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		<title>Feedback is Still a Valuable Tool for Engineering Managers</title>
		<link>https://budgetgourmetmom.com/feedback-is-still-a-valuable-tool-for-engineering-managers/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Apr 2020 07:42:12 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[feedback]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[what is feedback]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://budgetgourmetmom.com/?p=1414</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>It&#8217;s performance review season for much of the corporate world, and everyone&#8217;s fretting about promotions, salary increases, granted stock, or lack thereof. One of the dirty words of this time of year is &#8220;feedback.&#8221; Whether at the receiving end or having to give feedback, it can get stressful, challenging, and intimidating. While both empirical observations [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://budgetgourmetmom.com/feedback-is-still-a-valuable-tool-for-engineering-managers/">Feedback is Still a Valuable Tool for Engineering Managers</a> appeared first on <a href="https://budgetgourmetmom.com">Budget Gourmet Mom</a>.</p>
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<p>It&#8217;s performance review season for much
of the corporate world, and everyone&#8217;s fretting about promotions, salary
increases, granted stock, or lack thereof. One of the dirty words of this time
of year is &#8220;feedback.&#8221; Whether at the receiving end or having to give
feedback, it can get stressful, challenging, and intimidating. While both
empirical observations and proper research have shown mixed results when it
comes to achieving desired results, we argue that the problem is the quality of
the feedback and the way it is offered and not its mere existence.</p>



<p>Git Analytics tools, such as Waydev, <a href="https://waydev.co/gitprime-vs-waydev-vs-code-climate/">Gitprime Pluralsight Flow, and Code Climate</a>
provide data so that engineering managers can offer valuable feedback to their
engineers.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>What
is feedback </strong></h3>



<p>Feedback is information about a task,
behavior, or learning process given to help the person at the receiving end
improve future outcomes. Feedback should not be seen as a tool to humiliate,
punish, or embarrass. For feedback to happen, at least two people are needed —
the person doing the task or displaying the behavior and the person observing
and reacting. Since the observer is human, the product of her observation is
always subjective to a certain extent — an opinion, the observers&#8217; perspective,
and not an undeniable reality.</p>



<p>Even if it does lack absolute objectivity
and seems fraught with distortions caused by egos or personal preferences and
perspectives, feedback is a necessary tool in learning. If we accept the
&#8220;we don&#8217;t know what we don&#8217;t know&#8221; axiom, it follows that no learning
and improvement can happen unless something or someone points out what we are
missing, what we are doing wrong, and what we can do differently so that we can
reach better results.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Why
feedback matters</strong></h3>



<p>While many people are capable of learning
from their mistakes, a lot of time, effort, and resources can be spared with
the right input from others. This is especially valuable for engineering
managers and leaders — in the words of the Harvard Management School Professor,
Robert Kaplan, leaders should be going out of their way to ask for feedback,
both from the upper ranks and their own teams, as a way of keeping themselves
in check and make sure that they keep learning and growing.</p>



<p>&#8220;I haven&#8217;t met a leader yet that can
be a great leader of a group all by themselves. This [inviting feedback]
engages your people. And for some people, they say, &#8216;But it makes me look
vulnerable. It makes me look weak.&#8217; I would argue the opposite. It makes you
look strong. It is not a weakness to ask a question or seek advice. I would
argue the most insecure people are the ones who do not do that,&#8221; says
Kaplan.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>How
and when to give feedback</strong></h3>



<p>For any feedback to have a chance of
being accepted and incorporated, it needs to be asked for or welcomed. Whether
it comes from a genuine desire to grow as a professional or individual or from
the more practical realization that in a corporate setting, one needs to listen
and adapt to grow. Openness to accept feedback is crucial. No matter how
well-intentioned, no piece of feedback will ever have any impact if the
receiver does not accept it. As an engineering manager, there are a few things
you can do to help improve the chances that team members will accept your feedback.</p>



<p><strong>Don&#8217;t
wait until it&#8217;s too late</strong>. Use regular one-to-ones to
stay on top of issues that team members might be struggling with and to give
and ask for feedback but don&#8217;t limit yourself to that. Feedback needs to be
given within a day or two of noticing an action or behavior that would benefit
from being discussed. If you miss that time frame, the event can be distorted
by memory or classified as irrelevant. You can benchmark engineering
performance on a daily basis by checking the Daily Update feature that Waydev
provides.﻿</p>



<p><strong>Be
specific</strong> and focus on how someone can improve instead
of on what they are doing wrong. General feedback like &#8220;you always&#8221;
or &#8220;you never&#8221; rarely achieves anything. Instead, point out the facts
and the impact of their action or behavior. If you&#8217;re having a conversation
with an engineer that is always late for team meetings, there is no point in
saying, &#8220;You never arrive on time.&#8221; Try something more along the
lines of &#8220;This was the third time in a row that you&#8217;ve missed half of the
weekly meeting. Because of that, you&#8217;ve missed important updates shared by
other members of the team. Now, they will each have to take time out of their
schedule to brief you.&#8221; Git Analytics tools, such as Waydev, help you be
more specific, by providing you with concrete metrics regarding your engineers&#8217;
performance.﻿</p>



<p><strong>Be
aware of mood memory</strong>, or that people will remember how
you&#8217;ve made them feel. Humans are wired to notice and focus on negative
feedback, so you need to know that team members will dwell on that and barely
recall the positive feedback you give them. In the past, engineering managers
have tried to offset that imbalance by using the now much despised
&#8220;feedback sandwich&#8221; where a piece of negative feedback was forced
between two &#8220;slices&#8221; of positive feedback. The problem was that
people could see right through the trick and ended up rejecting everything and
resenting the person giving it.</p>



<p>What would help when having to give
negative feedback is to be aware of your tone, keeping it informal and empathetic
so that the person receiving the feedback does not feel threatened. People&#8217;s
sensitivity and reactions to feedback vary immensely and ignoring that reality
will not help anyone. Even more importantly, make sure you ask questions and
listen actively and intently. This will give the other person a chance to tell
their side of the story. It will also help you see what suggestions or advice
to provide them with to help them do better in the future. You might even
realize that you are actually on the same page because they know exactly what
they did wrong and how to avoid doing it again.</p>



<p><strong>Never
miss an opportunity to give positive feedback.</strong> In a
highly functioning team, the appropriate ratio of positive to negative feedback
is 6 to 1. That said, make sure that you don&#8217;t force it to comply with the
ratio. People are capable of seeing through insincere, forced positive
feedback. Also, compliment your engineers on things that matter to them —
giving kudos to a team member for getting right a piece of basic code might
have the opposite effect, and you might end up offending them. To help you with
that, Waydev provides a complete overview of your engineers&#8217; activity, enabling
you to visualize healthy work patterns and spot achievements worth praising.﻿</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading"><strong>Why
and how to ask for feedback</strong></h3>



<p>Engineering managers and leaders can (and
should) also ask for feedback from their teams. Going back to admitting that we
don&#8217;t know what we don&#8217;t know, it&#8217;s hard to improve when we don&#8217;t know what our
blind spots are. While some of your engineers will be more reluctant to share
feedback, if they see that you are sincerely looking for suggestions on how to
improve and that you are acting on the feedback you receive, this will prove
very useful — you will be spared errors that can be avoided by incorporating
other perspectives. It will help you build relationships based on trust,
honesty, and mutual support with your team. </p>



<p>At Waydev, we make a point of reminding
ourselves that incorporating as many points of view as possible when making a
decision or when looking at a problem is key to getting things right. We value
and count on the feedback provided by our clients as a way of continuously
making our product better and making sure that it serves our clients&#8217; real
needs. Also, the product we&#8217;ve built helps engineering leaders use concrete
data to understand their engineers better and drive more meaningful
conversations about what they are working on.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://budgetgourmetmom.com/feedback-is-still-a-valuable-tool-for-engineering-managers/">Feedback is Still a Valuable Tool for Engineering Managers</a> appeared first on <a href="https://budgetgourmetmom.com">Budget Gourmet Mom</a>.</p>
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