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When providing feedback hurts employee performance

There are times when providing employee feedback can actually have a negative effect, according to research published earlier this year.
Martin Kovacs
Martin Kovacs

There are times when providing employee feedback that’s designed to improve performance can actually have a negative effect, with recent research shedding light on the potential benefits of listening as an alternative.

Writing at the Harvard Business Review, Guy Itzchakov, a lecturer at Ono Academic College’s Faculty of Business Administration, and Avraham N. Kluger, a professor of organisational behaviour at Hebrew University of Jerusalem’s School of Business, point to the potential pitfalls of providing employee feedback.

Itzchakov and Kluger observe that previous research revealed how feedback, both positive and negative, actually caused performance to decline in 38% of cases, occurring โ€œmostly when the feedback threatened how people saw themselvesโ€.

Conversely, Itzchakov and Kluger’s research, published earlier this year, โ€œconsistently demonstrated that experiencing high-quality (attentive, empathic and non-judgmental) listening can positively shape speakersโ€™ emotions and attitudesโ€.

Good listeners versus distracted listeners

In one experiment, Itzchakov and Kluger assigned 112 undergraduate students to serve as either a speaker or a listener. They found speakers who were paired with good listeners, as opposed to those listeners who were distracted, โ€œfelt less anxious, more self-aware and reported higher clarity about their attitudes on the topicsโ€.

โ€œSpeakers paired with undistracted listeners also reported wanting to share their attitude with other people more compared with speakers paired with distracted listeners,โ€ they write.

Another experiment saw the researchers instruct 114 business school undergraduates to talk for 12 minutes about their fitness to become a manager in the future, randomly assigning the speakers to good, moderate or poor listening groups.

Speakers were subsequently asked to address the extent to which they considered themselves suitable for becoming managers, and the researchers found โ€œspeakers who talked to a good listener saw both strengths and weaknesses more than those in the other conditionsโ€.

โ€œSpeakers who talked to a distracted listener mostly described their strengths and barely acknowledged their weaknesses,โ€ the researchers write.

โ€œInterestingly, the speakers in the poor listening condition were those that, on average, reported feeling the most suitable for becoming a manager.โ€

Three subsequent field studies replicated the findings, showing that โ€œlistening seems to make an employee more relaxed, more self-aware of his or her strengths and weaknesses, and more willing to reflect in a non-defensive mannerโ€.

Itzchakov and Kluger stress that they โ€œdo not claim that listening must replace feedbackโ€.

โ€œRather, it seems that listening to employees talk about their own experiences first can make giving feedback more productive by helping them feel psychologically safe and less defensive,โ€ they say.

How to become a better listener

While many barriers may exist to becoming a good listener, such as a feeling of loss of power or fear of change, Itzchakov and Kluger provide a number of tips to improve listening skills:

  • Prioritise listeningย โ€” provide 100% of your attention, with constant eye contact helping โ€œthe speaker feel that you are listeningโ€.
  • No interruptionsย โ€” wait for the speaker to indicate that they are done.
  • No judgmentsย โ€” push aside judgmental thoughts.
  • Do not impose solutionsย โ€” help the speaker draw up a solution of their own.
  • Ask questionsย โ€” designed to help shape the conversation and benefit the speaker.
  • Reflectionย โ€” seek to learn what impact your listening has had on conversations.

NOW READ: Embrace the full opportunity of improving your employees’ experience

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