The Creative Art of Giving Feedback

Feedback is both an art and a skill. It has the power to refine ideas, improve work, and build trust—or, if handled poorly, to discourage, confuse, and stall creativity. Whether you’re a client commissioning a project, a leader guiding a team, or simply someone reviewing a piece of work, the way you give feedback matters just as much as the feedback itself. If you’re the client or the boss, it’s possible that someone is going to create creative work for you.

At some point, you will receive work that doesn’t meet expectations. Your instinct might be to explain why it’s not good enough—to point out the technical flaws, the lack of alignment with the vision, or the ways it misses the brief. Context and reasoning can be valuable. Breaking down how something doesn’t fit a genre, market demand, or structural framework is useful—if you’re correct and clear.

But sometimes, the truth is simpler. Sometimes, you just don’t like it and that’s okay too.

The problem arises when we feel pressured to justify personal taste with a list of reasons that may not hold up under scrutiny. Not every reaction needs an elaborate defence. If something doesn’t resonate with you, it’s better to acknowledge that plainly rather than construct an argument suggesting no one else will like it either.

Taste is subjective. Taste is elusive and often hard to describe, and that’s okay.

It’s easy to fall into the trap of believing that if something doesn’t work for us, it won’t work for anyone. But great creative work isn’t about appealing to a single person’s sensibilities—it’s about serving a purpose, a market, or an audience. Asserting personal taste as universal truth can stifle creativity rather than shape it.

So, how do we master the art of feedback?

  1. Be honest, but self-aware. If something isn’t to your liking, say so, but recognise the difference between a subjective reaction and an objective critique.
  2. Give clear direction. If there are structural or contextual reasons why something doesn’t work, articulate them clearly. Avoid vague comments like “This isn’t right” without explaining why.
  3. Respect the creative process. Creativity is iterative. Your first reaction is not always the final verdict. Give room for exploration and refinement.
  4. Acknowledge when it’s just about taste. It’s okay to say, “This isn’t my style, but let’s explore why it might still work.”

Feedback should be a tool for progress, not a roadblock. When given with clarity and awareness, it elevates ideas and strengthens relationships. When misused, it can derail momentum and diminish confidence.

The creative art of feedback lies in knowing when to explain, when to guide, and when to simply say, “I don’t like it.”