Take a closer look: You may be unintentionally cutting yourself off from the honest feedback you want to hear.

I was on the phone with a CEO the other week. He wanted my advice on how he could cultivate a more open, transparent company culture for his team.
This CEO seemed to be already doing a lot of the right things. He held monthly all-hands meetings to get everyone on the same page. He also regularly asked questions to his employees about what could be better in the company.
However, when I recommended one question that he ask his employees, he was a bit taken aback.
âYou want me to ask my team: â Are there any benefits we donât offer that you think we should? â Hmm, I dunno, Claire,â he told me.
This CEO assured me that he welcomed and valued feedback from employees. But asking about company benefits? And asking about them so publicly? He started to feel nervous about it.
âI donât want the feedback to be a distraction,â he shared. âThereâs so much we already do around benefitsâââI think this could set the wrong expectations and derail people from getting their work done.â
He continued:
âAnd, I donât think weâre ready to act on that feedback. If we ask that question, it implies we need to implement something. But it might not be cost-effective. If we canât do it, I donât want to let people down.â
I get it. Iâm a CEO myself. No CEO wants her employees to be distracted. No CEO wants to make false promises.
Hereâs the reality, though: If you dig deeper, those two statements are actually excuses that are keeping you from building the open, transparent company culture youâre keen on.
Letâs take a look.
Excuse #1: âI donât want feedback to be a distraction.â
Any feedback your employee might have already existed, whether or not you choose to ask about it. If someone has an idea to improve company benefits, thatâs an idea that theyâre already thinking about in their heads. So if you donât ask about itâââif you let that feedback sit and festerâââit becomes a distraction. The longer you ignore it, the longer you donât ask about it, the greater the distraction balloons. The way to nip the distraction in the bud is to ask about it. When you ask a question like, â Are there any benefits we donât offer that you think we should?â, you have an opportunity to clear the air, and help an employee feel heard. Asking for feedback isnât the distractionâââpretending that your employees donât have feedback is.
Excuse #2: âIâm not ready to act on feedback.â
Popular management wisdom tells you, âYou shouldnât ask for feedback unless youâre ready to act on it.â Sure, if you donât do something with the feedback, youâll look like youâre not following through on your word. But acting on feedback doesnât necessarily mean implementing the actual piece of feedback. You can thank the person who gave you the feedback. You can explain why youâre not enacting the feedback, and provide context for the decision. Both routes show youâre listening, and that you value your employeesâ feedback. Oftentimes, that recognition and explanation are all an employee is looking for. Theyâll take notice.
If youâve ever caught your own managerâââor yourselfâââsaying the above two excuses, then hereâs my tip: Stop.
While you may mean well, youâre hindering yourself from creating the open, transparent company culture youâve always wanted.
đ Okay, so have you put the excuses aside? Are you ready to get honest feedback from your team? If so, you’ll want to use our Culture Questions in Know Your Team. These regular, periodic questions about your team’s culture will help you uncover insights you’ve never known before â and we give you hundreds of researched questions to do this. Try Know Your Team and our Culture Questions today.
This article was originally published for Inc.com.
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