Why I Am Writing This
Founders spend enormous energy learning how to give feedback to their teams. What to say, how to say it, when to say it. It is a skill they take seriously.
But the ability to receive feedback well is almost never discussed in the same breath. And yet it is the one that determines how fast a founder grows, how honest their team will ever be with them, and whether the company gets better information or just comfortable information.
This week: Why receiving feedback is harder than giving it, what gets in the way, and how to build the skill that makes everything else accelerate.
He had built a culture where feedback flowed freely, or so he believed. His team gave each other feedback in retros. They ran 360s twice a year. He had even hired a coach to help with this. What no one had told him was that they had stopped giving feedback to him specifically, around eighteen months ago.
When I asked his team what had changed, the answer was consistent across four different people. Not that he got defensive. Not that he argued. But that when he received feedback, something visibly shifted in the room. A tightening. A brief silence before he responded. And over time, people had learned to read that signal and adjust what they said accordingly.
He was not getting dishonest feedback. He was getting edited feedback. The version his team had decided was safe to give him. And he had no idea, because from where he sat, the feedback culture looked healthy.
Receiving feedback well is genuinely difficult for founders, and the difficulty is not a character flaw. It is structural. Founders carry the weight of the vision. Their identity is tied to the company in a way most people's is not. So feedback about the company, or about how they are showing up, does not land the way it might for someone with cleaner separation between themselves and their work. It lands closer to the bone.
The second thing that makes it hard is that founders are usually the most capable person in many of the rooms they are in. They have often been right more than they have been wrong. That track record creates a subtle bias: the instinct to evaluate incoming feedback against their existing view, rather than to genuinely receive it first.
The problem is not that founders reject feedback. Most are too self-aware for that. The problem is that they receive it in a way that tells the giver it was not entirely welcome. And that signal travels fast.
Once a team decides that certain feedback is not safe to give, you cannot un-ring that bell by asking them to be more honest. You have to change what happens in the room when honesty arrives.
There was a period when I was confident I was open to feedback. I asked for it directly. I told people around me to be honest. And I genuinely believed I was receiving it well.
What I eventually understood is that there is a difference between tolerating feedback and actually being changed by it. I was tolerating it. I was listening, thanking people, and then filing it away. The response was gracious. The integration was minimal.
The shift came when someone I trusted said, very plainly, that they had noticed I tended to respond to feedback with context. With explanation. And that the explanation, however valid, had the effect of closing the conversation rather than opening it.
That one observation changed how I received feedback more than anything else I had read or heard on the subject. Not because it was delivered well. Because I actually let it land.
1
Receive before you respond
The instinct to respond to feedback immediately is almost always the wrong move. Not because the response is wrong, but because the speed of it signals that you were processing the feedback while it was being given rather than after. The most powerful thing you can do when someone gives you feedback is to say nothing for a few seconds, then ask one question that shows you are still curious. That pause changes what the other person believes is possible to say to you.
2
Separate the signal from the delivery
Feedback is rarely delivered perfectly. It comes wrapped in the other person's discomfort, their relationship with you, their own communication style. The founders who grow fastest are the ones who can extract the useful signal even from feedback that is poorly framed or emotionally loaded. If you only receive feedback when it arrives well, you will miss most of the feedback that matters.
3
Close the loop visibly
The single best signal you can send that feedback is welcome is to come back to the person who gave it and tell them what you did with it. Not a thank you. A specific update. "You said this last month. Here is what I changed and here is what I am still working on." That loop tells people that giving you feedback has a real effect. And when people believe their feedback has an effect, they give you better feedback.
Satya Nadella's transformation of Microsoft is one of the most studied leadership turnarounds of the last decade. One of the things he has spoken about most consistently is the shift from a culture of knowing to a culture of learning. He describes his own practice of listening without defending, of sitting with discomfort when he hears something he does not want to hear, and of treating feedback as data rather than as verdict. The company that resulted, one that went from stagnant to one of the most valuable in the world, reflects a leader who genuinely changed how he received information.
The point is not that receiving feedback well caused Microsoft's growth. The point is that a leader who cannot receive feedback accurately will eventually be running on incomplete information. And the decisions that come from incomplete information compound over time.
This Week's Reflection
Think of the last time someone gave you feedback that you found difficult to hear. What did you do in the moment after they finished? And is there any chance the people closest to you are editing what they say to you, based on what they have learned is safe?
The founder who grows fastest is almost never the one who gives the most precise feedback. It is the one who has built the kind of relationship with the people around them where the most honest information keeps flowing in, even when it is uncomfortable.
That is not a personality trait. It is a practice. And it starts with what you do in the thirty seconds after someone says something you did not want to hear.
See you Wednesday.
Riddhi
Founder, VisionVoyage
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