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22 Oct 25

Make Feedback an Integral Part of your “Way of Working”

In a time when customer expectations are changing rapidly and employee engagement is becoming increasingly important, organizations are looking for ways to work in a truly customer- and people-oriented manner. A powerful CX/EX feedback platform is not a luxury in this context, but a necessity. Yet we often see that feedback ends up in dashboards that only management looks at – while the greatest opportunity lies in activating teams on the work floor.
Make Feedback an Integral Part of your “Way of Working”

Step 1: Build your Optimal Measurement House

A good measurement house starts with clarity on what you want to know and why. Focus on:

  • Customer journey and employee journey moments: Think of onboarding, service contact, departure moment.
  • Different perspectives: Combine quantitative (NPS, eNPS, CSAT) with qualitative feedback from customer or employee stories.
  • Rhythm and relevance: Measure frequently enough to recognize patterns, but ensure it fits with work practices.

🎯 Tip: Think in terms of “action-oriented feedback”: Which insights help teams act differently tomorrow?

Step 2: Activate Teams – from Feedback to Action

Ensure that feedback is not just something for headquarters, but that every team understands: this is about us, and we can do something with it.

  • Translate insights into the team’s context: Use concrete customer and employee quotes in team meetings.
  • Give teams ownership: Let them choose and monitor improvement actions themselves. Consider securing action plans through short feedback stand-ups, for example.
  • Train team leaders in conversation techniques: Making feedback discussable requires skills – invest in them.

🧩 Tip: Use storytelling – have colleagues share what they’ve changed based on feedback.

Step 3: Make Feedback Part of your “Way of Working”

Feedback should not be a project, but part of the daily rhythm:

  • Integrate into meeting structures: Consider a fixed feedback moment in the weekly meeting, discussing the latest customer stories.
  • Link feedback to goals/KPIs: For example, customer impact as a fixed agenda item in quarterly reviews.
  • Celebrate successes: Show how feedback leads to improvement – this motivates and strengthens the feedback culture.

🌟 Organizations that do this well notice: more engaged employees, more satisfied customers, and faster adjustments in operations.

Finally

Do you want to truly build a customer-oriented organization? Then start with the people who make the difference: your employees. Put their insights at the center, give them the tools and space to act, and build a culture where feedback is the engine of continuous improvement.

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