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Make your meetings matter
Getting feedback from peers is one of the most useful tools we have for enhancing our performance. Peer feedback is in real time, looks at learnt skills being used in real situations, and it's from 'end users'. But how we go about asking for this feedback has a huge influence on how useful what we hear will be. No more 'Do you think my presentation was OK'? type questions, what do you really want to know?
If they say no, it's not necessarily because they have nothing good to say! Not everyone is comfortable giving feedback, and those that aren't tend to give the type of empty answers such as 'great' or 'it was fine'. A few ways to ask could be:
When asking for feedback, briefly explain what you would like to cover, and why it's important to you.
And, if the other person is struggling to think of something to say, ask two basic questions:
For example, I was told that I had lost the audience in a presentation. By asking where I had lost them, why did they feel this had happened and did they have any suggestions for what I could do differently, I was able to think of ways to prevent this happening in my next presentation.
Since following these steps, I've found feedback far more useful and an increase in respect from both sides. There have only been a couple of times that I've winced at something somebody has said, but what they said was true. Ultimately, audiences at future presentations have benefited. So, take a big breath, smile and ask the question - could I ask you for some feedback?