Trust is not coming back. Scepticism reigns, as it should. – Gerry McGovern
Since the industrial revolution, a trusting relationship between individuals and organisations has been the norm.
This has shaped the way we communicate – both internally and externally. It has resulted in the issuing of corporate annual reports, press releases , customer satisfaction scores and benchmarking results. All designed to tell a positive, on-message story.
Those days have gone.
As Gerry McGovern writes – the game has profoundly changed. “Many organisations are still deluding themselves into thinking that if they can just get their marketing and PR right, they can control the message, control the future.”
I’m not a smoker, but I’m told that if you really want to get a view of what’s happening in an organisation you don’t look at the intranet. You go to the smoking shelter. There hierarchy has no place. You get the real story behind the corporate version, and you get the stories that the corporate machine hasn’t yet realised are happening.
In 2017 we all have our version of the smoking shelter. Our news and gossip travels through the likes of Twitter and the backchannels of its direct messaging system. It thrives through end-to-end encrypted chats on WhatsApp and in peer-to-peer customer exchanges on our Facebook pages.
Over the past 17 years the Edelman Trust Barometer has surveyed tens of thousands of people about their level of trust in the sectors of business, media, government, and non-profits. This year was the first time the study found a decline in trust across all four.
It comes at a time of staggering lack of confidence in leadership: 71% of respondents said government officials are not at all or somewhat credible. 63% said the same about CEOs.
In a world where 76% of people trust leaked information over a press release, we have to rethink what trust means in a digital age.
As part of design work we are doing at Bromford – we’re beginning to redefine what we mean by organisational trust in both a colleague and customer context.
It’s easiest to think about trust in a personal relationship like marriage or a partnership. It’s built through four things:
Applying this to our relationship with organisations is subtly different.
We need to feel that organisations are competent and have the ability to fulfill their commitments. We need to believe they have the right motives, are benevolent, act fairly and honestly. We need to see they are transparent, that they are learning from mistakes and failure.
However, the digital age is disrupting the accepted rules of trust. No longer is a relationship between citizen and institution.
The network effect of technology has created a way for people to share experiences more quickly, and to more people with more detailed information than ever before.
The challenge for organisations is not for them to rebuild trust but to leverage the power of the network. It means reducing the gap between organisational rhetoric and the reality.
That means it’s time to do less talking and more listening:
It means stopping saying how great your organisation is.
It means engaging rather than broadcasting.
It means defaulting to transparency.
It means people as your ambassadors rather than just the CEO.
Trust now lies in the hands of individuals, not in our organisations.
Institutional trust isn’t designed for the digital age. No government , never mind a single organisation, can control it. The official source is now secondary.