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How to Give and Take Constructive Criticism: Useful Tips

4 min readOct 14, 2022

Valuable feedback in criticism can help you improve, but many people are uncomfortable when they hear negative comments about their work. Getting used to responding positively to criticism will help you grow and advance in your career. Constructive criticism is a tool for improvement; it helps the other person see and polish their work from a new perspective. On the other hand, destructive criticism is abuse that can lead to stress and decreased productivity. In this post, we’ll walk through tips and strategies for giving and receiving constructive criticism like a champ.

What is Constructive Criticism?

Constructive criticism is a way of giving feedback that provides specific, actionable suggestions. Rather than providing general advice, constructive criticism offers specific recommendations on how to make positive improvements. Criticism that is constructive focuses on the positive aspects of the situation while emphasizing the scope for improvement. This is a valuable quality in leadership. You can drastically enhance your team’s output by showing people where they fall short and help them improve without bringing their morale down.

Benefits of Using Constructive Criticism

Constructive criticism is an essential part of the workplace. When people know how to give and take criticism, they can identify areas for improvement. Here are some of the benefits of constructive criticism:

Learning opportunities

Humans tend to overestimate their abilities and ignore their shortcomings. That’s why it’s important to seek feedback for personal growth. The learning curve increases as you adapt to doing things differently and accept corrective criticism.

Builds relationships

Giving constructive criticism takes courage because you can’t predict how the other person will respond. People with your best interests go out of their way to provide corrective feedback. Accept their criticism and thank them for helping you improve. This way, you can build productive relationships with people who care about you.

Welcomes new perspectives

Constructive criticism can give you a fresh perspective on the world. When you understand other people’s views, you can effectively change your work and approach.

3 Tips for Giving Constructive Criticism:

Constructive criticism encompasses a variety of factors that influence one’s outlook to a significant degree. However, the following are several noteworthy features of corrective criticism:

  • Practice what you preach

If you want to be taken seriously, implement what you say before you share your opinion. People won’t respect your feedback if you don’t follow your advice. For example, if an employee is struggling to maintain a work-life balance, they won’t seek advice from someone who rarely leaves the office. Instead, they’ll go to colleagues who have found balance and know how to achieve it.

  • Use real and specific examples

Use real-life examples when providing feedback. It will help people visualize how their method is flawed and, if improved, how it can generate better results. For example: “Hey, I noticed you don’t follow up with leads after the first sales pitch. That’s something we can work on together. I usually see 40% more conversions in my first follow-up and 10% in the second. It adds up quickly and can increase commissions significantly.”

  • Provide people a chance to revert

Always conduct civil discourse when sharing your perspective with others. It will help them understand the reasoning behind your actions. Let them cross-examine you and respectfully answer their questions. If they find your stance wrong, gracefully accept it, apologize and move on.

Destructive vs. Constructive Criticism

Constructive criticism can help people improve, while destructive criticism often targets people personally and does little to improve a situation. While you can’t choose which feedback you receive, you can decide how to respond to them. Self-acceptance plays a pivotal role in providing a healthy response to criticism. It will help if you put conscious effort into offering feedback empathically.

Empathy and Constructive Criticism

When offering constructive feedback, be sure to put yourself in their shoes. If you don’t understand their situation and feel you don’t care about them, they will not listen to anything you say. Here’s an effective method for delivering constructive criticism empathetically:

Leverage the ‘Feedback Sandwich’ approach

The ‘Feedback Sandwich’ method is a way to deliver negative feedback that minimizes the harmful intensity of the criticism and makes it comforting for the receiver. This approach consists of a negative remark between two positive statements, balancing the critical comment with two relatively positive ones. Here’s an example: The first ‘positive’ layer: This website looks great! The overall design is aesthetically pleasing, and I love how you’ve integrated an easy-to-understand UI. In addition, your explainer video works amazingly well with our services. The ‘improvement’ layer: The content structure for our ‘About Us’ and ‘Services’ pages is too cluttered. We would do better to present the information in a way that makes it easier for people to browse through. The last ‘positive’ layer: Overall, the work is good! We are headed in the right direction. By revamping the content structure, we can enhance the user experience significantly. This type of feedback adds a positive spin to criticism, making it easier for employees to digest. They are also more motivated to improve their work after being given this response.

How to give and take constructive criticism?

Delivering Constructive Criticism Taking Constructive Criticism Offer feedback that doesn’t give impulsive reactions, be concise and to the point, strive to be a good listener, always follow up with recommendations, Cross questions for clarity, Give unbiased feedback, do not become defensive, Avoid making assumptions Do not interrupt the other person Be empathic Try and extract the learning point from the feedback and focus on it Pay attention to your situation instead of people do not respond with anger and disappointmentCriticism is a natural part of workplace life. It’s easy for leaders to lash out at employees and exercise their authority, but this doesn’t motivate people. Giving constructive criticism is the best way to improve performance.

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Milan Kordestani
Milan Kordestani

Written by Milan Kordestani

Social Impact Founder, Investor, and Author l CEO at Ankord Labs

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