Should feedback be free?

Illustration of a person holding an exclamation mark

My two cents

Monica Ray Scott asked and answered this question on Linkedin and I highly recommend that you check out here answer.

What I find interesting in her pieces is this idea that when you give feedback to a service you already use a lot, that service could pay you back not so much with money but with additional gifts linked to the service. If there is a loyalty program, you will get more points. Why not upgrade to the higher class if it's a rail or air transport company?

I have to admit that's something I haven't done that much myself, and I'll try to implement this more in the future. Because it's smart to give something back to someone willing to invest even more in the relationship with your service.

But to come back at the question "Should feedback be free?" my opinion is different depending on the type of feedback:

  • Work feedback: yes, it should be free. It's your job to also help colleagues

  • Direct impact feedback: No, if the feedback you give will have a visible impact in the upcoming days or weeks. Then that impact is for me the payment. For example, when I ask someone what they are looking for when they join my newsletter (feedback), I then give them a few links to reach their goal they shared in their feedback (payment).

  • Indirect impact feedback: Yes, if you will not directly see the impact of your feedback in the upcoming days or weeks. For example, when you rate the quality of a customer support interaction. Yes maybe in a year it will change how customer support is done, but you won't directly feel that your feedback changed this.

More Service Design questions and answers like this one

Check out all the questions about the field, user and desk research side of Service Design.