Feedback at work - Maxman [EN]
Inspirations

Feedback at work

Martina Matrtajová
Feedback at work

How to handle feedback in difficult conversations with clarity and respect (even when emotions run high)

Feedback is one of the most searched and most needed leadership skills. Because it directly impacts performance, trust, and culture. Yet giving feedback becomes truly challenging in difficult conversations: when emotions rise, egos get triggered, and the stakes are high.

Managers often look for practical answers to questions like:

01

How to give feedback to an employee (without damaging motivation)

02

How to give constructive feedback that leads to behavior change

03

How to deliver negative feedback professionally

04

How to handle difficult conversations at work

05

How to address poor behavior from a high performer

06

How to manage defensiveness during feedback

This is exactly where feedback breaks down—and where leadership matters most.

Why feedback conversations fail (common mistakes in hard conversations)

In high-stakes situations, feedback often becomes ineffective or counterproductive due to:
°

Mixing facts with assumptions and judgments

Labels (“you’re arrogant”, “you’re careless”) trigger defensiveness.

°

Vague feedback instead of specific, observable behavior

People can’t change what they can’t clearly see.

°

Avoiding the real issue

And focusing on “safe” topics.  The conversation feels polite, but nothing improves.

°

Feedback overload (too much at once)

The receiver remembers the emotion, not the message.

°

Too little, too late

Delayed feedback increases tension and reduces trust.

°

Underestimating ego and self-protection mechanisms

People protect identity and status—often automatically.

A practical structure for giving feedback (that protects both clarity and trust)

A reliable way to improve feedback skills is to use a simple structure that keeps conversations grounded:
  • Opening: purpose and intent (improvement, alignment, support)
  • Behavior: observable facts (what happened, when, what was said/done)
  • Impact: effect on team, client, results, collaboration
  • Closure: agreement on next steps, expectations, and support
This structure helps you deliver clear, specific, constructive feedback—without turning it into a personal attack.

How to deal with defensiveness, emotions, and resistance

n difficult feedback conversations, defensive reactions are normal:
  • denial (“that’s not true”)
  • justification (“I had to”)
  • counterattack (“you do the same”)
  • shutdown or silence
The goal is not to “win” the conversation. The goal is to keep it respectful and productive: return to facts, name impact, and guide the discussion toward a clear next step.

Interactive MBA taster session: feedback in difficult situations (Zoom)

This webinar is a practical preview of the Managerial Feedback module within MBA – Leadership and People Management—designed as hands-on learning, not a lecture.
Expect:
  • short, focused theory inputs
  • AI-supported role play in realistic managerial scenarios
  • breakout discussions and shared reflection
  • practical workplace examples
  • interactive elements and quick quizzes
If you want to improve your feedback skills, handle difficult conversations with confidence, and address sensitive topics without damaging trust—this session is a strong practical start.
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Consultants

Feedback in difficult situations

(webinar)

Turn difficult feedback conversations into moments of impact, clarity, and leadership. Giving feedback is easy—until it really matters. When emotions rise, egos get triggered, and the stakes are high, even experienced managers hesitate, soften the message, or avoid the conversation altogether. This MBA taster session gives you a practical glimpse into how to handle feedback in difficult situations—without overpromising quick fixes or one-size-fits-all formulas. When we say difficult situations…

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