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6 types of employee feedback every frontline organization should collect

Posted on: February 2, 2024Updated on: August 8, 2025By: Hiba Amin

Frontline employees across any company are aware of 100% of an organizations front-line problems. Thats because theyre the ones who implement new strategies and processes from head office. Theyre the ones who talk to customers on a daily basis. Theyre a wealth of informationif you ask for it. 

When properly collected and acted upon, :

  • Employee feedback turns ineffective and time-wasting processes into seamless ones
  • Employee feedback turns top customer complaints or requests into business opportunities that improve customer satisfaction and increase revenue
  • Employee feedback turns disgruntled employees into highly engaged employees who consistently show up ready to perform
Employee Feedback Gathering

When it comes to gathering this upward feedback, there are so many different types you can collect to capture those elusive insightsand drive employee engagement. Here are six types of employee feedback your frontline organization should be collecting:

1. Employee experience feedback

According to Forbes, the emotional commitment the employee has to the organization and its goals. To simplify that further, organizations can gauge engagement as whether or not employees show up to work and try. . And regardless of how engaged (or not) your front line employees are, its important to continuously collect feedback around the employee experience because: 

  1. Theres always room for improvement, and
  2. Things change

Take the pandemic as a prime example of life and work never being constant. Things are bound to happen, whether its a global pandemic, or local policies that impact the workforce. Keeping a pulse on what your workforce feels about their experience at work ensures that youre addressing engagement issues quickly, and keeping your workforce happy and productive. 

2. Employee feedback on management

In corporate offices, its likely that youre running . However this practice is less common for the frontline workforce. That being said, organizations should give their employees opportunities to provide feedback on their manager to higher-ups. Why? As the old adage goes, .

Remember the ? Only 9% of middle management and 4% of executives  are aware of an organizations problems. This includes bad supervisors. The best way to find out if your supervisors are fostering an engaging work environment is through offering your workers feedback channels to share concerns privately and without worry of ramifications. 

One thing to note: when you ask for employee feedback, its important that you dont frame it in a way that makes supervisors feel like their job is on the line. Instead, approach it as a way to collect feedback for the purpose of improving the workplace for everyone, supervisors included.

3. Workplace protocols and process-oriented feedback

You want your stores or locations to be as efficient as possible, right? While ideas and processes sound great on paper, they dont always pan out in real life. Thats why its so important to collect feedback around protocols and processes from your employees.

A big piece of collecting this type of upward feedback is building psychological safety across your workforce so that they feel comfortable sharing their insights on what could make the company run smoother. Like with manager feedback, there can be a fear among frontline workers that their feedback will lead to repercussions. Fostering a feedback culture over time reiterates to your employees that theyre encouraged to safely share critical feedback. 

As you collect this employee feedback, youll be able to update inefficient processes and put together best practices that you can roll out to new and existing employees. Youll also be able to update your onboarding programs to ensure that all new hires are following the most up-to-date training.

4. Health and safety concerns

To talk about health and safety, we need to first talk about According to Maslow, motivation comes from fulfilling five basic human needs:

  1. Physiological needs 
  2. Safety
  3. Love and belonging
  4. Esteem
  5. Self-actualization

Lets focus on the second tier: safety. Safety is a basic need. Its perfectly normal for employees to want to feel safe at their workplace. When feelings of safety are high, it increases overall employee engagement. Safety concerns can differ from industry to industryand even from location to location. Safety concerns might include: 

  • Trepidation around ongoing cleaning/safety protocols 
  • Concerns around theft or violence (our recent research found that whopping 40% of retail and grocery associates are scared to go to work)
  • Knowledge gap flags around using machinery or equipment
  • Ideas on how to navigate natural disasters or other emergencies, especially in regions prone to hurricanes or tornadoes   
  • Burnout or mental health concerns

Thats why its important to collect health and safety concerns across all of your locations on a frequent basis. Another crucial piece of gathering health and safety feedback is to remain open and welcoming to any and all feedbackthis is another type of feedback that requires a lot of psychological safety to ensure your workforce feels able to share their safety concerns without fear of repercussion. But its worth it: the sooner you get your staff feeling safe and confident, the faster theyll be motivated to thrive.  

5. Knowledge gaps

Youre likely introducing new products or services throughout the year. While your product team or buyers are very aware of what this new thing does, the same shouldnt be assumed about your frontline workers. 

As the face of the company, its important that this segment of your workforce is equipped with the knowledge and training to assist and advise customers. This is even more important in todays omnichannel approach, especially in retail, foodservice and hospitality, where guests and customers are coming into locations armed with a lot of information. 

Knowledge gaps can be identified and flagged in a number of ways, especially if you have the right frontline enablement tool in place. And as part of that strategy, asking your employees directly what information they need is also a great way to identify problem areas. After all, when your employees feel supported, and when they have the information needed to successfully serve customers, everyone wins.  

6. Customer insights

Frontline employees have the most exposure to your customers. Theyre the ones answering questions, listening to real-time feedback and seeing how customers or guests interact with your brand. This information is solid gold. This is the intel that can improve your CX and drive sales through better insight on:  

  • The products customers are looking for
  • The processes or rules customers are frustrated with (i.e. hours of operation, return policies, etc)
  • What customers love about your company and what excites them most about it

This type of employee feedback, more than any other type, requires a real-time approach. Heres another place where a digital communication app can come in really handyideally employees can log feedback, customer insights, or other ideas right from their phones, as soon as they happen. If you ask them to hold on to these ideas until after their shift, theyll likely forgetand in some cases, it might be too late to act on the feedback. 

Frontline employees are the face of your company. As a result, its important that organizations make the time to listen to their employees and collect a wide range of feedback to improve your employee experience, workplace and customer/guest experienceand drive better business outcomes as a result.

Hiba Amin

Hiba Amin deeply understands how to connect business strategy to frontline performance. She brings a unique lens to topics like employee engagement, enablement and retention and is passionate about translating complex ideas into practical insights that help organizations support their people and drive measurable results.


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