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Step by Step: How to Launch a 360 Feedback Program

360 feedback programs can be incredibly powerful (or incredibly frustrating), depending on how they’re carried out.

Done well, they build self-awareness, improve leadership capability, and support a strong feedback culture. Done poorly, they feel like a box-ticking exercise that creates anxiety and skepticism.

This step-by-step guide guides you through how to implement a 360 feedback program, with clear actions, common pitfalls to avoid, and a simple checklist you can follow from start to finish.

1 Clarify the Purpose

Before tools, surveys, or timelines, get clarity on why you’re running a 360.

Ask:

Actions:
  A one-paragraph purpose statement you can reuse in all communications.

2 Secure Buy-In

A 360 program without leadership support is dead on arrival.

Make sure leaders understand:

Equip managers to:

3 Define the Scope and Participants

Decide the boundaries of your first rollout.

Key decisions:

Best practice:
  Start small. A pilot group (e.g., senior leaders or one function) lets you test, learn, and refine before scaling up.

4 Align with your Company values

This is where many programs go wrong.

Your survey should:

Avoid:
 

Rule of thumb:
  6–8 competencies, 5-8 questions each, plus optional open-text comments.

5 Select Your 360 Feedback Tool

Your tool should match your goals, not the other way around.

Look for:

6 Communicate Early, Clearly, and Often

Transparent communication builds trust and participation.

Your launch communication should explain:

Reinforce:
 

7 Launch and Monitor Participation

Once live:
 

Watch out for red flags:
 

Address issues quickly to protect credibility!
 

8 Deliver Feedback the Right Way

The feedback report is powerful, but only if people know how to read it.

Support participants with:

Encourage them to:
 

9 Turn Insight into Action

Feedback without follow-up is wasted effort.

Build in:

Key question:


“What will I reinforce and/or do differently because of this feedback?”
 

Evaluate and Improve the Program

After the cycle:

Use insights to:

360 Feedback Program Launch Checklist
Final Thought

A 360 feedback program isn’t just a survey—it’s an experience.

When designed thoughtfully and launched correctly, it can strengthen trust, accelerate development, and reinforce a culture of continuous feedback. Start simple, communicate clearly, and always keep the focus on growth.

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