Performance feedback coaching fails when leaders focus on the message instead of the human receiving it.
Different employees bring different levels of:
- Competence
- Interpersonal skill
- Motivation
- Personality
- Readiness for change
- Learning and communication style
- Cultural, generational, and neurodiversity factors
Yet most feedback models treat everyone the same.
This is why leaders find themselves repeating the same conversation with no progress.
It is rarely a clarity issue — it is a mismatch between the feedback approach and the person receiving it.
Performance Feedback Coaching by Employee Type
High skill + high interpersonal competence
Use feedforward coaching to deepen strengths and accelerate growth.
Low skill + high interpersonal competence
Provide clear expectations, structure, and skill-building.
High skill + low interpersonal competence
Use impact-focused coaching and tools like 360 feedback to build awareness.
Low skill + low interpersonal competence
Use a performance improvement approach with clear timelines and accountability.Â
This is why performance feedback coaching must adapt to the employee’s competence, interpersonal skill, and readiness — not rely on generic scripts or one-size-fits-all models.
Research consistently shows that generic feedback approaches fail to change behavior over time (Harvard Business Review).
Why Performance Feedback Coaching Saves Leaders Time
When feedback is mismatched, leaders repeat conversations, manage defensiveness, and lose momentum.
When feedback fits the person, conversations shorten, accountability strengthens, and behavior changes faster. (See our previous post on giving feedback to different personalities)
This is the foundation of the Performance Feedback Coaching Model.
Comment below: What is your experience with giving feedback to different employees?

