Anonymous 360 Review Template
Get the honest feedback your team won't say to your face. 9 questions, anonymous by default, free forever.
Free forever · 3 forms · unlimited responses · no credit card
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This is what respondents seeAnonymous 360 Review
Your honest, anonymous feedback helps this person grow. Nobody — not the subject, not their manager, not even us — can see who answered.
You'll get an editable copy in your dashboard. Edit any question, then share the link.
When to use this template
Use this 360 review template anywhere a person would benefit from honest, multi-perspective feedback — and where the feedback only stays honest if respondents are confident they cannot be traced.
Typical moments:
- Performance review cycles — quarterly or annual, for any individual contributor or manager
- Manager 360s — direct reports rating their manager (the highest-risk feedback flow; anonymity is non-negotiable)
- Leadership development programs — collecting baseline data before coaching, then re-measuring after
- Post-project retros for individuals — after a major project lands, gather feedback on a key contributor
- Promotion calibration — when evaluating someone for a promotion, get peer signal before the decision
If you're collecting feedback about a single person from multiple people, this template fits.
Why anonymity actually matters here
360 reviews fail when respondents think there's any chance their manager — or worse, the person they're rating — could trace a comment back to them. They don't lie outright. They just write blander, safer, less useful feedback. The whole exercise becomes a costly checkbox.
That's why anonymity isn't a "nice to have" in 360 reviews — it's the entire mechanism that makes the data trustworthy.
The catch: most survey tools sell "anonymous mode" as a checkbox you tick. Behind the scenes they still log IP addresses, browser fingerprints, and respondent cookies. If you're using Google Forms, your respondents' Google account is visible to the form owner unless they manually toggle multiple settings. If you're using Typeform or Jotform, IPs are stored by default.
Anonymeter is built the opposite way. There is no IP logging, no fingerprinting, no respondent account, and no cookie on the public form page. Anonymity is the default — not a configuration option you might forget to flip. We can't tell you who answered. Neither can the subject's manager. Neither can the subject. That's the only design that actually changes what people are willing to write.
The 9 questions, explained
We chose 9 questions specifically. Fewer and you miss signal; more and people drop off (typical 360 completion rate falls off a cliff after 12 questions).
Four ratings (1–5) — quick to answer, easy to aggregate across multiple respondents:
- Core skills of their role — technical / functional competence
- Collaboration with the team — how they work with peers
- Communication of ideas, decisions, and feedback — clarity and frequency
- Handling disagreement and conflict — the most diagnostic skill for senior roles
One multiple choice — Energizing / Neutral / Draining — captures the felt experience of working with this person in one click. This is the single most predictive question for whether the person should be promoted into management.
Four open-text questions — biggest strength, one improvement, START / STOP / CONTINUE, and a free "anything else" box. The START / STOP / CONTINUE format is the gold-standard for actionable feedback — it forces respondents past vague observations into concrete asks.
Best practices for running the review
A few tested practices to keep the data useful and the process safe:
- Minimum 5 respondents per subject. With fewer than 5, the subject can often guess who wrote what from style or known opinions. With 5+, individual voices blend into themes.
- Mix peers, reports, and managers. A pure-peer 360 misses the upward and downward perspectives. Aim for at least 2 of each category.
- Don't ask "who is X?" questions. Any question like "which teammate do you trust most?" or "who is your go-to for help?" silently breaks anonymity because it forces respondents to name themselves.
- Set a deadline (1–2 weeks max). Drag-out review cycles produce worse data; the urgency creates honesty.
- Never share individual responses with the subject — only themes. This is the cardinal rule. If you violate it once, every future cycle is poisoned.
- Consider response retention. Set the form to auto-delete responses after 90 or 365 days from the form settings. GDPR-compliant by default; signals seriousness to respondents.
What to do with the results
After the review window closes, the data needs to be turned into something the subject can actually act on. The Anonymeter response dashboard shows averaged ratings and the full text of every open-text answer, with charts already drawn.
Process:
- Look for themes across multiple responses — three respondents independently flagging the same improvement is signal; one comment is noise.
- Aggregate and anonymize before sharing. Rewrite text answers in your own words if needed to remove identifying phrasing.
- Use Anonymous Follow-Up to clarify ambiguous comments — Anonymeter is the only platform that lets you reply to a specific anonymous response and get a clarification back, all without ever knowing who you're talking to.
- Share with the subject in a 1:1, not a doc. Walk through themes verbally first; written summary after.
- Co-create an action plan with 1–3 specific commitments. Re-run the same 9 questions in 6 months and compare.
Why Anonymeter for 360 reviews
Officevibe, Lattice, and 15Five charge per seat — typically $5–$11 per employee per month — for the same capability. For a 50-person team that's $3,000–$6,600 a year, often with annual contracts and demo-gated sales calls.
Anonymeter is free for up to 3 forms with unlimited responses, forever, no credit card. The Pro plan at $9/month adds CSV export, custom branding, conditional logic, and our flagship Anonymous Follow-Up — the only way in the industry to have a two-way conversation with an anonymous respondent without ever knowing who they are.
No seats. No contracts. No "schedule a demo." Click the button, get a shareable link, run your review.
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Related reading
How to Run an Anonymous 360 Review (Without Producing Garbage Data)
Most 360 reviews fail. Here's an 8-step playbook for running a 360 that actually produces honest, actionable feedback — and the common mistakes that ruin it.
Survey Fatigue: 7 Practical Fixes Before Your Response Rate Collapses
Your team used to fill every survey. Now barely half respond. Here's what causes survey fatigue and 7 specific fixes that work.
Frequently asked
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