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Home»Culture»Building a Feedback Culture: 18 Practices from Leaders
Culture

Building a Feedback Culture: 18 Practices from Leaders

January 14, 2026No Comments
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Building a strong feedback culture requires deliberate systems and consistent practices that encourage honest communication at every level of an organization. This article presents 18 actionable strategies drawn from experienced leaders who have successfully implemented feedback mechanisms in their teams. These approaches range from daily huddles and one-on-one questions to post-project debriefs and engagement surveys that create ongoing opportunities for improvement.

  • Add Quick Event Check-Ins
  • Run Transparent Annual Engagement Surveys
  • Lead with Structured Prompt Sets
  • Facilitate Improvement Triage for Senior Leaders
  • Install Internal and Client Input Loops
  • Model Curiosity with Standard 1:1 Questions
  • Create a Routine Reflection Ritual
  • Replace Critique with Practical Coaching
  • Hold Brief After Action Retrospectives
  • Embed Post-Project Debriefs in Meetings
  • Favor Regular Conversation over Annual Reviews
  • Adopt Diverse Employee Voice Channels
  • Close Sessions with Start Stop Continue
  • Start with Perception Checks to Humanize
  • Ensure Safety with Daily Huddles
  • Pause Before You Reply
  • Apply Pre Mortems to Surface Risks
  • Prioritize Open Dialogue and Cadence

Add Quick Event Check-Ins

What makes those short after-action check-ins so powerful is the timing. When you talk about something while it’s still fresh, people don’t overthink it, and the conversation feels more like two colleagues comparing notes than a formal review. I’ll often say, “Here’s what I saw, here’s what I’d adjust next time — what did you notice?” It’s simple, but it sets the tone. When the leader goes first, the room relaxes. People realise it’s safe to be honest because you’re already modelling it.

Over time, those tiny conversations stack up. You stop storing feedback for later, and small problems stop growing into big ones. The team starts offering thoughts without being prompted because it just feels normal to say, “Next time, let’s try this instead.” In my experience, that’s how a feedback culture really forms — not through grand programmes or glossy initiatives, but through consistent, everyday moments where learning is the default and no one’s ego is on the line.

Sean McPheat


 

Run Transparent Annual Engagement Surveys

One effective way leaders can foster a culture of feedback and continuous improvement is by creating a consistent, structured mechanism for employees to share their perspectives, and then visibly acting on what they say. We conduct an annual internal survey that every team member is encouraged and incentivized to complete. We ask the same core questions each year so we can measure progress over time, identify patterns, and understand whether the actions we’ve taken are actually moving the needle.

Once the survey closes, we share the anonymous results transparently with the entire organization. As a leadership team, we highlight both the strengths and the areas of concern, select specific themes to address, and commit to implementing changes that will make the greatest impact. Most importantly, the following year we report back on what was implemented and how the feedback shaped our decisions.

This simple tool, a recurring, transparent, cyclical feedback survey, signals to employees that their voices matter, that leadership is willing to listen, and that improvement is an ongoing practice, not a one-time event. Over time, it builds trust, drives accountability, and creates a culture where continuous improvement becomes part of the company’s operating system.

Talia Mashiach


 

Lead with Structured Prompt Sets

The most effective practice for fostering feedback and continuous improvement is structured coaching conversations with open questions.

Here’s the specific approach: Train leaders to conduct regular coaching sessions built around four simple areas — Accomplishments, Challenges, Momentum, and Goals. This isn’t a performance review or status update; it’s a dialogue designed to surface honest feedback and drive problem-solving. The structure keeps things focused, but the real power comes from the questions leaders ask.

Instead of telling people what to fix, leaders ask open questions like:

  • “What have you discovered since our last conversation?” (Accomplishments)
  • “What’s proving harder than expected?” (Challenges)
  • “Where are you on your project plan?” (Momentum)
  • “What’s your focus for the next step?” (Goals)

Notice these aren’t yes-or-no questions. They’re a tool designed to spark dialogue, uncover obstacles, and help people think critically about their own work. Questions like, “What else?” keep the conversation alive when someone seems stuck. “How do you know?” pushes for evidence-based thinking rather than assumptions.

First, it removes ego from feedback. When leaders coach through questions rather than directives, people feel safe surfacing problems without fear of judgment. Second, it builds problem-solving capability — employees learn to diagnose issues and develop solutions themselves rather than waiting for answers from above. Third, it creates a rhythm of continuous improvement. Regular coaching sessions normalize talking about what’s working, what isn’t, and how to adjust.

Mike Loughrin


 

Facilitate Improvement Triage for Senior Leaders

As an internal OD Consultant for a manufacturer, I facilitated Stop, Start, Continue Feedback sessions with the executive leadership team (ELT) consisting of the Senior VP, VPs, and Directors within the logistics division of a large manufacturer. These Stop, Start, Continue feedback sessions provided the springboard for internal innovation processes that sparked continuous improvement, resulting in reductions in cost per case, improved on-time delivery, and more rapid inventory turns. The feedback sessions among these executives built trust and communication within the ELT and established a common success scoreboard that reduced silos across their organizations. Their department leaders were inspired by their humility and willingness to model feedback for the logistics division. The continuous improvement initiatives, by conservative estimates, generated at least 1.5 million dollars in savings.

Celia Szelwach

Celia Szelwach, Co-Founder and Principal Consultant/Executive Coach, PCS2 Consulting LLC

 

Install Internal and Client Input Loops

We’ve built multiple structured feedback loops across teams and clients instead of relying on annual reviews. Internally, we run a weekly 5-minute project health check where teams answer three simple questions:

  • What worked this week?
  • What didn’t?
  • What should we improve next week?

Externally, we conduct a monthly client feedback survey focused on delivery quality, communication, and outcomes. This keeps us honest and aligned with client expectations in real time.

The most important part is psychological safety. Feedback only works when people know it won’t be used against them. Leaders must model this by openly accepting feedback themselves and acting on it. When teams see feedback turning into decisions, continuous improvement becomes a habit, not a task.

Salman Lakhani


 

Model Curiosity with Standard 1:1 Questions

One powerful way to build a culture of feedback and continuous improvement is for leaders to model it first. I coach leaders to ask a simple, standard question in every 1:1, such as, “What’s one way I can be more supportive to you this week?” or, “How can I communicate with you more effectively in meetings?”

Once this becomes routine, they can set up two-way feedback exchanges, where both parties share insights and agree on next steps for implementation. This consistent, predictable rhythm builds trust, normalizes open dialogue, and turns feedback into meaningful action.

Elisabeth Galperin

Elisabeth Galperin, Executive Coach | Business Productivity Consultant, Peak Productivity

 

Create a Routine Reflection Ritual

One of the most effective ways leaders can foster a culture of feedback is by making feedback predictable and safe, not occasional or emotional.

A practical way to do this is by building a standing reflection ritual into the operating rhythm of the team. This can be a 20- to 30-minute session at the end of a sprint, project, or month where the agenda stays consistent:

  • What worked that we should keep?
  • What didn’t work and why?
  • What we will change next time?

The most important element is that the leader goes first and models self-reflection before inviting input from others. When leaders openly name their own misses, tradeoffs, or blind spots, it lowers the emotional cost of honesty for everyone else.

When feedback only shows up in moments of tension, people experience it as judgment, not information. When it shows up consistently, it becomes data the team can actually use.

This approach is supported by research on psychological safety from Harvard professor Amy Edmondson, which shows that teams learn and improve faster when people feel safe to speak up without fear of blame. It also aligns with continuous improvement principles used in agile and lean operating models, where small, regular adjustments outperform sporadic big fixes.

When feedback is built into the cadence of work and emotionally neutralized through routine, people stop seeing it as risky and start seeing it as useful. That is when continuous improvement actually sticks.

Lena McDearmid


 

Replace Critique with Practical Coaching

The approach that continues to work for me and that I share with others is to move away from the concept of feedback into the mindset of coaching. This does two things. First, it forces you to not just stop at telling people what to do better or differently, but rather share with them how they would make that happen. That, in turn, creates trust and builds a cascading culture that is a lot more sustainable and scalable. Second, it builds accountability both at the management level and within the operating ranks. It allows people to not just say something needs to be better and walk away, but rather get involved in solving the problem and owning part of the solution. It builds connective tissue between the leaders of the organization and the operating teams, which is invaluable for any team wanting to achieve high performance.

For me, it is less about tools but more about the practice. First, the leadership group needs to consistently practice the above approach. Without their role modeling, like most things in the company, this, too, will not scale. The second part of the practice is when the operating team is encouraged to ask for the “how” in any piece of feedback they receive. This reverse accountability is a key measure that will not only promote this practice but will develop future leaders that will inherently have this mindset when they get to the management ranks.

Rohit Bassi


 

Hold Brief After Action Retrospectives

One powerful way leaders can foster a culture of feedback and continuous improvement is this: make feedback routine, lightweight, and safe, so that it doesn’t feel scary. It’s just part of our ways of working.

The practice: After-Action Reviews (stemming from military practices) done consistently, not just after “big” moments.

How it works (keep it simple): At the end of a project, sprint, meeting, or milestone, the team spends 10-15 minutes answering four questions:

1. What did we intend to happen?

2. What actually happened?

3. What helped?

4. What got in the way and what will we do differently next time?

No blame. No emotional hijacking. Just truth-telling, collective learning, and forward motion.

Why this works:

  • It normalizes feedback as part of work, not a performance verdict.
  • It shifts focus from who messed up to what the system taught us.
  • It builds muscle memory for reflection, adjustment, and shared ownership.

Leader move that matters: Go first. Name what you would do differently next time. When leaders model self-feedback, psychological safety follows. You get the magic without the smoke.

Tonille Miller


 

Embed Post-Project Debriefs in Meetings

One effective approach is to embed post-project debriefs into existing team meetings using a simple, repeatable protocol. We review what worked, what didn’t, and what we will try next. Creating a space where feedback is expected helps to normalize it and ensure that it happens by integrating it into time already on our calendars. This practice strengthened decision-making, improved communication, and increased shared ownership across the team.

Lisa Friscia


 

Favor Regular Conversation over Annual Reviews

Shift away from annual evals only that feel like surprise attacks or check-the-box processes and lean more into ongoing real human conversations centered on curiosity and shared awareness, where the supervisor and employee are partnered together for joint efforts towards organizational objectives.

Routine and ongoing feedback is informal when catching up on things through the course of the day and during meetings and work activities. When there are formal year-end performance evaluations, the culmination of all these little bits of feedback throughout the year can effectively be consolidated to capture the overall essence of the year and document how the expectations were met and what’s expected in the next year. The results won’t be a surprise to anyone.

A key component of any feedback session is taking a moment to mention the HOW and WHY, so appropriate context is applied to the measuring tool of the review.

Regardless of who the person is filling the role, the expectations of that particular role is what is being accounted for. What the performance expectations and needs are, and How Well the person meets or exceeds the performance expectations and needs should be reviewed. Also consider What can be done to continue forward progress.

Recognizing the behaviors and actions that demonstrate how well a person is performing is essential. When people are doing well and setting an example for others to follow as a model of excellence — they should know that and know how they are doing that to reinforce the positive performance. When people are underperforming and not productively contributing to the outcomes as needed — they should know that and how they are detracting from their own success and the success of others. Sharing examples and the impact these examples bring helps the person better understand their performance in their role.

Comments like — do more … do better… keep it up — are not the most helpful. Even for great performers. Incorporate some examples of when they demonstrated the highlighted action and the associated impact for more meaningful feedback sessions.

One possible framework to explore for feedback sessions:

1. What are we doing that “shows” we are effective in our role?

2. What are we doing or not doing that is getting in our own way of success in our role?

3. What is one thing we can focus on to do that is new/better/different, that would make a positive impact to us and our success in our role?

Michael Brown


 

Adopt Diverse Employee Voice Channels

Employee feedback is a huge part of our organisation and rather than just relying on one survey you should seek to gather it in multiple different ways. For example, we have an anonymous feedback box for people who want to suggest ideas or grumble without revealing their identity. Staff are also asked for feedback in their weekly 1 on 1 check-ins with their team leads. Appraisals are also an opportunity to gather personal feedback.

We have also established a company-wide employee engagement survey which is based on the Gallup Q12 model. Gallup studied over 3.3 million workers across 50 diverse industries and identified 12 common employee needs, which can be represented as questions. Our engagement survey asks these 12 questions which provides an evidence-based method to gain useful employee feedback. We then run the survey consistently every 6 months, meaning we can measure performance and the impact of changes against these questions. It has been fundamental in establishing a consistent way of listening to our team and ensuring we publish and improve from the results.

Ben Foster


 

Close Sessions with Start Stop Continue

An effective way for leaders to help build a culture of feedback and the constant improvement of work is through embedding regular, informal feedback rather than scheduling it for formal evaluations and reports. One easy guideline I’d love to see would be to conclude meetings with a quick “Start, Stop, Continue” check-in. You know: What is one thing we need to start doing that will help us work better? Stop: What is one thing that isn’t working well and should be reduced or eliminated? Continue: What is one thing we’re doing well and should keep doing? It invites honest feedback without pressure, underlines that feedback is about growth, not criticism, and signals that everyone’s perspective matters. The consistency over time fosters trust, psychological safety, and a shared commitment to getting better together.

Kamini Wood


 

Start with Perception Checks to Humanize

As a neurologist, speaker and thought leader, I like to lecture young people about leadership and communication as a part of my mission.

One thing that I find very effective in getting feedback from your audience, whether speaking at an event or lecturing, is to start off your relationship with asking who they think you are (when they don’t know you yet). I have the audience/students write down their thoughts anonymously, hand them in, and then I read through them and we all laugh and have an aha-moment together about the lesson we learn: that our perception of our leaders and everyone we come across is shaped by our own experiences and biases.

When we start off our relationship on this footing, it makes it easier for a group of people to understand their own responses to issues as they arise, and to come to problem-solving in a less emotionally triggered state, and more in a solutions-focused manner.

Starting out a relationship in a humanizing way helps create a culture where we can communicate more freely.

Shafer Stedron

Shafer Stedron, Physician, Entrepreneur, Speaker, Author, Host of Talks with Dr Shafer, Publisher, Little House of Dreams Entertainment

 

Ensure Safety with Daily Huddles

This really starts with fostering an environment where employees believe that there will be no repercussions for honest feedback. As an employee, giving feedback/criticism/suggestions can be scary and concerns about how it will impact your standing at your job, and your livelihood, are real and valid.

For us, this is a constant effort of reassuring staff members that we value them, we value their opinions, that they are part of this team, and building up that belief and confidence in our staff, so that they can feel comfortable raising any feedback. Some of the best feedback we get is from staff members that helps us to identify inefficiencies and processes that will aid our efficiency and our clients’ experience. So, it is of the utmost importance to foster that trust and belief.

We believe the best tool to foster that culture is continuous communication and dialogue. We hold two meetings daily to go over work that needs to be done, the work that was done for the day, and address any concerns or questions staff has — in doing so, we try to always make clear that we want their thoughts and feedback and their opinions on issues that come up in those meetings are valued.

Thomas Ricotta


 

Pause Before You Reply

One way to foster a culture of feedback is to model and reinforce a simple practice: think before responding. In team meetings and 1:1s, I pause after hearing feedback and encourage others to do the same, which shifts the focus from defense to understanding and improvement.

Marchem Pfeiffer


 

Apply Pre Mortems to Surface Risks

Introduce the “pre-mortem” ritual.

Idea: Instead of reviewing what went wrong after a failure, imagine failure at the start.

Practice: Ask, “Imagine this project failed; what likely caused it?”

Why it works: It invites feedback early and reframes it as risk prevention resulting in better thinking, fewer surprises and stronger execution.

Colleen Capel


 

Prioritize Open Dialogue and Cadence

Exercising feedback can be executed in a few different ways. No method is foolproof; this is dictated by the level of professional maturity and work culture present to welcome such collaborative engagement. This can range from creating a cadence for members to meet 1:1 with their respective managers to implementing live group forums where people engage with sharing their work experiences stressing the opportunities and pain points in their roles. Feedback is leveraged to improve organizations by building trust among employees so their insights are valued, not via lip service but through thoughtful reflection, versus people fearing judgment from the organization’s managers and leaders. A culture of feedback and continuous improvement benefits all contributors in the company if they believe in their mission. Feedback starts from communication. When communication stops, so does progress in the viability of the organization.

Sasha Laghonh

Sasha Laghonh, Founder & Sr. Advisor to C-Suite & Entrepreneurs, Sasha Talks

 

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