This post is part of our 3-part series: The Approval Loop Trap.
Even with the best planning, approval flows don’t always behave.
Sound familiar? This is where project managers earn their stripes. Approvals rarely fall apart because of the work, it’s usually because the process slipped. The good news? With the right mix of tools, tactics, and guardrails, you can bring approvals back under control.
Scattered feedback is what breaks momentum. Pull everything into one visible channel:
Rule of thumb: no Slack threads, no stray emails. If it’s not in the tool, it’s not official.
💡 Pro move: If feedback is left in Figma (or any creative tool), make sure it’s also reflected in the PM tool, like Asana, so it’s captured in the workflow and handed off cleanly to the next step.
Not every deliverable deserves the same level of scrutiny. A campaign launch? Absolutely. A daily social post? Probably not.
Build tiers so the level of review matches the level of risk:
This keeps senior stakeholders focused on the decisions that matter most, while routine work flows quickly.
A lot of frustration comes from stakeholders weighing in on things that aren’t up for discussion. Be explicit:
The more precise you are, the less wasted time and irrelevant feedback.
Raw, unfiltered feedback is overwhelming. Before it reaches the team, it should pass through a gatekeeper, often a Creative Director or PM—who:
This shields creatives from “ten people, ten directions” chaos.
Chaos often comes from people reviewing old drafts. A screenshot here, an outdated attachment there, and suddenly feedback doesn’t apply.
Fix it by enforcing version discipline:
Many stakeholders feel compelled to give some feedback, even when everything looks fine. The result? A thousand unnecessary tweaks.
Normalize this instead:
When two senior stakeholders give opposing feedback, you can’t just toss it back to the team. Use escalation scripts like:
This reframes conflict as a project risk, not a personal battle.
At some point, approvals must be frozen. Otherwise, the project never ends.
If someone tries to reopen a signed-off deliverable, redirect:
Deadlines create leverage. Use them to protect the team.
Approvals go off the rails when feedback is scattered, roles are vague, or decisions drag. The fix isn’t heroics, it’s a mix of structure, tools, and confident PM guidance:
Approvals don’t have to be black holes of time and energy. With the right approach, they become what they were always meant to be: a step that strengthens the work, not one that sinks it.