Anonymous Manager Feedback
Six questions that let direct reports tell the truth about their manager — because they know no one can trace the answer.
Free forever · 3 forms · unlimited responses · no credit card
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This is what respondents seeAnonymous Manager Feedback
Your honest feedback about your manager. Fully anonymous — neither your manager nor HR nor we can see who answered. This is the only way to give upward feedback without risk.
You'll get an editable copy in your dashboard. Edit any question, then share the link.
When to use this template
This is upward feedback — direct reports rating their own manager. It's the single highest-risk feedback flow in any company, because the person being rated controls the rater's career.
Use it:
- Once per performance review cycle (twice a year for most companies), as a counterpart to the manager's review of the report
- For new managers after their first 90 days, as a calibration signal
- As a regular standalone practice — not tied to performance — to detect manager issues before they cause turnover
- For founder/CEO feedback when the company is small enough that the CEO is everyone's grand-manager but no one feels safe giving feedback
Don't use it for managers with <3 direct reports — the responses are too identifiable.
Why anonymity matters more here than anywhere else
Of all the feedback flows in a company, upward manager feedback is the one where anonymity is most critical and most often broken.
The math is brutal: if a manager controls your pay, your promotion, your project assignments, and your reference for the next job, telling that manager the truth about how they're falling short carries enormous personal risk. Most employees, faced with that risk, simply don't.
"Anonymous" in most HR platforms means "your manager doesn't see your name, but HR does, and they sit two doors down from your manager." In small companies this is functionally not anonymous at all — managers can usually guess who wrote what within a week.
Anonymeter's design eliminates the risk at the technical level. No IP logging. No cookies. No login. No respondent identity column in the database. Even with a court order, we couldn't tell you who wrote a specific response. That's the only design that produces actually honest manager feedback.
The 6 questions, explained
Three ratings cover the core dimensions of management:
- Support — "How effective is your manager at supporting your work?" — the day-to-day operational test. Removes blockers, provides resources, gives clear direction.
- Feedback quality — "How well does your manager give actionable, useful feedback?" — separates "nice to work with" from "actually helps you grow." Many warm, well-liked managers score low here and don't realize it.
- Career advocacy — "How well does your manager advocate for your career growth?" — the long-term test. Promotions, raises, project assignments. A manager who scores high on the other two but low here is fine to work for but stalling careers.
One multiple-choice psychological-safety check — "Do you feel comfortable raising concerns directly with your manager?" — the diagnostic for whether anonymous feedback was even necessary. If most reports answer "Always," your manager is approachable. If "Rarely/Never" dominates, anonymous channels are the only feedback they're getting.
Two open-text complete the picture: what the manager does well, and one specific improvement ask. The combination of strength + improvement is more useful than complaints alone.
Best practices
- Require ≥3 direct reports. Below 3, anonymity isn't real. Group small teams under their grand-manager.
- Have HR or a leadership peer collect responses, not the manager themselves. The manager should never see raw responses — only themes summarized by a third party.
- Aggregate and share themes only. Never share individual responses with the manager, even if the report explicitly says it's okay. The cultural norm matters more than any single case.
- Don't make participation mandatory. Forced responses are surface-level. Voluntary high response rates mean the team trusts the process.
- Run it on a predictable cadence (e.g., twice a year, in March and September). Surprise upward feedback feels like ambush; scheduled feels like investment in management quality.
- Set retention to 90 days for sensitive responses. Past 90 days, themes are captured in summary docs; raw text shouldn't linger.
What to do with the responses
The handling matters more than the collection. A working flow:
- HR or leadership peer reads all responses within a week of close.
- Theme summary written — 3–5 themes, each backed by paraphrased quotes (not verbatim, to protect anonymity).
- 1:1 with the manager — share the summary, walk through each theme, ask the manager which one they want to act on first.
- Manager commits to 1–2 specific changes, written down.
- Re-run the survey in 6 months, look for movement on the dimensions the manager committed to changing.
- Use Anonymous Follow-Up sparingly — Anonymeter lets you reply to a specific anonymous response to ask for clarification (e.g., "Can you give a specific example of the 'unclear feedback' pattern?"). Use it only when a theme needs detail to act on; overuse signals to respondents that you're trying to identify them.
Why Anonymeter for manager feedback
The enterprise tools that do upward feedback well (Culture Amp, Lattice, 15Five) cost $8–$15 per employee per month and require you to put every employee on their seat. For a 30-person company that's $3k–$5k a year, plus an annual contract and a sales call.
Anonymeter does upward feedback in 5 minutes for $0. Create one form per manager (or one form with a "who is this about?" first question for teams with multiple managers). Share the link directly with reports. Collect responses. Done.
The structural anonymity is what makes the data trustworthy. The price just removes the excuse not to do it.
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Related reading
How to Give Honest Feedback to Your Manager (Without Career Damage)
The 'open door' policy doesn't actually protect you. Here's how upward feedback safely works — and what to do if your manager is the problem.
How to Get Honest Feedback From Your Team (When Polite Garbage Is the Default)
Most teams default to polite-but-useless feedback. Here are 6 things that block honest feedback, and 5 specific changes that unlock it.
Frequently asked
My manager will know who wrote what from writing style. How do I prevent that?
Should I run a separate form per manager?
How do I know if I have enough responses to share?
What if my manager retaliates against the team after seeing the feedback?
Can I make this a 360 review with peers and reports?
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