Nobody Wants Your Sh*t Sandwich 

My Uber driver last week told me something that should make every leader uncomfortable. 

"I wish my boss would just tell me what I'm doing wrong. He always starts with this fake compliment, then hits me with the bad news, then ends with another compliment. It's exhausting. Just tell me so I can fix it and move on." 

He's not alone. Your team sees right through your feedback sandwich. And they hate it. 

The Recipe for Terrible Feedback 

You know the formula: 

  • Start with something positive (usually generic) 

  • Sneak in the real issue 

  • End with encouragement (equally generic) 

It sounds like: "You're doing great work overall, but this report needs significant improvement, but keep up the good effort!" 

What your team hears: "I'm about to criticize you but I'm too uncomfortable to just say it, so I'm wrapping it in bullsh*t to make myself feel better about this conversation." 

Why Nobody's Eating What You're Serving 

Your team isn't stupid. They know the game. The moment you say something nice, they're bracing for impact. They're not hearing your compliment; they're waiting for the "but." 

The positive feedback becomes meaningless. The criticism gets diluted. And nobody knows what actually matters. 

Worse? You've trained them to distrust praise. Every genuine compliment now sounds like a setup. 

What Actually Happens 

When you sandwich feedback, you're managing your own discomfort, not helping them improve. 

You feel better because you "balanced" the conversation. They leave confused about what really needs to change, whether the positive stuff was even true, and whether you're being straight with them. 

They don't need you to manage their feelings. They need you to respect them enough to be direct. 

The Uber Driver Has It Right 

"Just tell me so I can fix it and move on." 

That's what competent people want. Clear information. Direct communication. The respect of straight talk. 

They don't want a performance. They want clarity. 

They don't want your sh*t sandwich. They want the truth. 

How to Actually Give Feedback 

  • Be direct. "We need to talk about this report. Here's what's not working and why it matters." 

  • Be specific. Not "it needs improvement." Try "The financial projections are missing three key assumptions, and without them, we can't present this to investors." 

  • Be useful. Don't just point out problems. "Here's what good looks like. Here's what needs to change. Here's how I can help." 

  • Be human. You can be direct without being cruel. "This isn't where it needs to be yet" is both honest and encouraging. 

What Happens When You're Straight 

Your team trusts you more, not less. Because you respect them enough to tell the truth. 

They fix problems faster. Because they know exactly what's wrong. 

Your praise actually lands. Because it's not a preamble to criticism. 

And your difficult conversations get easier. Because you're not performing emotional gymnastics to deliver basic information. 

The Real Test 

If you can't give feedback without wrapping it in compliments, the problem isn't your delivery, it's your relationship. 

You shouldn't need a spoonful of sugar to help the medicine go down. If your team can't handle direct feedback, you've either hired wrong or led wrong. 

Strong teams can take straight talk. Weak leaders can't give it. 

The Bottom Line 

Your team doesn't need you to protect them from reality. They need you to give them clear information so they can do something about it. 

Stop managing your discomfort and start respecting their intelligence. 

Be direct. Be clear. Be helpful. 

Skip the sandwich. Serve the truth. 

Your Uber driver figured this out. You can too. 

Sel Watts 

P.S. – If you're still sandwiching feedback because you're afraid of the reaction, that's a leadership problem, not a communication problem. We help leaders have the hard conversations they're avoiding. Let's talk. 

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