Is There Leadership Trust Where You Work?

Culture-of-Gratitude

It can be hard to spot right away, but in many workplaces an underlying lack of leadership trust undermines productivity and team success. The leaders I work with are, for the most part, 99.9 percent trustworthy as individuals. At least in the relationships we have, there is no doubt in my mind they are good people genuinely interested in bringing out the best in themselves and those who work for them.

And yet, if we were to survey employees, I’ll bet they don’t all get high marks in the “trust department.” There are many reasons for this. First, here’s what the research says:

Only seven percent of employees say they trust their senior leaders to look out for their best interests. In a 2011 Maritz survey, more than 90,000 employees worldwide said the No. 1 driver of employee engagement was “when senior management takes a genuine interest in me as an individual.”

Employees want consistency between their leaders’ words and actions. But only 11 percent of employees strongly agree that their managers “walk the talk,” the Maritz poll reveals.

Trusting relationships are what make the difference between people’s feeling good about what they do and simply going through the motions. Trust is inspiring and energy producing. ~ Dennis and Michelle Reina, Trust & Betrayal in the Workplace

Fairly or unfairly, leaders’ behaviors are magnified and weighted, including their values, work ethics, integrity and perceived honesty. Employees have high moral expectations for those they choose to follow.

Why, then, do almost 90 percent of leaders rate so poorly on measures of trust? It’s not just a problem for rank-and-file employees. Roughly half of all managers don’t trust their leaders, according to a Golin Harris survey of 450 executives at 30 global companies.

These statistics are particularly troubling. A distrustful environment creates expensive—and sometimes irreparable—problems.

There may be a trust deficit in your company, and you may not even realize it. Maybe it’s part of the culture, and it’s not talked about. It’s a huge cause of lack of engagement and team dysfunction.

What do you think? I’d love to hear from you. You can call me at 561-582-6060, let’s talk. And as always, I can be reached here or on LinkedIn.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest