Feedback People Want to Receive
Feedback lands best when expectations about cadence, channels, and tone are written down and modeled consistently. Define regular one‑to‑ones, project retrospectives, and lightweight peer kudos that travel publicly. Offer phrasing that separates observation from interpretation, and intent from impact. Encourage request‑driven feedback so autonomy grows. Share examples for career conversations tied to business outcomes. Invite readers to comment with prompts they use, and pledge to refresh the library as your community contributes sharper, kinder language that builds capability.