shallowbridge.com shallowbridge.com
   Site Home >> About Us >> Privacy >> Terms of Service >> Add Your Link >> Submit Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

Society & Communities

Estate & Realty

Self Enhancement

Home & Garden

Art & Creative

Medical Care

Shopping Online

Lifestyle & Fashion

Sports

Jobs & Careers

Events & News

Music & Entertainment

Policies & Law

Academics & Learning

Food & Recipe

Online & Board Games

Hygiene & Health

Companies & Business

Automobiles

Finance & Banking

Children & Teens

Travel & Vacation

Research & Science

Software & Networking


 

Site Home –› Self Enhancement –› Art Of Leadership
 

Effective Feedback for Leadership Success

 

Providing feedback as a leader is critical to direct your team towards success. If you do it correctly, you educate and motivate your team members all at the same time. Get it wrong, and you send them into a downward spiral towards poor performance and possibly even their departure. Here are 4 key areas to focus on when providing feedback effectively.

1) Focus on the behavior, not the person. Feedback is not personal. We should not be attacking the person, rather describe the behavior that you have documented or observed, and then share your observations with the team member. The key here is to clearly coach the behavior and keep the self-esteem as high as possible while changing the behavior.

2) Eliminate words like always, all the time, and never. When you use wording that says that something always happens or never happens, the team member will automatically dispute, because the statement is not accurate. When you are equipped with specifics such as dates and times, coaching is more factual and specific, thus more effective.

3) Provide feedback as close to the behavior as possible. If you wait too long, the details become less clear and it is much easier to get into a debate about what actually took place. The only time I would suggest allowing some time to pass is when your emotions may be an issue and you need time to cool off.

4) Ask for a summary when completed. At the end of your discussion, ask the team member to provide a summary. This will ensure that he/she understood the point of the discussion, and there are also benefits to having the team member actually say in their own words what took place and what the corrective action is that was agreed upon.

So take every opportunity to provide coaching and feedback and you will see your team become more motivated and self-directed, which makes your job as a leader more fun and rewarding.

Kreg Enderson
Leadership Mentor/Coach
www.LeadershipMentor.net

Take a look at our new Learning Leaders Mentoring Groups Monthly mentoring program for new leaders. And we also have A free tele-seminar on March 15th on Leadership Styles.

Author: Kreg Enderson
 
Author Bio:
Kreg Enderson is a specialist in this area. Kreg has written several articles in the past on this topic.
This article can be searched using: leadership skills, good leadership skills, leadership qualities, leadership skills development
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Watch Your %@#*$! Language
 
Truth be Told
 
You Don't Find All Drunks in the Gutter: The Story of a Functional Alcoholic!
 
Speak in Public! Who Me?
 
Are You in Touch With Your Inner "M"?
 
Organized and Loving It ?C Working at Home In Style
 
Joy Is Sexy
 
Dreaming Hell
 
Coaching Generation X
 
5 Result-Getting Time Management Tips
 
 
 
Site Home >> Privacy >> Terms of Service  
Copyright © www.shallowbridge.com - All Rights Reserved Worldwide.