To ask for feedback well, get specific and future-focused: pick one skill or situation you want to improve, choose a few people who actually see your work, and ask what you could do better next time rather than “how am I doing.” That small reframe is what turns a polite “you’re doing great” into something you can actually use.
Most feedback requests fail before they’re answered, because the question itself invites a non-answer. Get the sequence right and people tell you things they’d otherwise keep to themselves.
How to ask for feedback that’s actually useful
The order matters here — each step makes the next one work. Skip straight to “any feedback for me?” and you’ll get the shrug you’re trying to avoid.
1. Decide what you actually want feedback on
Before you ask anyone, narrow it. “How am I doing?” is not a feedback request — it’s too big to answer honestly, so people default to reassurance. Pick one concrete thing: how you run meetings, the clarity of your last report, how you came across in that client call. The narrower the target, the more specific and usable the answer, and the easier it is for the other person to say something real. Knowing which areas to aim at is its own small skill, and getting a read on your skills first can tell you where to point the question.
2. Choose the right people to ask
Pick a few people who genuinely see the work you’re asking about — not whoever is easiest to corner. A useful mix is one or two who’ll be supportive and one or two who’ll be straight with you, because you want the encouraging read and the uncomfortable one. Your manager is an obvious source, but peers and people you collaborate with often see things a manager never witnesses. Three or four thoughtful sources beat a survey of everyone. Timing matters as much as the roster: ask soon after the thing you care about — a project wrapping, a presentation, a difficult call — while the specifics are still fresh, rather than banking it all for a once-a-year review when nobody remembers the details that would have made the advice concrete.
3. Ask for advice, not feedback
This is the highest-leverage move, and it’s backed by research. A Harvard Business School study found that when you ask people for advice rather than feedback, you get markedly more useful input — across their studies, advice-givers pointed to 34% more areas to improve and offered 56% more concrete ways to do it. The reason is that “feedback” pulls people toward judging your past, which feels awkward, so they soften it; “advice” points them at your future, which feels helpful, so they open up. Swap “Can you give me feedback?” for “What’s one thing you’d suggest I do differently next time?“
4. Keep it specific and future-focused
Build on that by aiming every question forward. Leadership coach Marshall Goldsmith calls this approach “feedforward”: instead of dissecting what went wrong, you ask for a couple of suggestions for next time — “what would make my next presentation sharper?” It’s easier to give and far easier to hear, because no one has to deliver a verdict. Add follow-ups that force concreteness: “can you give me a specific example?” keeps the conversation out of vague-reassurance territory.
5. Make it safe to tell you the truth
People only say the honest thing if they trust it won’t cost them or blow up into a debate. Signal that you genuinely want the real version, and then — this is the hard part — when it comes, don’t defend, explain, or argue. In Goldsmith’s method the only allowed response is “thank you,” precisely because the moment you push back, you teach the person never to be candid with you again. You can decide later what to act on; in the moment, your job is to make honesty cheap.
6. Close the loop and act on one thing
Feedback you collect and ignore quietly trains people to stop bothering. So pick one thing from what you heard, act on it visibly, and circle back: “you mentioned my updates were hard to follow — I’ve restructured them, is this clearer?” That single loop does more for your reputation than the asking itself, because it proves the request was sincere and makes the next person far more willing to be honest with you. Skip it, and the cost is quiet but real: people conclude their candor went nowhere, and the next time you ask, you’re back to the polite shrug you were trying to escape.
What the best feedback-seekers are actually doing
Step back from the script and the pattern is clear: asking well isn’t about the perfect question, it’s about a handful of underlying habits that make other people comfortable being honest with you.
Building Self-Awareness is the engine of all of it. A real part of knowing yourself is going out and getting the information you can’t see from the inside — proactively seeking specific, future-focused input and then actually reflecting on it, rather than waiting for an annual review to tell you something you could have learned months earlier. Asking for feedback is self-awareness in its most active form.
Communication is what makes the ask land. How you frame the question, whether you listen without interrupting or jumping to defend yourself, and whether you can make the other person feel their honesty is welcome — these are the difference between a question that gets a real answer and one that gets a polite deflection. The same desire-to-understand that drives good listening drives a good ask.
Working with Your Manager is where a lot of this plays out, and handling it well shifts the whole relationship. Asking your manager for input rather than waiting to be evaluated, coming to one-on-ones with specific questions, and being visibly keen to improve signals that you’re coachable — which tends to come back to you in trust, better assignments, and a stronger review.
Asking well, communicating it clearly, and working with your manager are three of the twelve work skills the framework treats as buildable rather than fixed — and the test gives you a clear starting read on where each of yours sits right now, so you know what’s most worth raising in your next conversation.
If you’ve ever left a review wishing you’d asked one sharper question, you already feel the gap this closes. The encouraging part is that asking well is a habit, not a personality — you can get good at it without becoming someone who fishes for compliments. And it tends to compound quietly: the people who keep improving are usually the ones still asking long after everyone else has stopped. That you’re reading about how to ask, instead of waiting to be told, is already the part most people skip.
Get your own baseline first
Before you go asking everyone around you, it’s worth having one honest read on yourself to anchor the questions. The free Work Skills Test is a short self-assessment that scores you across all twelve work skills — including the self-awareness, communication, and manager-handling habits that good feedback-seeking runs on — and shows you which ones are most worth asking about.
Free, and it takes about 7 minutes.
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