Why should business leaders care about trust? This is why:
Performance of Trust Across America’s
Most Trustworthy Public Companies vs. the S&P 500 (2014-2019)
The chart above is the cumulative “Return on Trust” of America’s annual “Top 10” Most Trustworthy Public Companies over the past six years. Through its FACTS® Framework, Trust Across America has been analyzing, assembling and publicly reporting on this data for ten years.
If you are the CEO of a public company, or any company for that matter, who claims there is no Business Case for Trust, now may be the time to reconsider. Why DO business leaders require proof or ignore trust as their most valuable strategic advantage?
Leaders take trust for granted
Trust doesn’t just “happen.” It is not bestowed upon leaders by virtue of their title. Trust is a learned competence and an intentional business strategy that must be crafted, practiced, modeled, and reinforced daily.
Leaders focus on the wrong metrics
Growing quarterly earnings, over reliance on sales quotas, focus on “old school” risk and/or “new school” ESG metrics will not satisfy the trust imperative that stakeholders are increasingly demanding. Neither will talking rather than acting on trust.
Leaders treat trust as a “soft skill”
Organizational trustworthiness is a hard currency. The proof is in the chart above.
Leaders are “trust reactive”
Rarely do we hear proactive leadership discussions about building stakeholder trust. Instead, trust becomes a communications talking point only after a breach. This is both a missed and lost opportunity for leadership.
Leaders delegate trust
Trust is not a function of legal, compliance, HR, communications, or any other department. Boards of Directors and executive leadership teams must spearhead trust, making it central to the organization’s core values, so that all stakeholders can benefit.
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