Most of us have difficulty with negative feedback. We tend to become angry, defensive, or hurt when people offer negative feedback. We blame the bearer of the information. Many leaders avoid it altogether, because it strikes at one of our most prized possessions--our image of self. We like to see ourselves as effective, skilled, and capable both with people and task. Negative feedback is an opportunity that should be welcomed and valued as a great gift.
It is unlikely we can prevent ourselves from experiencing negative emotion when people give us negative feedback, yet we need to welcome it anyway. Negative information is better than no information. If my people are unhappy, if my customers are unhappy, or if those closest to me are unhappy--it is better that I know than not know. At least if I know I can do something about it.
In fact, as leaders we should welcome negative feedback and even encourage it. On one hand negative feedback is potentially hurtful and upsetting. On the other hand it is an opportunity. Complaints and grievances against us are opportunities to reflect, clarify who we are, and to envision something new and better.
Here are some ideas on how to turn negative information into positive opportunities:
1. Accept it. This is how others see you. It is not wrong or right; bad or good; it just is. Refuse to take it personally. It is information. How do you want to best use this information to help others, yourself, and your organization (or family)?
2. Become a listener. Invite information from those who have spoken negatively without defending yourself. Let your focus be to care about their well-being and to understand them fully. Determine what they need from you. Are you seeing them as important? Are you giving value to their needs and concerns? This doesn't mean agreeing with them or satisfying all of their wants. It means you see them as important and you value them.
3. Examine the tone that you set. Are you approachable? Are people comfortable talking to you? This will help people to offer potentially negative information to you so you can act upon it. If you are not approachable, people will talk to others about you, but they not express directly to you.
4. Are you seeing people in terms of their faults or in terms of their needs? If you are a fault finder you will tend to dismiss feedback from others as unimportant. If you are responsive to the needs of others, you will see their feedback as important information. Your ability to care about and understand others is an invitation for them to be concerned for you. They will want to be helpful to you.
Excellent leadership must always be reflective. As leaders, we must ask ourselves: "How am I doing? How are the people I affect doing? Am I consistently creating a positive and healthy environment?" This kind of reflection causes us to grow and reach higher levels of success. Reflection will inevitably involve the reception of some negative feedback.
I coached a senior executive who was having some difficulty with his staff. I used a 360 degree assessment to get feedback from his employees, colleagues, and the CEO. He was horrified at the results. People painted a picture of him that was selfish and not responsive to others. This man had high standards and was known as a kind and generous person in his personal life. The negative feedback served as a wake up call. He was thankful for this gift of negative feedback and he immediately began changing his way of being with people at work.
Learning isn't always painful. We learn from our successes too. My senior executive found immediate successes when he changed his way of being. People became more helpful and responsive to him. His colleagues greatly respected his willingness to receive and act upon the feedback.
When people criticize or complain about us it is best to face it without defense, and take action to help them and to improve our effectiveness. Negative feedback is not always accurate, but whether it is accurate or not, dealing with it honestly is an opportunity we don't want to miss.
Homeostasis And Negative Feedback
Your eBay feedback is your biggest eBay selling tool bar none. If you have bad eBay feedback you will struggle to make sales and your eBay business will suffer. Therefore you must protect your eBay feedback as much as possible. Here are 10 tips that will help you maintain an excellent feedback rating.
1. Always be polite in all correspondence. This goes without saying, always treat your customers with respect and give them a pleasant buying experience. By doing so you may gain a customer for life.
2. Avoid excessive shipping charges. If you charge $10 shipping for an item and the cost is only $3 you are leaving yourself open to negative feedback.
3. Mail your items as soon as possible. Don't wait till the end of the week. Taking too long to deliver your goods means you are risking your feedback. You should always aim to have items packaged and sent within 48 hours of payment.
4. Make sure your item description is accurate. Don't say your item is as good as new if it's not. This is probably the most common reason for negative feedback.
5. Answer emails promptly. Don't wait days and days to answer any queries. This only makes your customer frustrated and this can result in a negative comment.
6. List any flaws your item has. If the item you are selling has a scratch or mark say so or you could be left a negative comment for a poor item description.
7. Don't retaliate to awkward customers. Sometimes you may get an awkward or offensive customer, that's life. Don't retaliate, just deal with their query in a polite and professional manner. This usually ends in the customer apologising and excellent feedback follows.
8. Accept returns. If a customer is not happy with your product for whatever reason allow them to return the item and refund their purchase minus shipping fees. You can then cancel the transaction through eBay and you will get your fees returned and therefore wont be out of pocket. This leaves you free to relist the item with your feedback intact.
9. Package your items carefully. If you are selling delicate items make sure they are packaged carefully with plenty of protection, the last thing you want is your customer to receive damaged goods.
10. Don't leave feedback first. If you do you are leaving yourself open to negative comments. A happy customer will always leave feedback first, if you leave feedback first you will learn the hard way, trust me.
Remember! Your customer is a real living person. I think sometimes people forget this, try to make the whole buying experience as easy and pleasant as possible. Your customers are the lifeblood of your eBay business and your number one goal should be to make them happy. This can only result in excellent feedback and in turn success for your eBay business.
Both William Frank Diedrich & John Thornhill are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
William Frank Diedrich has sinced written about articles on various topics from Telemarketing, Marketing and How to Sell on Ebay. William Frank Diedrich is a speaker, executive coach, and the author of Beyond Blaming: Unleashing Power and Passion in People and Organizations. William offers keynotes and workshops on leadership and moving beyond blaming. William also offers an inexpen. William Frank Diedrich's top article generates over 22200 views. to your Favourites.
John Thornhill has sinced written about articles on various topics from Kids and Teens, Site Promotion and Internet Marketing. John Thornhill trades on eBay under the username planetsms and earns over $1000 per week on eBay on autopilot. To see how he does it visit his eBay store at
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