Getting good feedback is one of the most effective tools you can use to get better and faster in your creative life. But most of us don’t know how to receive good feedback.
The best policy is to accept it gracefully and gratefully and then consider it. Think about it. Maybe ask a followup if you don’t understand it, but otherwise, just “thank you so much for that thoughtful critique, back to the drawing board.”
If you disagree with feedback, work that out on your own. Nobody wants feedback on their feedback. It’s disempowering to the other person when you argue with them—you’ll never get good feedback from them again. They put themselves out there to give you an opinion—to help you!—and you want to encourage that.
Good, thoughtful feedback is priceless. (Check out yesterday’s tip for how to give good feedback.)
My takeaway from this post: Don’t give Feedback on your Feedback. This is a valuable dictum. Use the constructive criticism wisely, then move on.
hello bro I make a substack channel but i have no more idea that how to grow my channel hope you will guide me . thanks