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by Winter Nie Published December 2, 2025 in Leadership ⢠10 min read
Giving feedback is a core responsibility of leadership. Without clear and structured input on their performance, team members may struggle to grow professionally and personally to stay meaningfully engaged with their work and purpose, and to address the issues that can hinder their effectiveness, contribution, and progress.
Even so, giving feedback can feel like a minefield. All too often, leaders are stalled in their efforts by certain anxieties. Conflict avoidance or a fear of negative response can make feedback-giving feel awkward.
In my work with organizations, Iâve pinpointed approaches that can help leaders and managers overcome these difficulties. Over time, Iâve compiled these into a six-part checklist that ensures that when you give feedback, it will always be timely, purposeful, balanced, empathic, specific, and ultimately effective.
Giving effective feedback hinges on six prerequisites:
In the first feature of this three-part series, I walked you through the importance of the first three requisites: timing, intent, and the positive/negative ratio.
Here, Iâd like to work through the next three: empathy, communication skills, and specificity.
Letâs get into it.

Empathy is the capacity to somehow put yourself into someone elseâs shoes and appreciate how things might look and feel from their point of view. Itâs a core skill of effective leadership because it helps build multi-directional trust, collaboration, engagement, support, and resilience within your team. Empathy is also a fundamental part of giving constructive feedback. Why? Some social-neuroscience studies suggest that empathic or trusting interactions are associated with higher oxytocin levels â the so-called âbonding hormoneâ â which may reduce stress responses and foster social connection.
This sense of connection can, in turn, enhance psychological safety â the shared belief that itâs safe to take interpersonal risks such as admitting mistakes or receiving critiques. When people feel safe and respected, they are more willing to engage in learning behaviors, including acting on feedback. Finally, feedback that feels supportive rather than threatening aligns more closely with intrinsic motivation. Research grounded in self-determination theory shows that informational (constructive, autonomy-supportive) feedback sustains motivation and performance, while controlling or critical feedback undermines it.
Taken together, these findings suggest that empathy does not just make feedback feel palatable â it helps create the psychological and biological conditions under which feedback can truly lead to growth and performance. But how do you go about integrating empathy into the way you give feedback? Here are a few suggestions:
Remember, being empathic does not mean avoiding hard truths. And be careful to avoid false empathy. You are not a superhero, dashing in to solve someone elseâs problems, nor do you know more about their problem or the source of any distress than they do. A good rule of thumb is to be aware of your own ego and remember that giving feedback is way less about you than it is about the person on the receiving end. Empathic feedback is all about delivering observations or messages with care, understanding, and a genuine desire to help the recipient grow and thrive.

âGiving feedback is about conveying a really important message â one that is designed to help another person learn, overcome, and grow. So be careful with language.â
As a leader, you might be confident in your communication skills. But remember that when youâre giving feedback, itâs not just about what you say â itâs about how you say it and the non-verbal cues that you give off while youâre communicating.
Research in organizational and communication studies shows that a leaderâs nonverbal immediacy behaviors â such as open posture, steady eye contact, nodding, and expressive facial engagement â significantly influence how feedback is perceived. For example, nonverbal immediacy has been linked with increased perceptions of warmth, trust, and relational closeness. In workplace settings, literature reviews suggest that consistent, positive body language can strengthen leader credibility and receptivity, which likely increases employeesâ openness to feedback. If your facial expressions, posture and gestures, and tone of voice are friendly or relaxed, they will trigger a response in the recipientâs mirror neurons â the cognitive systems that make us mirror (understand and even imitate) the behaviors, attitudes, and approaches that we see. In other words, positive cues engender greater positivity in others â and greater receptivity to the messages being shared. Be aware of your body language and notice how it impacts your team memberâs emotional status â and your own.
Be sensitive too to the impact of the things you say. Giving feedback is about conveying a really important message â one that is designed to help another person learn, overcome, and grow. So be careful with language. Again, as a rule of thumb, avoid sentences that include the word âshould,â which can come across as hectoring or demeaning. Similarly, be careful with words like âalwaysâ and ânever,â which can sound like youâre generalizing. Be sure to focus your language on behaviors and not personality. Instead of something like âyou are too sensitive,â how about âyour reactions can appear sensitive.â Finally, try to lead with âIâ statements. What do I mean by that?
Using your own personal pronoun comes over as more personal opinion and less accusatory. When you say things like âI feelâ or âI noticed,â the dynamic shifts to your personal perspective as a manager, and away from anything that might feel like an attack. Compare these phrases.
âYour work is rushed and incomplete.â
âI have noticed that some elements are missing in the work youâre submitting.â
How about these?
âYour work is not up to scratch.â
âThere are some areas for improvement that I can see in your work, and Iâd like to go through them with you.â
Can you appreciate how the âIâ statements in these examples might have the effect of lowering defenses and opening up dialogue (albeit around difficult truths) in a way that makes the recipient feel more respected?
When feedback is vague or overly general, you leave room for uncertainty â the recipient may be left guessing what went wrong or how to fix it
The last point in your six-part feedback framework is specificity. Be clear, be concrete, and as much as possible, be granular in what you observe and describe. Research consistently shows that specific, behavior-based feedback improves clarity, motivation, and short-term performance because it helps people understand exactly what behaviors to continue or adjust.
When feedback is vague or overly general, you leave room for uncertainty â the recipient may be left guessing what went wrong or how to fix it. Worse, it can come across as unfair, unfounded, or even biased, as vague feedback has been shown to undermine credibility and contribute to inequitable career outcomes.
Yet there is a balance to strike. Studies also caution that feedback that is too prescriptive can inadvertently limit curiosity and exploration â the very behaviors that fuel innovation and deeper learning. In other words, feedback should provide enough specificity to orient someone â what happened, when, and why it matters â while leaving space for reflection, dialogue, and self-correction.
Compare these two phrases:
The second version grounds the feedback in specific behavior and impact and then opens up a question â an invitation for the recipient to think, respond, and co-create a solution. That balance â specific direction plus space for exploration â is what makes feedback both actionable and developmental.
Think of it like this: vagueness breeds confusion; rigidity stifles growth. The best feedback points clearly to ânorth, south, east, or west,â but still leaves room for the recipient to chart their own course toward improvement.
Giving feedback can feel like an emotional or psychological minefield. But it doesnât have to. When your feedback is delivered at the right time, with the right intent, when itâs balanced in positivity, expressed with genuine empathy, when your body and verbal communication are language are aligned and you are specific about areas to work on and improve while still leaving room for exploration, you will end up sharing valuable and important input that will help people grow and progress, professionally and personally. This is what your employees crave.
Of course, feedback can and should be a two-way street. As a leader, itâs important that you also glean insights into the impact of your practices and approaches. These will be critical for your own leadership growth. In the next article in this series, we will look at how to receive feedback as a manager, be it from bosses, peers, or reports â how to avoid certain pitfalls in your thinking, how to frame feedback positively, and how to channel it into continuous progression, learning, and growth.

IMD Professor of Leadership and Change Management
Winter Nieâs expertise lies at the intersection of leadership and change management. Her work shows that the role of leadership is not to eliminate but skillfully navigate through these tensions into the future. She works with organizations on change at the individual, team, and organizational levels, looking beyond surface rationality into the unconscious forces below that shape the direction and speed of change.

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