Ask Before You Give Feedback
Unrequested advice lands as criticism. A five-word question turns it into a gift.
You see the thing your friend can't see. The pattern in their dating life, the tell in their pitch, the way they keep undercutting themselves. And you want to help, so you just say it.
But feedback that lands on someone who didn't ask for it feels like an ambush. The same words, invited, feel like care.
Consent changes everything
When you ask first, you hand them the controls. They can say not now. And when they say yes, they've already leaned in — they're listening for help, not bracing for attack.
Advice nobody asked for is just criticism wearing a nicer coat.
Ask, then wait
Say, "I have a thought about that — want to hear it?" Keep it light and genuinely optional.
If they pass, drop it without a sulk. A pressured yes isn't a yes.
Once they've opened the door, skip the throat-clearing and say the real thing plainly.
- Lead with the relationship before the hard truth.
- Be specific — point at the moment, not the person.
- End with a question: "How does that land?"
- Kind and honest aren't a trade-off; they're a technique.
- Before advising, ask "Want a thought on this?" — let them say no.
- Catch yourself hinting and swap it for one plain sentence stating what you want.
- When you apologize, stop talking before the word "but."
- Douglas Stone and Sheila Heen. Thanks for the Feedback — Viking (2014, on how receivers control whether feedback is heard)