Whether in your personal or professional life, chances are you will find yourself in a situation where you need to give someone challenging feedback. You need to tell them they are doing something wrong, but you don’t want them to take it personally, get defensive, or shut down.

So, how do you make negative feedback feel positive and constructive?

1. Protect The Ego (Location Matters)

This is rule number one. Never give negative feedback in public.

One of the worst things you can do is critique someone in front of their peers. The moment you do that, their ego takes a hit. They stop listening to what you are saying because they are too busy defending who they are.

Always pull them aside and deliver the feedback in a private, safe space.

2. The Sandwich Technique (With a Twist)

When I give feedback, I use a very simple framework called the Sandwich Technique. It’s not complicated at all, but it works.

  • The Top Bun (Positive): Start with a compliment or validation to lower their defenses.
  • The Meat (Constructive): deliver the feedback/critique.
  • The Bottom Bun (Positive): End with encouragement.

But here is where most people fail. They get the structure right, but they get the delivery wrong.

The Secret Sandwich Ingredient: Tonality

Most leaders do this: They start nicely: “Hey Ken, you did amazing asking those questions…” Then, they immediately switch their voice to “Serious Boss Mode”: “…BUT, you really need to improve this.”

You cannot switch tonality.

If you switch from a “warm” voice to a “cold” voice, the other person feels the trap and your message comes off insincere. 

You must keep that caring tonality moving forward through the entire conversation.

Summary

Often, when people give feedback, they strip away all emotion and become robotic. 

But if you focus on providing that feedback in a tone that says: “I care about you” – the recipient will be much more likely to accept your critique.