5 Ways to Offer Agents Better Feedback

Brokers and team leaders can use these tips for delivering constructive feedback with tact and authority.





As a broker-owner or team leader, your agents look to you for
leadership and guidance. Offering sales associates constructive feedback
is an important way to share your vision and help them improve their
skillset.Here are five tips to help you provide advice that associate brokers,
agents, and team members can use to reach their sales goals. Chances
are these tips will lead to more trusting relationships among those in
your office and greater productivity for everyone.

  • Check your biases. Before you even consider offering
    feedback, be honest with yourself about your own biases. All of us have
    different points of view, so make sure your viewpoints are not based in
    sexism, racism or ableism. Masala Dukuly, director of learning and
    development with LifeLabs Learning, says, “We are all biased…you
    can be a well-meaning, good human being and still be biased.” Don’t
    project your biases onto other people. Make feedback a dialogue. Create a conversation with your
    agents that begins with asking them to “consent” or “opt in” to
    receiving feedback. Approach them by saying something like, “I’d like us
    to take some time together to talk about ways to work with new
    prospects. Is that okay with you?” By asking for permission, you are
    creating a situation that gives her or him room to respond, participant
    in the feedback, and learn rather than become defensive or feel “on the
    spot.”Make your feedback specific and objective. Offer one or two
    examples in your conversation. Don’t generalize or use vague language.
    Instead of saying, “You seem unengaged,” say, “It’s important to me that
    all of our team members respond to client messages, regardless of
    whether the messages are phone calls, emails or texts, within five
    minutes of receiving them during our business hours.”Make your feedback central to the situation at hand. Let’s
    say the team member was late to an important sales meeting. You might
    say something like, “Because you were late to the team meeting
    yesterday, the team lost momentum developing our strategy going forward
    with a prospect we’ve been hoping to land as a client. I want to
    encourage you to arrive on time and prepared.”Welcome the opportunity to receive feedback from your agents.
    Even though it can feel hard or uncomfortable, when you approach
    feedback as dialogue at your company, chances are that everyone
    involved—including you—will be able to learn and improve from the
    experience. We have no doubt that your agents will share feedback with
    you that will help you improve your communications and leadership
    skills. Perhaps their feedback will also help you become more clear,
    specific, and effective in your constructive criticism.
  • Providing feedback should a two-way street that can be a win-win situation for everyone in the office.

    National Association of REALTORS®
    Reprinted with permission