Reviews happen twice a year. The anxiety starts weeks before.
Practice changes the outcome.
Your managers dread the review. Their reports dread it too. Let them practice the exact conversation before the real thing.
Every manager knows the feeling. The review is next week. You have feedback that needs to be direct — but too direct and you crush them. Too soft and nothing changes. Some managers soften the message so much it's meaningless. Others deliver it like a verdict. You rehearse it in your head, but heads don't push back.
What if your managers could practice the exact review they're about to give — with a counterpart that reacts like the real person?
Clear, actionable feedback
Practice delivering motivational feedback that builds trust. Your leaders learn to be specific, constructive, and empathetic — even when the message is tough.
Addressing sensitive topics
Prepare for underperformance conversations, interpersonal challenges, and team dynamics issues. Practice navigating emotional reactions with empathy and clarity.
Aligning on expectations
Build confidence in setting clear deliverables and timelines. Practice framing goals collaboratively so team members leave motivated, not deflated.
Quick Practice
Set up in 15 seconds
What conversation?
Give difficult feedback
With whom?
Someone on my team
Describe the situation
She's been missing deadlines for 3 weeks. I need to address it but she tends to get defensive...
I've been working really hard on that project. I don't think the delays were entirely my fault.
I understand you've put in effort, but we need to discuss the impact on the team's timelines...
Get Sarah to acknowledge her pattern of delays and commit to a specific improvement plan.
“Sarah, I value your dedication. I need to share something important about how our timelines have been affected.”
“The delays impacted three other teams. Here's what I need going forward.”
“I'm not questioning your effort. I'm asking us to solve the timing together.”
Clear, actionable feedback
Practice delivering motivational feedback that builds trust. Your leaders learn to be specific, constructive, and empathetic — even when the message is tough.
Quick Practice
Set up in 15 seconds
What conversation?
Give difficult feedback
With whom?
Someone on my team
Describe the situation
She's been missing deadlines for 3 weeks. I need to address it but she tends to get defensive...
Addressing sensitive topics
Prepare for underperformance conversations, interpersonal challenges, and team dynamics issues. Practice navigating emotional reactions with empathy and clarity.
I've been working really hard on that project. I don't think the delays were entirely my fault.
I understand you've put in effort, but we need to discuss the impact on the team's timelines...
Aligning on expectations
Build confidence in setting clear deliverables and timelines. Practice framing goals collaboratively so team members leave motivated, not deflated.
Get Sarah to acknowledge her pattern of delays and commit to a specific improvement plan.
“Sarah, I value your dedication. I need to share something important about how our timelines have been affected.”
“The delays impacted three other teams. Here's what I need going forward.”
“I'm not questioning your effort. I'm asking us to solve the timing together.”
0%
of managers are uncomfortable communicating with employees
Interact / Harris Poll
0%
of managers avoid giving critical feedback to their team
Gallup
$0,506
of employees say redirective feedback improves performance when delivered well
SHRM / Grossman
After 84% of practice sessions, leaders report feeling more confident going into the real conversation
Frequently asked questions
From feedback that's avoided or feared to a culture of real conversations.
Your organization already invests in culture. Zursum makes sure that investment pays off when it matters most.