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Management Focus

Management Focus

09

know it was a budget meeting) or

those who make excuses (it fell into

my pocket, officer) to minimise their

involvement in the situation (it wasn’t

my fault), or unreasonably shift the

focus of control to external events

(how could I have known they wanted

to stick to the contract) will have

significant difficulty in regaining trust.

Demonstrating understanding, clarity

and openness about what has gone

wrong, an expression of genuine

regret, and a description (followed

by action) of what is going to happen

to redress the breach of trust are

all essential. Building trust doesn’t

happen overnight but there are

important steps leaders can take to

foster a more trusting climate.

BUILDING TRUST

in business

by

Dr Richard Kwiatkowski

, Senior Lecturer in

Organisational Psychology

public pantomime of the Chamber.

Every politician I have spoken to has

friends and confidants in other parties.

It is sometimes easier to have a frank

discussion with someone outside your

own political party as you are both

vulnerable; you must have trust. Ask

yourself - who do you have those

conversations with?

Building trust

Trust, particularly in leadership, is

linked to notions of fairness and

equity in social exchange. There is

an implicit psychological contract

present - leaders and followers are in

a social relationship where both sides

benefit. If this contract is broken the

relationship is damaged.

It is perception that is critical

here. If as a follower you perceive

that unreasonable effort is being

demanded, or that the boss does

not stand up for your department, or

does not provide sufficient direction,

or that their rewards are too big,

then problems arise. Equity is about

perceived fairness and acting unfairly

is a breach of trust. For politicians

perception is all - a cabinet minister

regretfully told me ‘it’s not what you

do that matters, it’s what people

think you do’. The same is true in any

organisation.

Losing and regaining trust

As the Dutch saying goes ‘Vertrouwen

komt te voet en vertrekt te paard’

roughly translated ‘trust arrives on

foot but departs on horseback’.

However rebuilding trust always takes

time, as politicians, bankers, CEOs of

energy companies and others have all

found.

Linking back to the cognitive and

emotional aspects of trust, people

who claim that they acted due to

incompetence or lack of skill (I didn’t

D

o you trust me? You’re

reading this article - but

why? Perhaps you are

relying on the brand;

maybe you’re an alumni of Cranfield

and have fond memories. But are

you right to trust me?

What I’m illustrating here are the two

components of trust; the cognitive

and the emotional. Broadly we trust

people who we think are competent

and then we make a decision about

how we feel about them. “Can they

do it and are they nice?”

Gaining trust

As a manager or leader it is essential

that you are able to utilise both of

these components of trust. If people

feel an emotional link with you; if they

believe that you care about them, that

you are concerned that they will do

well in your business - it’s likely that

their discretionary effort is going to

be greater; of course their judgement

is founded on the question “are you

competent?”

Who do we trust?

We tend to trust people like us.

The good news is that this sort of

prejudice declines with increasing

openness and international

experience. But it is still the case that

attractive people are seen as more

trustworthy than the unattractive.

Thinking is hard so we tend to

generalise; the Mori polls reveal that

people distrust politicians, but think

their local Member of Parliament is

actually a good person and works

hard. How is this possible?

My experience of researching

parliament for over 15 years leads

me to say that most politicians tell

me the truth. I trust what they say.

But equally they don’t tell the whole

truth straightaway, they have to get

to trust me. It normally takes three

or four interviews before they are

sufficiently confident that they can

reveal themselves. So in a new role,

don’t expect instant trust – people

need to know you first. They need to

trust you, not your job title.

What is trust?

To trust somebody means to be

confident that when you make

yourself vulnerable to them they

will not damage you. This applies

in personal relationships as well

as professional ones. If you reveal

personal information to a colleague

reciprocity suggests they may then

reveal something about themselves.

Now you have both made yourselves

vulnerable to each other.

It may come as a surprise to hear

that people across different political

parties do trust each other outside the

Building trust in business

Don’t expect instant trust – people need

to know you first. They need to trust you,

not your job title.

MF