practised this technique ourselves in pairs and , despite it feeling very awkward grammatically, I experienced first hand how much easier it is to receive challenging feedback when it is not pointing a finger at YOU with the words ‘you’ and ‘your’ – ‘This morning I noticed late arrival to the meeting’, ‘When speaking I observed little eye contact and hard to hear’,'As I look around, I can’t help but notice small piece of scrambled egg on chin from breakfast’.

By now you may well be thinking what I was thinking when I first came across this tip – it sounds unnatural, awkward and I can’t see how it could possibly make a difference. Yet how many other aspects of great coaching did you feel exactly the same about when you first came across them, going right back to being non-directive, active listening and asking powerful questions? In the same way, that you experimented and practiced with those skills which you now use naturally, I would encourage you to try giving feedbackwithout using the words ‘you’ or ‘your’. Have a bit of fun with it, practice in a low risk situation and judge it on its impact on the other person rather than whether it makes YOU feel comfortable or not in the moment. What other tips do YOU have for giving challengingfeedback?

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