By Stephen M. R.
Covey
When trust is low it places a hidden
tax on every transaction: every communication, every interaction, every
strategy, every decision is taxed, bringing speed down and sending costs up. In
this article from Stephen Covey, find out how the best leaders build trust and
learn the 13 behaviors of high-trust leaders.
Almost everywhere we turn, trust is on
the decline. Trust in our culture at large, in our institutions, and in our
companies is significantly lower than a generation ago. Research shows that
only 49% of employees trust senior management, and only 28% believe CEOs are a
credible source of information. Consider the loss of trust and confidence in
the financial markets today. Indeed, "trust makes the world go
‘round," and right now we're experiencing a crisis of trust. This crisis
compels us to ask three questions. First, is there a measurable cost to low
trust? Second, is there a tangible benefit to high trust? Third, how can the
best leaders build trust in and within their organizations to reap the benefits
of high trust?
In 2004, one estimate put the cost of
complying with federal rules and regulations alone in the United States -- put
in place essentially due to lack of trust -- at $1.1 trillion, which is more
than 10% of the gross domestic product. A recent study conducted by the
Association of Certified Fraud Examiners estimated that the average American
company lost 6% of its annual revenue to some sort of fraudulent activity.
Research shows similar effects for the other disguised low-trust taxes as well.
Most people don't know how to think about the organizational and societal
consequences of low trust because they don't know how to quantify or measure
the costs of such a so-called "soft" factor as trust. For many, trust
is intangible, ethereal, unquantifiable. If it remains that way, then people
don't know how to get their arms around it or how to improve it. But the fact
is, the costs of low trust are very real, they are quantifiable, and they are
staggering.
Think about it this way: When trust is
low, in a company or in a relationship, it places a hidden "tax" on
every transaction: every communication, every interaction, every strategy,
every decision is taxed, bringing speed down and sending costs up. My
experience is that significant distrust doubles the cost of doing business and
triples the time it takes to get things done.
By contrast, individuals and
organizations that have earned and operate with high trust experience the
opposite of a tax -- a "dividend" that is like a performance
multiplier, enabling them to succeed in their communications, interactions, and
decisions, and to move with incredible speed. A recent Watson Wyatt study
showed that high trust companies outperform low trust companies by nearly 300%!
I contend that the ability to
establish, grow, extend, and (where needed) restore trust among stakeholders is
the critical competency of leadership needed today. It is needed more than any
other competency. Engendering trust is, in fact, a competency that can be
learned, applied, and understood. It is something that you can get good at,
something you can measure and improve, something for which you can "move
the needle." You cannot be an effective leader without trust. As Warren
Bennis put it, "Leadership without mutual trust is a contradiction in
terms."
How
do the best leaders build trust?
The first job of any leader is to
inspire trust. Trust is confidence born of two dimensions: character and
competence. Character includes your integrity, motive, and intent with people.
Competence includes your capabilities, skills, results, and track record. Both
dimensions are vital.
With the increasing focus on ethics in
our society, the character side of trust is fast becoming the price of entry in
the new global economy. However, the differentiating and often ignored side of
trust -- competence -- is equally essential. You might think a person is
sincere, even honest, but you won't trust that person fully if he or she
doesn't get results. And the opposite is true. A person might have great skills
and talents and a good track record, but if he or she is not honest, you're not
going to trust that person either.
The best leaders begin by framing
trust in economic terms for their companies. When an organization recognizes
that it has low trust, huge economic consequences can be expected. Everything
will take longer and everything will cost more because of the steps
organizations will need to take to compensate for their lack of trust. These
costs can be quantified and, when they are, suddenly leaders recognize how low
trust is not merely a social issue, but that it is an economic matter. The
dividends of high trust can be similarly quantified, enabling leaders to make a
compelling business case for trust.
The best leaders then focus on making
the creation of trust an explicit objective. It must become like any other goal
that is focused on, measured, and improved. It must be communicated that trust
matters to management and leadership. It must be expressed that it is the right
thing to do and it is the economic thing to do. One of the best ways to do this
is to make an initial baseline measurement of organizational trust and then to
track improvements over time.
The true transformation starts with
building credibility at the personal level. The foundation of trust is your own
credibility, and it can be a real differentiator for any leader. A person's
reputation is a direct reflection of their credibility, and it precedes them in
any interactions or negotiations they might have. When a leader's credibility
and reputation are high, it enables them to establish trust fast -- speed goes
up, cost goes down.
There are 4 Cores of Credibility, and
it's about all 4 Cores working in tandem—Integrity, Intent, Capabilities, and
Results. Part of building trust is understanding -- clarifying -- what the
organization wants and what you can offer them. Be the one that does that best.
Then add to your credibility the kind of behavior that builds trust. (see the
13 high trust behaviors below). Next, take it beyond just you as the leader and
extend it to your entire organization. The combination of that type of
credibility and behavior and organizational alignment results in a culture of
high trust.
Consider the example of Warren Buffett
-- CEO of Berkshire Hathaway (and generally considered one of the most trusted
leaders in the world) -- who completed a major acquisition of McLane Distribution
(a $23 billion company) from Wal-Mart. As public companies, both Berkshire
Hathaway and Wal-Mart are subject to all kinds of market and regulatory
scrutiny. Typically, a merger of this size would take several months to
complete and cost several million dollars to pay for accountants, auditors, and
attorneys to verify and validate all kinds of information. But in this
instance, because both parties operated with high trust, the deal was made with
one two-hour meeting and a handshake. In less than a month, it was completed.
High trust, high speed, low cost.
13
Behaviors of High-Trust Leaders Worldwide
I approach this strategy primarily as
a practitioner, both in my own experience and in my extensive work with other
organizations. Throughout this learning process, have identified 13 common
behaviors of trusted leaders around the world that build -- and allow you to
maintain -- trust. When you adopt these ways of behaving, it's like making
deposits into a "trust account" of another party.
1. Talk Straight
2. Demonstrate
Respect
3. Create
Transparency
4. Right Wrongs
5. Show Loyalty
6. Deliver
Results
7. Get Better
8. Confront
Reality
9. Clarify
Expectation
10. Practice
Accountability
11. Listen First
12. Keep
Commitments
13. Extend Trust
Remember that the 13 Behaviors always
need to be balanced by each other (e.g., Talk Straight needs to be balanced by
Demonstrate Respect) and that any behavior pushed to the extreme can become a
weakness.
Depending on your roles and
responsibilities, you may have more or less influence on others. However, you
can always have extraordinary influence on your starting points: Self-Trust
(the confidence you have in yourself -- in your ability to set and achieve
goals, to keep commitments, to walk your talk, and also with your ability to
inspire trust in others) and Relationship Trust (how to establish and increase
the trust accounts we have with others).
The job of a leader is to go first, to
extend trust first. Not a blind trust without expectations and accountability,
but rather a "smart trust" with clear expectations and strong
accountability built into the process. The best leaders always lead out with a
decided propensity to trust, as opposed to a propensity not to trust. As Craig
Weatherup, former CEO of PepsiCo said, "Trust cannot become a performance
multiplier unless the leader is prepared to go first."
The best leaders recognize that trust
impacts us 24/7, 365 days a year. It undergirds and affects the quality of
every relationship, every communication, every work project, every business
venture, every effort in which we are engaged. It changes the quality of every
present moment and alters the trajectory and outcome of every future moment of
our lives -- both personally and professionally. I am convinced that in every
situation, nothing is as fast as the speed of trust.
Copyright © 2009 Stephen M. R. Covey
author of The SPEED of Trust: The One Thing That Changes Everything
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