Overview
The most common failure in feedback management is not collecting too little feedback — it is never telling customers what happened to it. A customer submits a feature request, the feature ships six months later, and the customer never knows their input contributed. The company misses the most powerful trust signal available: "you told us something, and we acted on it."
Closing the feedback loop is not just good manners. It is a compounding investment. Customers who know their feedback is read and acted on give more feedback, give better feedback, and become advocates. Customers who never hear back give feedback once and stop.
What you get: - Feedback loop closure trigger criteria (when to notify and when not to) - Communication templates by feedback type (feature shipped, bug fixed, process changed, policy updated) - Personalized vs. broadcast closure communication framework - "You asked, we listened" campaign structure for product launches - Feedback contributor recognition system
Built for: product marketing teams, customer success managers, and support leads who want to close the loop on customer feedback and turn it into a trust and advocacy engine.