Trust at work is crucial for business operations. So, why do so many organizations get it so wrong?
The concept of trust — particularly in the workplace — is deceptively simple.
What is trust at work? It’s a measure of relationships, how one group (employees) feels valued and understood by another (management). The presence of trust indicates healthy workplace culture, as well as a host of benefits to the organization, from resilience and innovation to stock market success.
Yet, it’s something that even the most well-meaning leaders can get wrong.
Great Place To Work® has been measuring high-trust work culture for 30 years and has defined the elements of trust for employees (credibility, respect, and fairness). Data has shown how diversity, equity, inclusion & belonging must be embraced to build trust across an organization.
Over the years, our experts have learned a thing or two about the more misguided notions business leaders have about trust. Here are some of the most common mistakes.
1. Building trust is HR’s job.
Even the most hands-on leaders often fail to understand how central a role they play in building trust with employees. A CEO will make a speech about the importance of culture to the organization — and then pass the baton to the HR team.
Julian Lute, senior strategic advisor with Great Place To Work, explains that leaders often fail to ask questions about how they influence company culture:
- How are we making decisions about the business?
- How are we communicating our decisions?
- How are we listening to feedback and incorporating it into future activities?
“It’s almost like culture lives on this island,” Lute says, when in fact culture has everything to do with the actions of leaders. “It’s really about how people experience their leadership.”
2. Trust can be built quickly.
After a company surveys employees, it often expects to put things right immediately. However, trust is something that can only be built over time, through a continual process of delivering on promises again and again.
Lute says leaders are often frustrated when results don’t change by the next fiscal quarter or before the next pulse survey. His more realistic timetable for seeing meaningful movement is 18 to 24 months.
But that doesn’t mean you should wait to start building trust.
“Your opportunity to build trust always starts now,” says Sarah Lewis-Kulin, vice president of global recognition at Great Place To Work. And while it is more difficult to build trust in a crisis, you always have the opportunity to start building for the future.
“The decisions people make today are critical to the workplace they will have in a few years,” she says.
3. Money can buy trust.
Many leaders mistakenly think they can buy trust with expensive perks and benefit programs.
Lewis-Kulin explains that employees often separate the parts of their work experience that feel transactional. If an employee is dissatisfied with their work culture, their colleagues, or their leadership team, a superb childcare benefit won’t tip the scales.
Employee programs and benefits are important, Lewis-Kulin says, but they won’t make up for a lack of trust. They’re tools that leaders can implement, but they must coincide with complementary company values.
“When you launch the new parental leave program, you must actually allow people to use it and still promote people when they decide to become parents,” Lewis-Kulin offers as an example. “It's that kind of consistency that makes employees feel like they can genuinely trust leaders.”
4. Employee trust is the same as engagement or happiness.
When looking at data from the Fortune 100 Best Places to Work For® list that Great Place To Work produces each year, it’s tempting to interpret it simply as a measure of employee engagement, or even individual happiness.
That’s a mistake.
Lewis-Kulin argues engagement or job satisfaction alone are poor indicators of the overall employee experience. They might be part of the picture, but all workers go through phases of engagement and disengagement, to say nothing of emotional peaks and valleys.
What Great Place To Work measures is trust — and it’s trust that has a transformational business impact on retention, recruitment, and stock prices.
5. Employees don’t have to trust you to get their job done.
Does it really matter how employees feel?
“People will say: ‘Do we pay them? Do they show up to work? Do they have a job?’ That’s the thing that should motivate employees to do what we need to do for our customers,” Lute says.
But employee trust shows up in their work. Employees who feel empowered by their organization are more likely to innovate and go above and beyond for their organization. Great Place To Work research found that the biggest difference between typical U.S. workplaces and great workplaces is the willingness to give extra at work. Great workplaces — and the Best Workplaces — enjoy 55% and 81% more discretionary effort, respectively, than a typical workplace.
Employees also notice when care and concern shown for customers is never extended to them.
It’s not uncommon to hear employees say, “We will do anything for our customers — but when we as employees need any sort of support, it’s a fight,” Lute says.
The best companies know that employees deserve the same level of care and consideration. “It’s that same intimacy you would have with your customers,” Lute says.
6. It’s no big deal if some employee groups don’t trust you.
Without numbers, it’s easy to miss how some groups of employees feel left out at work. Frontline employees often have a worse experience than in-office workers and senior management — and the experience of culture can be deeply divided across an organization.
“If you’re out on the field, you don’t get to go to the birthday party,” says Lute. If your work culture only exists in office activities — workers who don’t participate find it harder to think of themselves as part of the whole.
That’s a problem because often frontline workers are also your brand ambassadors in the community. Employees performing services in the community are the most tangible expression of your brand for most customers.
“If that person’s late, if that person doesn’t finish the job, if that person is rude, if that person has lots of other stuff on their mind, blocks your driveway, hits your car — that person is your representative in that moment,” Lute says.
For companies that wonder how employee trust is affecting customers, Lute recommends going back into your customer experience data.
In his experience, where trust is lacking, so is the experience for customers.
Subscribe to our newsletter
Improve employee retention and engagement with the latest insights from our data and research team. Subscribe to the Great Place To Work newsletter and learn how to create a great workplace culture.
Trust at work is crucial for business operations. So, why do so many organizations get it so wrong?
The concept of trust — particularly in the workplace — is deceptively simple.
What is trust at work? It’s a measure of relationships, how one group (employees) feels valued and understood by another (management). The presence of trust indicates healthy workplace culture, as well as a host of benefits to the organization, from resilience and innovation to stock market success.
Yet, it’s something that even the most well-meaning leaders can get wrong.
Great Place To Work® has been measuring high-trust work culture for 30 years and has defined the elements of trust for employees (credibility, respect, and fairness). Data has shown how diversity, equity, inclusion & belonging must be embraced to build trust across an organization.
Over the years, our experts have learned a thing or two about the more misguided notions business leaders have about trust. Here are some of the most common mistakes.
1. Building trust is HR’s job.
Even the most hands-on leaders often fail to understand how central a role they play in building trust with employees. A CEO will make a speech about the importance of culture to the organization — and then pass the baton to the HR team.
Julian Lute, senior strategic advisor with Great Place To Work, explains that leaders often fail to ask questions about how they influence company culture:
- How are we making decisions about the business?
- How are we communicating our decisions?
- How are we listening to feedback and incorporating it into future activities?
“It’s almost like culture lives on this island,” Lute says, when in fact culture has everything to do with the actions of leaders. “It’s really about how people experience their leadership.”
2. Trust can be built quickly.
After a company surveys employees, it often expects to put things right immediately. However, trust is something that can only be built over time, through a continual process of delivering on promises again and again.
Lute says leaders are often frustrated when results don’t change by the next fiscal quarter or before the next pulse survey. His more realistic timetable for seeing meaningful movement is 18 to 24 months.
But that doesn’t mean you should wait to start building trust.
“Your opportunity to build trust always starts now,” says Sarah Lewis-Kulin, vice president of global recognition at Great Place To Work. And while it is more difficult to build trust in a crisis, you always have the opportunity to start building for the future.
“The decisions people make today are critical to the workplace they will have in a few years,” she says.
3. Money can buy trust.
Many leaders mistakenly think they can buy trust with expensive perks and benefit programs.
Lewis-Kulin explains that employees often separate the parts of their work experience that feel transactional. If an employee is dissatisfied with their work culture, their colleagues, or their leadership team, a superb childcare benefit won’t tip the scales.
Employee programs and benefits are important, Lewis-Kulin says, but they won’t make up for a lack of trust. They’re tools that leaders can implement, but they must coincide with complementary company values.
“When you launch the new parental leave program, you must actually allow people to use it and still promote people when they decide to become parents,” Lewis-Kulin offers as an example. “It's that kind of consistency that makes employees feel like they can genuinely trust leaders.”
4. Employee trust is the same as engagement or happiness.
When looking at data from the Fortune 100 Best Places to Work For® list that Great Place To Work produces each year, it’s tempting to interpret it simply as a measure of employee engagement, or even individual happiness.
That’s a mistake.
Lewis-Kulin argues engagement or job satisfaction alone are poor indicators of the overall employee experience. They might be part of the picture, but all workers go through phases of engagement and disengagement, to say nothing of emotional peaks and valleys.
What Great Place To Work measures is trust — and it’s trust that has a transformational business impact on retention, recruitment, and stock prices.
5. Employees don’t have to trust you to get their job done.
Does it really matter how employees feel?
“People will say: ‘Do we pay them? Do they show up to work? Do they have a job?’ That’s the thing that should motivate employees to do what we need to do for our customers,” Lute says.
But employee trust shows up in their work. Employees who feel empowered by their organization are more likely to innovate and go above and beyond for their organization. Great Place To Work research found that the biggest difference between typical U.S. workplaces and great workplaces is the willingness to give extra at work. Great workplaces — and the Best Workplaces — enjoy 55% and 81% more discretionary effort, respectively, than a typical workplace.
Employees also notice when care and concern shown for customers is never extended to them.
It’s not uncommon to hear employees say, “We will do anything for our customers — but when we as employees need any sort of support, it’s a fight,” Lute says.
The best companies know that employees deserve the same level of care and consideration. “It’s that same intimacy you would have with your customers,” Lute says.
6. It’s no big deal if some employee groups don’t trust you.
Without numbers, it’s easy to miss how some groups of employees feel left out at work. Frontline employees often have a worse experience than in-office workers and senior management — and the experience of culture can be deeply divided across an organization.
“If you’re out on the field, you don’t get to go to the birthday party,” says Lute. If your work culture only exists in office activities — workers who don’t participate find it harder to think of themselves as part of the whole.
That’s a problem because often frontline workers are also your brand ambassadors in the community. Employees performing services in the community are the most tangible expression of your brand for most customers.
“If that person’s late, if that person doesn’t finish the job, if that person is rude, if that person has lots of other stuff on their mind, blocks your driveway, hits your car — that person is your representative in that moment,” Lute says.
For companies that wonder how employee trust is affecting customers, Lute recommends going back into your customer experience data.
In his experience, where trust is lacking, so is the experience for customers.
Subscribe to our newsletter
Improve employee retention and engagement with the latest insights from our data and research team. Subscribe to the Great Place To Work newsletter and learn how to create a great workplace culture.