How to Give Better Feedback to Applicants
Provide clear, constructive feedback—even to those declined—to build trust and learning.
How to Give Better Feedback to Applicants
Good feedback explains decisions, respects effort and helps applicants improve.
- Summarise strengths, gaps and how criteria were applied.
- Provide practical suggestions and future opportunities.
- Keep tone respectful and concise.
Components of effective feedback
Structure messages so they are easy to absorb.
- Refer to specific criteria and evidence.
- Distinguish eligibility fails from competitive declines.
- Offer pointers to support or alternative funds.
Key takeaway: clarity reduces appeals and repeat questions.
Using automation well
AI can draft tailored feedback that reviewers edit and approve.
- Pull examples from the application and scoring notes.
- Maintain templates for common outcomes.
- Track themes to improve guidance next round.
Key takeaway: Plinth scales constructive feedback for every applicant.
Timing and tone
Send feedback promptly and with empathy.
- Pair declines with clear reasons and next steps.
- Keep winners informed of conditions and reporting.
- Offer Q&A routes without over‑promising reconsideration.
Key takeaway: respectful communication strengthens the ecosystem.
FAQs
Do we owe detailed feedback?
Proportionate feedback is best practice and builds trust.
Can templates sound impersonal?
Edit AI drafts; include specific details from the application.
Should we share panel comments?
Provide a concise summary rather than verbatim notes.