Rebuilding trust has become a top priority for companies that are looking to break out of the
negativity that has become pervasive in many organizations. A self-centered, “What’s in it for
me” attitude robs an organization of the best that employees have to offer. When employees
perceive that an organization—or its leaders—are less than forthcoming, employees
become unwilling to contribute any discretionary energy or make any commitments to their
organization’s well-being beyond the absolute minimum.
Lack of trust creates cynicism, doubt, and anxiety that leads to “time off-task” speculation
and generally low energy and productivity. When people don’t trust their leaders, they
don’t come toward something; they pull back and withdraw instead. They doubt rather than
cooperate.
Often, the result is that employees will stay with the organization and do their job because
they need a paycheck, but not much more. It becomes purely a transactional relationship
with employees asking themselves, “If the organization does not do right by me, why should
I do right by them?” Sometimes employees will even leave an organization where trust is
lacking. Blanchard’s research with more than 1,000 leaders reinforces this point. Fifty-nine
percent of respondents indicated they had left an organization due to trust issues, citing lack
of communication and dishonesty as key contributing factors.
1 comment:
I remember reading somewhere.....Something about a "Glass House"reference,where the main problems involved in one company was the no trust and negativity.It centered around the leaders keeping everything hidden,or,under wraps...Anybody else see that?
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