Glossary
Feedback Loop
A cycle where input is gathered, acted on, and informs the next round.
In short
A feedback loop is a repeating cycle in which a team gathers input, acts on it, and uses the results to inform the next round of decisions. Tight loops let teams learn quickly and adjust often. The loop matters most when contributors see that their input produced visible change.
A feedback loop describes the repeating motion of collecting input, responding, and learning from the response. The shorter the loop, the faster a team can correct course and the more trust it builds with contributors.
Loops break when input goes in but nothing visible comes back out. Kithspark keeps loops closed by tracking each contribution and notifying requesters automatically as their idea moves through its lifecycle.
Example
A team ships a small change, watches usage, reads the new comments, and refines the feature in the following week.
Related terms
Turn your customers into your roadmap
Spin up an AI-moderated feedback forum, weight every request by real deal value, and keep each requester in the loop from idea to ship.