Posting this series of blogs scared me a bit. The value of using pure informational feedback* over other forms of feedback almost always triggers an emotional response. Over the past five years, respected colleagues have tolerated my position, refused to consider it, or outright disagreed with it for philosophical reasons. However, I stand firm in the knowledge that personalized feedback* such as praising and disapproval are inferior forms of feedback that promote suboptimal motivation at best and are potentially damaging at worst.
- Carrots are external motivators designed to entice people to do what you want them to do for the sake of a tangible or intangible reward.
- Sticks are external motivators designed to pressure people to do what you want them to do through fear, guilt, shame, or to avoid disappointing others.
- In the spectrum of motivation, both of these types of motivation are suboptimal. The compelling science of motivation shows that neither carrots nor sticks generate the sustainable energy required for people to achieve long-term goals and sustain high performance.
Given what we know from the science of motivation, lets look at why leaders defend personalized feedback in the form of carrots and sticks:
- Leaders misinterpret the word "works." Enticing or pressuring people to perform may "work" to get short-term results, but it rarely works if you're looking for long-term gains. Even if you get the results you want in the moment using carrot and stick feedback, inevitably, the quality of people's work suffers--and so does the quality of their life at work. Carrot and stick feedback "works" if you don't care about the quality of people's output or their experience.
Your job as a leader is to develop people. Your role is to guide them from enthusiastic beginner to self-reliant achiever. How can you do this if they are dependent on your opinion, blessing, validation, or approval? Pure informational feedback gives people the information they need when they need it so they can learn to self-evaluate and make necessary corrections to pursue goals they've agreed to and are invested in achieving.
You can wean people from their need for your approval by using pure feedback to develop people's capacity for self-evaluation and correction.
When people depend on your praising to validate their behavior, what happens when you aren't there to praise them, fail to notice, or for some reason just don't do it? Your lack of praising may then be experienced as rejection, shame, guilt, or regret. Ironically, the praising you hoped would bolster confidence or encourage future behavior generates feelings of ill-being.
On the other hand, pure feedback provides people with a healthy alternative: the information they need to change, improve, or maintain their behavior with a sense of autonomy, relatedness, and competence.
Pure feedback gives people the autonomy to accept the feedback and self-correct--or, the autonomy to not accept the feedback and face the implications. Pure feedback can't be used to manipulate behavior so a deepened sense of relatedness can be achieved in a relationship. Pure feedback also provides a greater chance of people acting on the feedback for reasons they find meaningful and compelling. People develop a sense of competence as they experience the connection between effort and outcomes, and hard work and results.
I believe these four potential reasons may be why leaders struggle to let go of their penchant for personalized feedback in favor of pure informational feedback, but am curious what you think.
We started with the question: "Is my feedback motivating?" The answer to that question is always "Yes." Better questions to ask yourself are: "Is my feedback optimally motivating?" "Does my feedback give people the best chance of growing, learning, and developing?" The answer is "Yes" if you use pure informational feedback to ensure your people flourish--and that they put your feedback into action to deliver high-quality, sustainable results that they, you, and your organization seek.
Notes:
- You followed all five steps outlined in our sales process in the first 30 minutes with the client.
- You are on target with your goals according to the action plan we agreed to in your performance plan.
- You hit one of the five steps outlined in our sales process during the first 30 minutes with the client, another one by the end of the call. Three of the five steps were not covered.
- You are two weeks behind with your goals according to the action plan we agreed to in your performance plan.
- I'm so proud of you for following all five steps in our sales process during the client call.
- I'm pleased with your progress on the goals agreed to in your performance plan.
- I wish you had prepared better for the sales call--only two of the five steps were followed.
- I'm disappointed--you are two weeks behind on your goals.