Giving honest and well-intended feedback is often confused with being mean. It's not mean; it's nice.
You make good work by (among other things) making lots of work that isn't very good, and gradually weeding out the parts that aren't good, the parts that aren't yours. It's called feedback, and it's the most direct route to learning about your own vision. It's also called doing your work. After all, someone has to do your work, and you're the closest person around.
Being transparent about our plans enables us to get better feedback.
When you actually sit down to write some code, you learn things that you didn't get from thinking about them in modeling terms. . . there is a feedback process there that you can only really get at from executing some things and seeing what works
Most of life is on-the-job training. Some of the most important things can only be learned in the process of doing them. You do something and you get feedback - about what works and what doesn't. If you don't do anything for fear of doing it wrong, poorly, or badly, you never get any feedback, and therefore you never get to improve.
The show [ Too Much Tuna] changed a lot, actually, which is risky when you get positive critical feedback.
The shortest feedback loop I can think of is doing improvisation in front of an audience.
Loving a baby is a circular business, a kind of feedback loop. The more you give the more you get and the more you get the more you feel like giving.
There is a huge value in learning with instant feedback.
I've gotten nothing but warmth from the Black community and positive feedback.
Intelligence is the source of technology. If we can use technology to improve intelligence, that closes the loop and potentially creates a positive feedback cycle.
Make sure you have someone in your life from whom you can get reflective feedback.
Negative feedback can make us bitter or better.
Feedback is the breakfast of champions.
The key to learning is feedback. It is nearly impossible to learn anything without it.
One of the many reasons why I love stand-up so much is when you're performing, you get instant feedback. You know if stuff is working right away.
I'm not a writing group member, not a joiner in that way. I don't seek a wide swath of feedback.
I started blogging because I didn't know if I wanted to be an artist. I wanted to talk to other people online who were doing art, so I would post work and ask for feedback. I loved that an artist like James Jean would show his process on his blog. It became this open dialogue that, unfortunately, we don't have a lot in the fine-art world. People will say, "Wow, you share a lot. " I'm like, "No, I make it a point to. " Instagram is a great place for people to share failure. I don't want people to think that being an artist is some glamorous life.
To a pitcher, a base hit is the perfect example of negative feedback.
You must see yourself run the race over and over, time and time again. You must put yourself in critical positions and see how you would react in those positions before the race so when and if they do happen, the feedback is automatic.