by Barbara Brooks Kimmel
Section
II:
Trust in Practice
Trust: The Great Economic Game-Changer
How trust can mean the difference between life and
death in business
Survival
is not a Given
Success
in any business venture, large or small, is not assured. Even the combination
of a great strategy and a great product will not guarantee success. Nor will a
company’s size insure against failure. Startups and venerable giants alike can
be struck down by a seemingly invisible disease: distrust.
Banks,
airlines, and auto companies are just a few of the industries torn asunder by
the distrust disease. Dishonest business practices ripped apart the banking and
investment industry worldwide, causing trillions of dollars of economic damage. Every year large airlines file for
bankruptcy and the common denominator is nearly always labor strife—a long
history of labor-management distrust which causes highly inefficient
delivery of services. Sports leagues like the National Hockey League and the
National Basketball Association have been stricken by strikes that nearly
threatened their very existence.
What’s
more, the disease of distrust tends to spread like an uncontrolled virus, soon
becoming a plague that feeds on fear and greed.
U.S.
Auto Industry Succumbs to the Distrust Disease
One
industry that’s dear to everyone is the auto industry—the world’s most visible
and best-studied business sector. In 2009, General Motors and Chrysler both
filed for bankruptcy and Ford came darned close. Being “too big to fail,” every
taxpayer in the United States, through the action of the President, became an
investor in GM and Chrysler through a bailout program (as taxpayers also did
with the banks that failed).
What
is not well known is that in the five year period leading up to the auto
crisis, the “Big Three” U.S. automakers collectively had lost over $100 billion
in the prior five years running up to the 2008 financial meltdown. The
financial cataclysm did not cause their failure; it just put them over the
precipice.
How
could such large companies, staffed by highly educated management
professionals, make such horrific mistakes? What really happened? What can we
learn from this debacle?
How
Distrust Became Deadly in Detroit
Twenty
five years ago, the Japanese auto manufacturers played a very minor role in
manufacturing automobiles in the United States. But Toyota’s vaunted “Lean”
production model (“Kaizen” meaning continuous improvement) threatened Detroit’s
Big Three—Ford, GM, and Chrysler.
As
the Japanese manufacturers—Toyota, Honda, and then Nissan—began building cars
in the U.S., they tapped into the same supplier base used by the Big Three.
Today,
most cars are assembled from components provided by outside suppliers. Typically
70-80% of an auto (such as seats, wheels, radios, and tires) is produced by
suppliers, and the remaining (such as engines and transmissions) are made by
the manufacturer, who then completes all the assembly.
The
Japanese manufacturers on North American soil took a strategy with their supply
chain to build trust: high levels of cooperation, respect, mutual sharing of
ideas, continuous innovation, and a willingness to share in the cost savings
those new ideas would bring. For example, if a supplier could redesign a group
of parts to make them into only one part, thereby shortening assembly time,
reducing complexity of inventory, and lowering potential warranty costs, the
supplier would be rewarded by a 50/50 share in the savings.
Senior
VP of Procurement, Dave Nelson spoke of the insights Honda had about human
behavior. He said the Golden Rule prevailed—treat people with dignity and
respect, don’t beat up on suppliers like lowly vendors, and never play the
blame game when something goes wrong. I asked Nelson about innovation with his
suppliers, and his remarks were quite insightful:
“When we receive a suggestion from our
suppliers, we split the savings 50/50. However, if a supplier is not making
their profit numbers, we give them a larger percentage of the savings (in the
short term), sometimes up to 100%. It helps them out.”[1]
Having
earlier spoken with GM suppliers who indicated that their relationships with GM
were unprofitable, I asked Nelson about costs over the course of model run. He
mapped the cost structure on a pad of paper using a target costing approach.
(See Figure 1) He smiled and as he said that a product that cost $1.00 to
manufacture had been reduced to $.58 by the end of the model run, which put
over a billion dollars a year on the Honda’s bottom line.
Figure 1: Cost Reductions by Honda Suppliers
Not
totally convinced that this was in the best interests of suppliers, I asked
Nelson about supplier profitability over the product life cycle. He assured me
everyone gained by this approach. Pressing farther, I challenged him. Honda was
committed to ensuring the sustainability of their supply base.
“We regularly monitor the financial
condition of our suppliers. I can assure you they are more profitable at the
end of the product life cycle than at the beginning.”
The
Japanese manufacturers saw their suppliers as critical partners in the whole chain of value creation. Similarly they saw
their employees in the same way; along with their newly emerging
dealer-distributor-service network that interacted with the customer. Each member
in the value-creation process was treated honorably as a cherished partner.
Toyota, for example, was not easy on their partners; they expected top quality
and continuous improvement. But if a problem arose with a supplier, Toyota’s
presumption was: “we” have a problem, “we” must determine the cause, and “we”
must mutually solve. [2]
During
the 1990s, Toyota and Honda gained ground fast, eating away at the Big Three’s once monumental market-share. By
building trust with their suppliers and treating them fairly, each grabbed
a larger chunk of market share with higher quality, all the while keeping
themselves and their suppliers profitable. [3]
In stark
contrast, Detroit’s Big Three bludgeoned their key suppliers, using
adversarial, short sighted relationships with their key
suppliers, to the detriment of all. Constant margin squeezing decimated the
supply base. GM and Ford saved money in the short run, but at the at the
expense of consumer value who received poor quality cars; and the suppliers
were financially weakened—a flawed strategy.
My
personal experience in the automobile industry illustrates the difference in
mind-sets dramatically. Working with a wide variety of auto supply companies in
the 1990s was very revealing. Most auto suppliers
provided parts for General Motors, Ford, Chrysler. Some were qualified as outsourcers for Honda or
Toyota. For those that supplied both US and Japanese auto manufacturers, I
would ask about their experiences. The worst buyer was, unquestionably GM,
followed closely by Ford. Both were notorious for nickel and diming their
suppliers, bullying behavior, and illegally canceling contracts or violating
proprietary material of their suppliers.
At one
workshop on supplier alliances I conducted in Detroit for CEOs of auto
suppliers, I asked what kind of cars they drove themselves? Universally all the
CEOs said their personal cars were Japanese. I asked “why?” They all agreed:
“Because we know what goes into them!” One CEO meekly raised his hand and said
“We have a token GM car which we only drive to meetings with GM for fear of
retaliation.”
The
lack of cooperation was extremely costly
GM’s
Procurement Czar in the 1990s, Ignatio Lopez’ notorious negotiations techniques
ran roughshod over every supplier in GM’s supply base; he used ignominious and
illegal tactics to pressure every supplier into price cutting that left them either abandoning GM or selling
to GM below their costs of production. He’d tear up legitimate
contracts in the face of the supplier or illegally take supplier’s proprietary
drawings and give them to Chinese vendors for bids. One ploy that irritated
every supplier was to demand an immediate price cut of 20% or lose their
contract. Suppliers were faced with producing at a loss, or shutting down large
production lines, resulting in even bigger losses. Quality slipped, production
lines often didn’t have the parts ready for assembly, and GM’s warranty costs
consistently outpaced their profits.
Vendors
weren’t the only group to receive GM’s wrath; its labor relations fared no
better. At one GM plant in California there was a backlog of over 5,000
grievances, the result of a long-standing war between labor and management.
Workers were boozed up or drugged up on the job. The absenteeism was often so
high (exceeding 30%) that the production line couldn’t be started, which meant
production halted. Workers regularly sabotaged cars on the assembly line,
putting ball bearings or Coke bottles in the doors and frames so they would
rattle around and annoy unsuspecting buyers.
Rancor
and distrust was so thick you see, smell, and taste it. Self-esteem was
destroyed, and adolescent revolt became everyday adult action.
Ford, not
to be outdone, unilaterally changed contracts, reprogramming their computers to
reduce the amount of any invoice by 5%. Adding insult to injury, Ford then
obtained totally unrealistic bids from unqualified suppliers, which were used
to pressure legitimate suppliers to succumb to unfavorable price reductions in
order to keep their contracts.
Every
part was examined to squeeze out more costs.
Severing
Trust with Customers
Here’s
a tragic example of price squeezing: The Explorer was one of Ford’s most
profitable vehicles, yielding $3-5,000 to the bottom line every time one was
sold.
However,
customers complained of the Explorer’s harsh ride. Rather than spend money
reengineering the suspension’s spring-tension levels to make the ride a little
softer, Ford let pressure out of the tires. Firestone, the tire manufacturer
shot back that the lower tire pressures were below design specifications and
would result in blowouts. Firestone recommended the addition of another nylon
belt around the tire to enable it to run effectively at the lower pressures,
reducing the failure rate by a factor of five.
Ford
vetoed the idea—it was too costly. The addition of a nylon belt would add
another 90 cents to each tire’s cost, eating away at Ford’s profit margins.
The
tires failed horribly. Ford was forced to replace all 13 million tires on its
vehicles, at a total cost of about $3 billion. The recall and associated suits
cost Firestone more than $570 million. But worse, more than 100 people died in
crashes caused by failures of tires on Ford Explorers; law suits were filed
around the world.
“The whole thing just screamed greed,” said La
Rita Morales, part of a jury in California that earlier this year awarded an Explorer
driver $23.4 million in damages. “I didn’t believe in my heart that a company like Ford
would put out a product with question marks over it.” [4]
The
debacle cost Ford billions of dollars in lost sales and law suits. All for a 90
cent belt. The tire manufacturers blamed Ford, and Ford blamed the tires. The
lawyers blamed everyone. Law suits dragged on for years.
Distrust
Costs US Automakers their Economic Prosperity
Warning
signals were everywhere during the years leading up to the 2008 meltdown and
the impending “too big to fail” bankruptcies. The disease of distrust in
Detroit had become virile. An annual automotive benchmark study in 2004[5] sent
emergency signals unequivocally:
•
U.S automakers’ relations with their suppliers suggest more trouble if they
don’t change the way they deal with their U.S. suppliers …[who] are shifting
their loyalties—and resources (capital and R&D expenditures, service and
support)—to their Japanese customers at the expense of the domestic Big Three.
•
Supplier trust of Ford and GM has never been lower; conversely, trust for their
Japanese counterparts has never been higher. Suppliers are increasing product
quality at a greater rate for the Japanese.
•
US automakers have little regard for their suppliers, they communicate very poorly and they generally treat suppliers
as adversaries rather than trusted partners. In all the other industries
studied such as aerospace, electronics, and computers, no one treats their
suppliers as poorly as the US automakers do.
•
US automakers continue hammering their suppliers for price reductions and
multi-million dollar cash givebacks and suppliers are responding by giving them
less support.
•
This shift in loyalty is not driven by cost reduction pressures on suppliers,
but rather on how the US automakers work with their suppliers across a wide
range of business practices.
•
The greater the trust between buyer and supplier, the more suppliers are
willing share and invest in new technology, and provide higher quality goods
and higher levels of service, which lead to greater competitive advantage and
market share.
The
author of this study, John Henke, presented this observation:
“What is apparent is that the Japanese
manufacturers are applying continuous improvement practices to their supplier
working relations just as they have done to their manufacturing processes, and
as a result they continue to win the cost-quality-technology race.”
By
2008, things had gone from bad to worse for the Detroit Big Three, who had
combined losses of over $100 billion for the prior five year period, while at
the same time driving 500 suppliers a year out of business. Their flawed
strategy of distrustful relationships took its toll not only on their
businesses, but on the surrounding community.
Today, the
effects on the City of Detroit’s economy are horrible. The municipality is losing population at the highest rate in the U.S.;
housing values are at the bottom. Detroit Mayor Kilpatrick, taking his cues
from his Big Three counterparts, extorted money from city contractors,
was convicted, and sentenced to
jail. In 2009 the median home sale in Detroit was a sickly $6,000. By 2013 the
City of Detroit was $14 billion in debt—bankrupt—a “ward of the state.”
Harsh
Conclusions
It’s
important for every business leader in America to understand that:
Distrust
destroyed Detroit by enabling innovation to flow away to other regions where
partners focused human energy on innovation, not warfare.
This is
the real message of trust and hope for our commercial future. Trust is not just
good ethics; trust is about building the relationships that charge the human
spirit with the collaborative energy to tackle new problems together; to build
bold new futures synergistically; to join forces across the boundaries of
supply chains to innovate; to safely know that the one will not be trapped by
foolish win-lose gamesmanship; and to challenge the status quo with the
assurance new ideas are welcome.
Trust’s
Hidden Advantage: Innovation
Lest one
be lured into a false sense of hope brought about by the good feelings of
trust, believing trust alone will assure business success, there is really much
more. Trust, while highly desirable, is not the end or the goal; it’s just the
beginning of a larger process.
Toyota,
Honda, and Nissan, unlike their U.S. rivals, understood that trust was the
foundation of collaborative
innovation—the hidden source of competitive advantage. By
removing fear, doubt, suspicion, and manipulation from the business
relationships, a much more powerful program of joint problem solving, removal
of non-valued work (such a redundancy), reduction of waste, and acceleration of
work flow could flourish. High trust is not the goal; it opens the pathways to
real value creation, which then manifests in competitive advantage and
profitability.
Trust
enables everything to move faster, more effortlessly, and with less conflict.
Mistrust causes everything to be more complicated, slower, and far more
fragmented. Because virtually all innovation is a collaborative effort; and there can be no collaboration
without trust.
Fortunately
for the U.S. auto industry, the 2008 debacles shook the foundations of
ill-conceived beliefs. New leadership has made some improvements to their
supplier relationships, but so far nothing earth shattering that would make a compelling
case for taking advantage of trust as an economic game changer.
How
to Channel Trust into Collaborative Innovation
Exactly
how important is trust?
Our
studies show, time and again, high trust organizations have at least a 25%
competitive advantage over their low trust counterparts. Embedding a system of
trust into your alliance yields enormous rewards for all stakeholders. Trust
unleashes latent human energy and enables it to be aligned on a common purpose.
Leaders who want to support collaborative and trigger innovation should keep
the “FARTHEST” principles in mind:
Fairness in all your dealings to be sure that
everyone gets a fair shake. Successful innovation leaders are perceived as
being even handed, good listeners, and balanced in their approach.
Accountable for your actions. When you make a mistake,
admit it and move on. Accountability is the external manifestation of internal
Integrity. Leaders without integrity are quickly dismissed as hypocrites.
Respect for others, especially those with differences
in skillsets and points of view is critical. Without respect for others, trust
cannot be built. Giving respect is the first step in gaining respect.
Truth is an absolutely essential component of
building the type of trust that triggers innovation. Remember, your emotions or
perceptions are seldom real truths. Stick to the facts—things that are
measurable or concrete. And remember, a critical comment has about five times
the impact as a positive comment. So balance your truths carefully.
Honorable purpose must be the
foundation of all your actions. If people perceive your purpose for innovating
as strictly for selfish purposes, without a component impacting the ‘greater
good,’ you will not be perceived as trustworthy.
Excellence in standards. Innovation is propelled by
the idea of always getting better, improving continually, reaching for the
highest level of performance. If anyone sloughs off, they must realign to the
highest measures, otherwise others will be resentful or fall off in their
performance.
Safety & security are
essential to all human beings. This includes ensuring that there is “No such
thing as Failure, Only Learning.” Be careful not to punish what might look like
a failed attempt at creative solutions; encourage learning from failure. And
always avoid the Blame Game. Fear does not produce innovation. You will know
when people feel safe—they will be laughing. Creativity is not all grinding
labor; it’s having fun and laughing a lot, spontaneously creating in the moment—that’s
magical. Research shows that laughter releases endorphins that trigger
creativity.
Transparency & openness enable
everyone to see intentions, share data, and exchange ideas in a culture that
supports challenging of ideas and develops new insights.
What’s
more is that the real advantage of trust is that it is the deepest yearning of
all humans; we were born with it, and it’s our birthright to retain it. Many
leadership situations require influencing without authority, which can only
happen when those we wish to influence trust us. Trust produces highly
effective people, high performance teams, useful ideas and innovations, and
people who want to come to work because it is a co-creative experience.
Robert Porter Lynch has spent the last
twenty-five years formulating the best-practice design architecture of
organizational synergy—how exceptional leaders energize collaboration to
produce sustainable innovation in alliances. He has written several
groundbreaking books on strategic alliances, serves as Adjunct Professor at the
Universities of Alberta and British Columbia, and is founding Chairman Emeritus
of the Association of Strategic Alliance Professionals. Lynch’s book: Trusted
to Lead is scheduled for publication in 2013.
[1] Interview, October 21, 1997
Pinehurst, NC
[2] GM, on the other hand was
loathe to accept any responsibility for supplier difficulties, and would first
place blame on suppliers, who may have been victims of poor planning or
communications.
[3] Another test of the power of
Honda’s quality control is represented by used car prices. A Cadillac, at the
ten year point in its life will have lost a far greater % of its original value
than a Honda. Typically the Honda depreciates at about half the rate of a
Cadillac.
[4] Internal Ford Documents about
Explorer Rollovers By Peter Whoriskey, Washington Post Staff Writer, May 8,
2010
[5] Planning Perspectives, Inc
Report, Aug 2, 2004. Responses from 223 Tier 1 suppliers including 36 of the
Top 50 and was based on 852 buying situations. Participating suppliers’
combined sales represent 48% of the OEM’s annual purchase of components
You Can’t Take 164 Years
of Trust for Granted
Menasha
Packaging Corp (MPC), a 164 year old, 6th generation family business, has grown
from making wooden pails in 1849 to a design-oriented packaging company that
today delights customers, employees and their communities with over $1 billion
in revenue. How? By leveraging their culture of entrepreneurship,
collaboration, and autonomy based on trust and faith in each other.
In
Menasha’s history, there have been times of great trust and times of wavering
trust. The early 1990s were a time of tension between many corporations and
their unions. During that time, MPC, a strong believer in collaboration,
started a formal team-based manufacturing program in their plants between
management and plant workers, including union representatives. The output was
increased innovation from the employees on the floor that improved productivity
and the outcome was increased collaboration and trust. While this may be common
sense to many of us today, it was not the “norm” 20+ years ago.
Fast
forward about 10 years and MPC was not doing very well. As a niche player in a
highly commoditized market (“Brown Box”), they didn’t have the economies of
scale and scope to compete with the big players. Just prior to Mike Waite (an
‘out-law’ as he is married to the youngest daughter of what was then the
current generation) becoming president in 2003, MPC had a formal ceremony
burying the old mission statement and announcing a new one. Performance was
deteriorating; there was diminished trust in leadership. Employees didn’t have
any sense of the company’s future direction, other than it was probably bad and
that any commitments could be up in the air. The company was put up for sale.
Early
in Mike’s new role, he gave air cover to an experiment by two leaders on an
entirely new business model. It was at this time Mike engaged my services to
develop a new, ‘bet your career’ strategic plan. The leadership team believed
culture was key to success; turning the company around meant they wouldn’t be
sold; not being sold and being successful would restore trust and faith, renew
autonomy and entrepreneurship resulting in more success, which would further
strengthen the culture—a virtuous cycle. The strategy focused on People,
Products and Processes with aggressive top and bottom line goals emphasizing
the non-traditional new business model. The “AND/BOTH” (not “Either/Or”)
strategy allowed MPC to achieve customer AND employee-advantage with increased
customer value AND decreased costs (not price).
Because
employees’ skepticism about leadership remained high, they were included in the
creation of the plan. A rigorous strategic communication program was created,
including a letter from the leadership team to all employees. It included
leadership’s commitment to the plan and MPC’s core values and gave employees
the right to hold the leadership team accountable without repercussions. Mike
visited all the plants to share the commitment letter and explain why and how
employees were critical to success. HR aligned everyone’s goals from Mike down
to the plant floor. This helped employees understand their part in the plan—how
they contributed and could have impact. It provided transparency of the Why,
What, How and interdependencies between all roles and responsibilities. It
confirmed commitment to the plan.
The
best demonstration of commitment is always through action. Mike made himself
vulnerable, key to gaining trust, by openly saying, “I don’t know” when he
didn’t and asking employees for their input and ideas on how to discover the
answer. He invested time and money in employee training and education. He
invested in equipment to make money not just cut costs. Even now, employees who
feel they need new equipment or capabilities create and present their own
business case, including the ROI, to their management. If the case is
compelling, it gets funded. Mike’s willingness to spend money to make money has
increased employees’ passion to try new things.
New
communication and recognition/rewards programs were put in place, and still
remain. Frequent transparent communications, including recognitions, awards,
customer testimonials, product awards etc., still stress leadership’s steadfast
commitment. Even achievements of employee’s families’ are recognized, including
scholarships from the Menasha Corporation Foundation. Profit sharing plans were
changed to give a more meaningful (higher) amount to employees. And, Mike still
hand writes notes to employees for special occasions and events, which to many
means more than money.
The
results? Within 18 months of the plan’s creation, almost every employee knew
the strategic plan and why he or she mattered. Once employees realized the
leadership team was committed, more self-organizing teams arose, employee
retention increased, key customer wins increased, costs decreased, and profits
increased. Employees saw that the direction was really working both in terms of
the leadership’s continued communication and commitment and most definitely in
the results.
A
powerful example of trust is MPC’s self-organized teams (SOT), a component of
the strategic plan. These SOTs developed and expanded more broadly than
expected. Part of the reason for this may lie in the investment of time and
money in Lean training. The focus on Lean, not Six-Sigma, put power in the
hands of the people doing the actual work and accelerated the innovative
culture. As Lean thinking started to permeate MPC, innovative thinking was a
no-brainer—part of the continuum of looking at things differently and focusing
on effectiveness instead of just efficiency.
Some of
these SOTs have worked with MPC’s customers on new products and services that
significantly increased customer success. In fact, MPC has brought entirely new
products, capabilities and opportunities to the marketplace. One of my favorite
examples originated with a major account manager in one location who knew MPC
could be doing much more for their customers. He asked 20 non-management
employees, from production, print, design, customer service and sales to come
together to create something that would increase value to the customer and either
decrease or at least keep MPC’s cost the same. Everyone came. They didn’t check
with their management, but they did check with peers to align schedules. The result
of this first, now ongoing, team meeting was a highly successful product. The
team used various designs, finishes, and 3d animation to develop the idea and
then allocated resources for prototyping and testing with customers. Management
only became involved once the results of prototyping were successful and a new
piece of equipment was required. The team created the business case, management
signed off and this ‘process’ is now a template in MPC.
The
success of these self-organized teams spread to other areas within MPC—such as
production, procurement, operations, quality, customer service, finance, IT,
HR, etc. For instance, the strategic plan identified the need for better
project management. Mike asked a few employees to figure it out and come back with
a solution. These people, from different plants, were not ‘freed up’ to do
this—although it was part of their ‘day job’. They were not relieved of any
work. It didn’t matter; the team’s passion for solving the project management
challenge was strong. They created a discovery process and used a ‘divide and
conquer’ method instead of appointing a leader. They looked at what had worked
in other areas of MPC, focusing on Bright Spots (Positive Deviance). They
created and presented a detailed solution to the leadership team, including
specific people to staff new, reallocated positions and technical tools. The
result? It’s been a huge success, providing people with internal growth
opportunities and significant value to customers. Clearly, SOTs require and reinforce
trust, both within and among the teams and with management, who worked hard to
remove obstacles and get out of their employee’s way.
The
MPC culture extends to the communities in which it lives. Mike views himself as
a steward of the company and its communities not just because he’s part of the
family, but also because he grew up in the community. MPC’s success directly
affects the quality of schools, healthcare and sports teams. Employees see each
other outside MPC’s walls in the grocery stores, on the football and soccer
fields, at school concerts, and at the gas station. This raises the level of
accountability, according to Mike and his leadership team. MPC employees are
active on school boards, in food pantries, soup kitchens and local shelters. One
plant’s motto is “Never Walk by a Free Sample.” Employees collect sample-sized
health and beauty supplies from hotels, salons and doctors’ offices to donate
to local shelters. Employees, and MPC at the corporate level, support various
fund raising groups related to diseases affecting MPC families, and packages
are always being sent to our troops.
One
of my favorite examples of a community-based SOT is from the Muscatine, Iowa
plant. Muscatine has an annual Great River Days cardboard boat race. Last year,
a team from the local plant took time during lunch and after work to design and test prototypes, settling on a 30’ long
and 11’ tall Pirate Ship and a canoe-like boat. They even used their Lean
training to design and build the boats! The team commented that this took them way out of
their comfort zone. And, on it’s maiden
(and only) voyage, it carried 4 employees for 10 minutes without leaking!
The
benefits of trust are evident within MPC—both tangibly and intangibly. The
tangible results are continual, consistent increases since 2005 in market share, revenues, profits and ROI,
even during the recession. Sales and profits continue to increase significantly
as a result of capitalizing on earlier investments, facility alignments and two acquisitions. Even
MPC’s Retail and CPG market sales increased in the down market. All years,
including the ‘recession years’, ended with
a strong cash position and exceptional current receivables. While the bigger integrated firms had dismissed MPC in
the past, they became a formidable competitor. Instead of just taking market
share, they created new share with new solutions in new markets, what some call
“Blue Ocean.” Many customers view MPC as a vital part of the merchandising
process. Key retailers require CPGs to use MPC’s products and services in their
stores and CPGs can measure how MPC’s products help both their top and bottom
lines.
The
intangibles are more powerful. When you walk through MPC’s plants, you can feel
the energy; employees on the floor smile and say “hi,” people are laughing and
working together and feel free to ask for help. Employees do not fear new ideas
or failure. Innovation pipelines are visible. MPC continues to invest in
training, education and equipment so their employees can try new ways to work,
easier ways to make “stuff’ and new ways to put things together.The attrition
rate is low and MPC attracts talent around the country to work at this “cool”
company in the Fox Valley of Wisconsin. The board has more confidence in the
leadership team, which results in a willingness to invest and take risk. The
legacy and story of MPC, a private family-held business, is strong with the
emphasis on doing things better and making things better—things that affect
customers as well as the communities where their employees live.
When
you ask Mike what his goal is, he says, “I want to make sure our people get to
live their dreams at home.” It’s that simple, and it works.
Deb Mills-Scofield helps companies create
and implement highly actionable, adaptable, measurable, and profitable living
innovative strategic plans. She is also a Partner at Glengary LLC,
anearly-stage Venture Capital firm in Cleveland. Deb is a co-creator of Alex
Osterwalder’s book, Business
Model Generation as well as contributor to several other
books and is currently working on her own. She blogs at Harvard
Business Review,
her own site, and is recognized as one of the top 40 bloggers on innovation.
Deb graduated from Brown University in three years, helpingcreate the Cognitive
Science concentration and went to AT&T Bell Labs where she received one of
AT&T/Lucent’s top revenue generating patents. She is active at Brown
University, mentoring and advising in several formal and ad hoc programs and
guest lecturing. Deb is a Visiting Scholar in Brown’s joint E-MBA program with
IE in Spain and on the Advisory Counsel for Brown’s School of Engineering. As
part of her “all business is social” philosophy, she asks her clients to match
and donate 10% of her fee to improve lives in their community.
Section
III:
Trustworthy Leadership
Leading Out in Extending Trust
Trust men and they will be true to you;
treat them greatly, and they will show themselves great.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
In
our work, we often ask leaders and executives around the world to reflect on
their lives or careers and to identify a time when someone took a chance on
them, extended trust to them, or maybe believed in them even more than they
believed in themselves. Whenever we do this, without exception, the feeling in
the room changes. People become deeply touched and inspired as they recall
their experiences and acknowledge with gratitude the impact those experiences
have had on their lives. And they become even more inspired when we invite them
to share and they take in each other’s experiences.
We
encourage you to take a minute now and do the same thing. Think of someone who
extended trust to you. Who was it? What was the situation? What difference has
it made in your life?
Leaders
in all walks of life lead out in extending trust to others. In doing so, they
build the capacity and confidence of those who are trusted. They unleash human potential and multiply performance. They
inspire reciprocal trust in both directions—back to those who
extended it and forward to others who could benefit from it.
Leaders
Go First
In order
to increase influence and grow trust in a team, an organization, a community, a
family, or a relationship, someone has to take the first step. That’s what leaders do. They go first. They lead out in
extending trust. In fact, the first job of a leader is to inspire trust, and
the second is to extend it. This is true in a formal leadership role, such as
CEO, manager, team leader, or parent, or in an informal role of influence, such
as work associate, marriage partner, or friend.
In the
exercise we described earlier, after asking leaders to reflect on their
experience when someone extended trust to them, we
then ask, “When have you led out in extending trust to someone else?” This
often brings people up short as they realize that they have missed
opportunities—sometimes many opportunities—to extend trust and initiate an
upward cycle of trust. You might want to think about your own experience. Have
there been times you extended trust to others and really made a difference in
their lives? Have there been times you didn’t but now perhaps wish you had?
Bottom
line, if you’re not extending trust, you’re not leading. You might be managing
or administering, but you’re not leading. “You manage things; you lead people.” And
real leadership requires trust. As renowned leadership authority Warren Bennis
put it, “Leadership without mutual trust is a contradiction in terms.”
When
managers don’t extend trust, people often tend to perpetuate vicious, collusive
downward cycles of distrust and suspicion. As a result, they become trapped in
a world where people don’t trust each other— where management doesn’t trust employees and employees don’t
trust management; where suppliers don’t trust partners and partners
don’t trust suppliers; where companies don’t trust customers and customers
don’t trust companies; where marriage partners don’t trust each other; and
where parents don’t trust their children and children don’t trust their
parents.
But when
managers take the lead in extending trust—in a relationship, on a team, in an
organization, or in a community—negative, collusive cycles of distrust and suspicion can be broken, and a
game-changing shift in possibilities can occur.
Of
course there is risk in extending trust. That’s why it takes courage. But there
is also risk in not extending trust. In fact, there is often greater risk in not trusting. As a society, we have become
very good at measuring the risks and costs of extending too much
trust, but we’re not good at all at measuring the risks and costs of not
trusting enough.
So how do
we navigate through the decision-making process and determine whether or not to
extend trust, and—if so—how much and under what conditions?
There are
two factors you will find most helpful in deciding to extend trust wisely: 1)
your propensity
to trust and 2) your analysis of the situation, the risk, and the
credibility of the people involved. It’s the combination of the two that
creates good judgment. Creating the highest synergy between these two factors
is more of an art than a science. It takes assuming positive intent in others—unless there’s good reason to do
otherwise. It takes determining when verification will
enable trust—or when it will get in the way. It takes discernment and sometimes the willingness to take a leap of trust, possibly
even when “logic” may direct otherwise.
Clearly,
deciding to extend trust does not result in a simplistic, “one-size-fits-all”
solution for every person or every situation. What’s smart for one person may
not be smart for another. What’s smart in one situation may not be smart in
another. Still, successful leaders and organizations have a definitive
propensity to trust and lead out in extending trust to others.
For
example, Zane’s Cycles is one of the largest bike shops in the United States.
Zane’s allows customers to go out the door for test drives on their bikes
without asking for any identification or collateral. When customers offer to
leave their driver’s licenses, they are politely refused. The message Zane’s
communicates to its customers is: “Just have a great ride. We trust you.” As
its founder, Chris Zane, put it, “Why start out that relationship by
questioning their integrity? We choose to believe our customers.” The company’s
high-trust message also communicates clearly to its employees that Zane’s is in
the business of building customer relationships, not merely selling products.
The result is $13 million in annual sales, with a 23 percent average annual
growth rate since opening in 1981, and a loss to theft of only five of the
5,000 bikes sold each year.
When
leaders lead out in wisely extending trust, their actions have a ripple effect that cascades throughout the team,
organization, community, or family and begins to transform behavior in the
entire culture. Sometimes the acts of leaders extending trust become legendary.
For example, when CEO Gordon Bethune burned the Continental Airlines policy and
procedure manuals in the parking lot and told his employees they would be
trusted to use their own judgment, that act became the symbol of Continental’s
new culture of trust.
One
reason some managers don’t extend trust is fear of losing control. They think
they will have greater control in a culture that depends on rules, policies,
and regulations to cover every contingency. In actuality, the relationship
between trust and control is inverse: the greater the level of trust, the
greater the level of control. The French sociologist Émile Durkheim put it
this way: “When mores [cultural
values] are sufficient, laws are unnecessary; when mores are insufficient, laws are unenforceable.” In a
low-trust culture, it’s literally impossible to put enough rules and
regulations in place to control people’s every action. In a low-trust relationship,
the legal agreement can’t be long enough to cover every possibility. We submit
that the best way to increase control is to create a high-trust culture. And
for a high-trust culture to exist, managers must lead out by extending trust to
others.
Leading
out and extending trust creates a culture of immense momentum, possibility, and
power. The increased freedom of expression, the autonomy, the enhanced trust,
and the greater speed at which things can be accomplished make an enormous,
tangible, measurable difference in performance. This is one reason extending
trust is smart. It’s not built on the assumption that what we need is more
rules, more regulations, and more referees; it’s built on the evidence that
extending trust and creating a high-trust culture (in which top performance is
expected) bring significantly greater dividends for stakeholders on every
level.
For
us, a poster child for leading out in extending trust is Warren Buffett of
Berkshire Hathaway. The most remarkable thing about Buffett’s approach is that
his headquarters staff managing Berkshire’s 77 separate operating companies and
more than 257,000 employees is a mere 21 people—unheard of by any measure.
Stanford Business School’s David F. Larcker and Brian Tayan call it “the lowest
ratio of corporate overhead to investor capital among all major corporations”
in the world.
When
we asked Grady Rosier, the CEO who runs McLane, a $33 billion Berkshire
Hathaway business, how Buffett is able to create trust so quickly, he replied,
“You have to understand the core business philosophy at Berkshire Hathaway—the
trust. Warren’s ability to acquire quality companies is built around the trust.
Warren leaves them in charge of their businesses, and they’re happy about that,
and nobody wants to let Warren down. And that’s the way it just cascades down
the organization as to ‘this is what the expectation is and this is what we’re
going to do.’ ”
How
does Buffett handle a span of control that includes more than 77 direct
reports? He operates on the premise of what he and his business partner Charlie
Munger call “deserved trust”—they assume that their people deserve trust unless
they prove otherwise. It’s not blind trust. It’s Smart Trust. It includes a
discerning selection of people, clear expectations, and high standards of
accountability. People respond to it, they thrive on it; they’re inspired by
it. Munger captures this beautifully:
Everybody likes being appreciated and
treated fairly, and dominant personalities who are capable of running a business like
being trusted. That’s how we operate Berkshire—a seamless web of deserved
trust. We get rid of the craziness, of people checking to make sure it’s done
right. When you get a seamless web of deserved trust, you get enormous
efficiencies. Berkshire Hathaway is always trying to create a seamless web of
deserved trust. Every once in a while, it doesn’t work, not because someone’s
evil but
because somebody drifts to inappropriate behavior and then rationalizes it … How can Berkshire Hathaway work with
only [21] people at headquarters? Nobody can operate this way. But we do … It’s what we all want. Who in the hell
would not want to be in a family without a seamless web of deserved trust? We
try for the same thing in business. It’s not rocket science; it’s elementary.
Why more people don’t do it, I don’t know. Perhaps because it’s elementary.
One
person’s or one company’s act of extending trust often inspires those on the
receiving end to reach out and extend trust to others. Often those experiences
become part of a “genealogy of trust.” Somewhere along the line, a parent,
teacher, manager, or leader extended trust to that first individual and
inspired him or her with a desire to make a similar difference in the life of
someone else. Over time, each act of extending trust becomes part of a legacy
of trust that increases prosperity, energy, and joy in families, relationships,
organizations, communities, and even countries … for
generations.
The
question to ask ourselves is this: “What kind of legacy am I passing down to
future generations—to my family, my personal associates, my community, my
organization, my nation? Is it a legacy of trust that will create increasing
prosperity, energy, and joy?” This is what creating a “renaissance of trust” is
all about. It’s about the snowballing effect of extending trust one act, one
person, one team, and one organization at a time.
Where
might you begin to enhance your legacy of trust? Is there a business colleague
for whom, or a situation in which extending trust might change a vicious
downward cycle into a virtuous upward cycle? Is there an opportunity for you to
lead out in extending trust in your team or organization?
Wherever
you start, your decision to lead out by extending trust to others will be a
game-changer. You may not see results immediately. And you will certainly never
see the full impact as those you trust, in turn, reach out and extend trust to
others . . . who then extend trust to others…and so on, over time. But
you will have the deep satisfaction of knowing that you are investing in
something magnificently bigger than yourself—something that can truly affect
every relationship in every team, every organization, every family, and every
community throughout the world.
Stephen M. R. Covey and Greg Link are
cofounders of FranklinCovey’s Global Speed of Trust Practice, which teaches
trust in more than 100 countries worldwide. Stephen is the New
York Times and #1 Wall
Street Journal bestselling author of The
Speed of Trust: The One Thing That Changes Everything. Stephen and Greg are coauthors of the
bestseller Smart
Trust: Creating, Prosperity, Energy, and Joy in a Low-Trust World. They are sought-after speakers and
advisors on trust, ethics, leadership, and high performance and have worked
with business, government, and educational entities throughout the world.
Reinforcing Candor Builds Trust and Transparency
The
decimation of trust in organizations of all types during the past decade has
been alarming, yet some groups have been able to buck the trend and are
actually increasing
trust. The research by Trust Across America is the most comprehensive data on organizations and consultants
who are leading a rebirth of trust. My own experience provides many examples of
the power of trust. This is one.
I
was a Division Manager for Eastman Kodak when an unusual request came in from
the Olympics. Responding to this impossible challenge involved having total
trust in the system and team to allow them to break every rule in the book and
put out a new product in less than three days.
On
a Tuesday morning in 1992, one of the product planners received a call from a
gentleman in Albertville, France. The Winter Olympics was starting to wind
down, and this customer from Sports Illustrated had a challenge for us. He
noticed there were colored Olympic rings embedded in the ice of the figure
skating venue. His idea was to climb up into the rafters and take images
looking directly down on the skaters in the Woman’s Singles Finals on Saturday
night, using the rings in the background. He needed some special equipment in a
format we did not sell. The accelerated cycle time to get a new product to
market like the one he was suggesting was 9-12 months. We had to ship the
product on Friday morning to be sure it would get there on time. That meant we
had to get everything done in 2½ days rather than a year.
The
team assigned the task of readying and delivering this product had a blast,
breaking all kinds of rules in order to make the impossible deadline. In the
end, the customer had what he needed, and the next issue of Sports Illustrated
included an image of Kristi Yamaguchi winning the Gold Medal while she was
literally flying over the Olympic rings embedded in the ice.
The
Business Unit was so thrilled that they presented the Department with a framed copy of the image signed by Kristi
Yamaguchi herself. When the business unit came to the factory to deliver
the picture, it was an electric moment for the workers. It is truly amazing
what a trusted team of workers can accomplish.
While
there are many examples of great progress like the one above, the overall trend
is still far from the trust levels we experienced in past decades. We must do
better.
Once
lost, trust is very difficult to rebuild. There is an urgent need to reeducate
all leaders on how to build trust consistently to prevent further loss of it.
More than any other factor, the quality of leadership governs the levels of
trust seen within any organization.
A
simple three-part model of how leader behaviors can help build higher trust
includes three categories of behaviors.
1.
Table Stakes
These are
the basic building blocks of ethics and integrity that must be present for any
level of trust to kindle. The term Table Stakes comes from the phenomenon in poker where individuals must ante up
even to play in the game. Traits like honesty,
openness, communication, consistency, and ethics simply must be present, or the leader may as well take
off his suit and hit the showers. Trust is not going to kindle or survive if
the Table Stakes are not there.
2.
Enabling Actions
These
are the components that further help build trust once the Table Stakes are
present. There are thousands of items we could name in this category. Here are
some examples: following up, advocacy, fairness, admitting mistakes, and many
others. The more these elements are present, the greater the ability for the
leader to withstand trust withdrawals.
Enabling
actions need to form a pattern of behavior that people see as consistent and
prudent in building trust. It is the actions of the leader that determine the
level of trust achieved in any organization; words are important but
inadequate.
These
first two lists of behaviors are necessary but not sufficient conditions for
real trust to kindle and endure. There is a central core that must also be in
play for the Table Stakes and the Enabling Actions to have their intended
impact. Without this core, these elements will aid in building some trust, but
their potency is severely limited.
3.
The Heart of Trust—Reinforcing Candor
In
this analysis, reinforcing candor takes center stage, because the concept goes
far beyond integrity. It is the magic that most leaders find difficult or
impossible to accomplish, but if done well, make a huge difference in creating
trust.
Reinforcing
Candor is the ability to make people glad they brought up an observation of a
leader’s inconsistency. In most organizations, people are punished in some way
for bringing forward a leadership problem. Where the highest levels of trust
and transparency are present, the leader has the ability to set aside his ego
and reinforce those who challenge an action. Doing so greatly increases trust
and allows for future trust-building exchanges. Without this critical element,
the Table Stakes and Enabling Actions are not sufficient. People do not feel
empowered to challenge the leader and hide their true feelings, making the
maintenance of trust impossible.
One
hallmark of an environment where candor is reinforced is the lack of fear.
Trust and fear are incompatible. If people know they will be reinforced for
initiating the difficult conversations, they will not be afraid to do so.
Whenever people are reinforced for their candor, trust deepens and fear is
suppressed.
The
critical need to reinforce candor can be explained by a phenomenon called “the
ratchet effect.” Like a ratchet, trust is built up by a series of actions or “clicks” that take place over time. But, if
the pawl holding the ratchet from rotating backward becomes dislodged, the entire
spool of trust equity can spin back to zero very quickly.
Visualizing
the Ratchet Effect in Action
Many
authors writing on the subject of trust, such as Stephen M.R. Covey, describe
the level of trust as similar to a bank account. Between any two people there
is a current “balance” of trust that is the result of all transactions that
have happened to date. Every time there is any kind of interface (whether
online, in a meeting,
or even with body language) there is some kind of transaction occurring. Either there is a deposit (increasing
trust) or a withdrawal (reducing trust). The magnitude of the transaction is
determined by its nature and importance.
The
level of trust between people is precisely the same as the balance in a bank
account. It is an instantaneous statement of the total worth of the
relationship based on all transactions up until the present. The balance can
only be increased by making consistent deposits, and being very careful to
limit the withdrawals.
It
is easy for a leader to make small deposits in the trust account with
employees. Treating people with respect and being fair are two examples. Great
leaders go about
their day trying to make these small deposits as often as possible, realizing they are adding to the balance every
time. While making small deposits is relatively easy, making a large deposit is
more difficult.
For
leaders, words alone rarely make a large deposit in trust. It has to be an
action, and it often requires some unusual circumstance, like giving up some
personal time off during a crisis, or relinquishing a long-standing perk if
others cannot have it too.
Unfortunately,
on the withdrawal side, the pattern is different. With one slip of the tongue,
an ill-advised email, or even the wrong facial expression in a meeting, a
leader can make a huge withdrawal. Because of the ratchet effect, a small
withdrawal can become big, because the pawl is no longer engaged in the
ratchet. Trust can quickly spiral to zero or even to a negative balance.
This is an
example of the ratchet effect in a typical conversation: “I have always trusted
George. I have worked for him for fifteen years, and he has always been
straight with me. I have always felt he was on my side when the chips were
down, but after he said that in the meeting yesterday, I will never trust him
again.”
Not
only has all trust been lost in a single action, but also it will take a very
long time before any new deposits can be made. The trust account dropped from a
healthy positive balance to a negative one in a single sentence. In many cases,
the normal small trust deposits do not even register in the account balance
after a mega withdrawal.
It
would be incredibly powerful if we could prevent the ratchet from losing all of
its previous progress. What if there was a way to reinsert the pawl back into
the ratchet during a serious withdrawal so that the mechanism only slipped back
one or two teeth? Reinforcing candor inserts the pawl and provides
organizational magic that has unparalleled power to build trust.
All
leaders make trust withdrawals because no one is perfect. In most organizations, people do not feel safe to let the leader
know they have just been sapped. There is no ability to reinsert the pawl, and
trust plummets. It may even go to zero or a negative level of trust before it
can be corrected over a long period of time with incredible effort.
Contrast
this with another scenario where the individual knows it is safe to let the
leader know she has made a blunder. The individual might say something like, “I don’t think you realize how people
interpreted your remarks. Your decision reduced trust, and I am concerned that
long term damage may result.” If this employee is sincerely thanked rather than
punished for their candor, then trust will grow.
Every
leader is trying to do exactly the right thing all day, every day. If an
employee is so bold as to question why the leader did something, the reaction
in most is for the leader to become defensive and push back on the messenger;
it is human nature. Taking a defensive stance becomes a withdrawal, which does
not work to reinsert the pawl into the ratchet.
Reinforcing
candor is not easy. Not only does it require a leader to suppress ego, it also
means performing an unnatural act in terms of being human. The solution to get
mileage out of reinforcing candor is for the leader to recognize the trigger
point and to modify his behavior to create the desired reaction.
Tip: When an employee brings forth bad
news or a contrary opinion, focus on doing only one thing. When the
conversation is about to end, make sure this person walks away saying, “I’m
glad I brought that up.”
This
tip is difficult for most leaders to execute, because they have justified their
action to themselves, so it is only natural to defend it to others. It takes
great restraint to listen and not have a negative reaction. The good news is
that the more a leader practices, the easier this technique gets. No one will
ever have a 100% batting average, but if a leader can go from 10% to 70% by
focusing on his behavior, he can change an entire culture of an organization in
a matter of months rather than years.
Once
the leader has learned to reinforce candor consistently, something magic
happens. When he practices any of the “Table Stakes” or “Enabling Actions,”
everyone benefits. That is why reinforcing candor is at the heart of building
trust. Individuals who learn to do this well will be among the elite leaders of
our time.
Bob Whipple is CEO of Leadergrow Inc a
company dedicated to improving leadership in organizations. He is also a
professional speaker and a member of National Speakers Association. When
speaking, Bob uses the brand name of “The Trust Ambassador.” He has been named
by Leadership Excellence Magazine one of the top 15 consultant thought leaders
in the country on leadership development. He has three published books on the
topic of trust and over 300 published articles on various leadership topics.
Reach Bob at bwhipple@leadergrow.com
Section
V:
Restoring Trust
Trust, Emotion and Corporate Reputation
In
2008, a musician flying from Nova Scotia to Nebraska checked his prized
instrument because it was difficult to carry on board. When he arrived in
Omaha, he discovered that his guitar was damaged and he immediately contacted
the airline.
After nine months of discussion with the airline, he was told he was ineligible
for compensation because he hadn’t filed the proper claim within 24 hours.
In
a move that has become legendary, the musician, Dave Carroll, recorded a song
and video called “United Breaks Guitars” and posted it on You Tube, and finally
got the attention of United Airlines- within 24 hours.
When
Carroll boarded the plane and checked his guitar with United, like hundreds of thousands of travelers that day,
he trusted that he and his luggage would arrive safely. He put himself in the
hands of pilots, flight control agents and baggage handlers, trusting that all
would act competently.
A
reputation is a promise
A
company’s reputation is built on trust. It’s the promise an organization makes
to its stakeholders about its products, processes and people. The promise is
then secured by the handshake of a transaction. When people trust an
organization, they are more likely to exhibit supportive behavior: buying the
products and services it is selling, recommending it to friends, and taking the
actions it would like. When a company lives up to its reputation, customers
develop warm or trusting feelings about it.
Trust is
an emotion we feel. When we trust another person we feel safe and secure. We are more likely to give them the
benefit of the doubt in times of stress, because ultimately we trust that there
will be a positive outcome.
After
multiple attempts at resolving the airline’s responsibility related to his
broken guitar, Dave Carroll’s emotions had moved from trust to outrage.
A
lack of trust in organizations is evident in the cynicism and skepticism that
permeates modern society, tracked in annual surveys such as the Edelman Trust Barometer. The 2012 survey showed that low
trust in business results in increased calls for regulation because of
perceptions about companies’ irresponsible behavior. While the survey points
out that business leaders are more trusted than government
officials, nearly half of the respondents said the government does not regulate
business enough.
The
decline in trust has a cost
Damage
to a company’s reputation for trustworthiness comes with a price tag.
• Bank of America was surprised at the public
reaction to its announcement of
a monthly fee to use a debit card, and scrapped the plan despite its revenue
potential.[1]
•
BP saw significant increase in its cost of doing business as a result of
reaction to its management of the Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico.[2]
•
The Komen Foundation faced a significant decrease in contributions when its
process to decide to withdraw funding from Planned Parenthood became public.[3]
All
three crises have two elements in common—a significant reputational crisis
event followed by a negative impact to revenue.
A
reputational crisis is one in which trust in the organization is undermined.
Reputation may be an organization’s most valuable asset, but its inherent
intangibility may make it the most difficult asset to manage. This explains why
CEOs and Boards of Directors consider it a perplexing challenge that keeps them
up at night.[4]
Key
to that challenge is understanding the emotions that drive stakeholders’
expectations. Leaders often mismanage trust and reputation because they fail to
think and communicate in emotional terms.
Trust
as an emotional construct
When
faced with consumer outrage—when trust and reputation are at risk—the first
instinct of many organizations is to respond with facts. But mistrust is not
often assuaged by facts.
Trust is
an emotional construct and a building block for civil society and commerce.
Trust is the core of every transaction and interaction. Why? We depend on
others. We need them to provide what we long for—love, safety and security.
Likewise, we depend upon businesses that provide essential products and
services. We rely on them and are disappointed when they fail to meet our
expectations.
Today,
consumer expectations often extend beyond price and quality to how the
companies make us feel. Are we satisfied with our interactions with clerks,
customer service representatives? Do they make us feel important or ignored?
We
expect companies to act ethically, fairly and reliably. When we hear an
executive speak or we read about corporate activities, we make judgments about
them. We decide whether they meet our expectations. These expectations shape
our beliefs and our actions.
The
more that companies meet our expectations, the stronger our emotional bond.
When our expectations are not met, we begin to withdraw our trust, either
slowly or rapidly, depending on the severity of the issue.
Unfortunately,
businesses often approach their activities from a purely logical perspective.
Rationality rules the boardroom while emotionality rules the living room.
Let’s say
a company is accused of acting unethically. The business may meet every requirement for compliance with laws and
regulations. In a crisis, the instinct of executives often is to respond with
the facts that demonstrate the logic of their choices and actions—in this case,
with a full list of compliance actions.
If they
were speaking to a boardroom of fellow executives, or a panel of attorneys,
that response might suffice. But if their broader audience is a nation of
skeptical families and consumer advocates, a cold list of facts may only worsen
the company’s reputational crisis. The company may get a reputation for
unethical behavior.
Instead,
facts should be just the starting point.
Facts:
only the first step toward trust
The
facts are the starting place to build trust. An organization must meet all of
the requirements to comply with the law. If the legal requirements are not met,
then stakeholders have good reason to consider a company weak in the dimension
of ethics.
To
earn trust, a company must go beyond the requirements, beyond the simple facts
of the situation, and demonstrate that it understands the concerns of its
stakeholders. Compliance with the law can be interpreted as doing the minimum;
today, stakeholders have expectations regarding ethics, fairness, workplace and
the environment that go beyond the attributes of a specific product. The manner
in which companies engage, respond and communicate can impact how they are
perceived.
In
times of crisis or stress, when the environment can be characterized as “high
concern/low trust,” people hear messages differently. Given the asymmetry of
information between large organizations and their stakeholders, companies
should communicate assertively that they care about their stakeholders and are
dedicated to resolving the situation. But if those communications are not
backed up with action, the move will backfire.
Commitment,
honesty and empathy
Risk
communication science suggests that to build trust, the facts of the situation
are a small part of what organizations need to communicate. Trust and
credibility depend upon a company demonstrating that it has the knowledge and
expertise to address a problem; that it acts with honesty and openness; and
that it expresses concern and care.
A
company that expresses empathy, care and concern for its stakeholders
demonstrates that it understands their perspectives and is more likely to
maintain their goodwill in a crisis.
In a
crisis situation, here is the recommended breakdown of communications content:
•
Half of a company’s external communications should express care and concern;
•
One quarter should express the company’s commitment to addressing the
situation;
•
And only one quarter should focus on the facts.
Consumers
today express their feelings through traditional market research and customer
care surveys, but also through social media.
A company
that welcomes unfettered stakeholder feedback will employ a listening platform
to understand what is being said about it and its competitors—and to ascertain
whether its perspective on a situation aligns with the perceptions of its
stakeholders.
The
more sophisticated social listening tools capture the level of emotion in the
public dialogue about an issue or organization—such as the emotion expressed in
comments on Twitter, blogs, Facebook and web forums.
Using
tools from social psychology, a listening platform should predict the emotion
that will be felt by people reading about an issue or company. By understanding trust and other emotions that drive
perceptions and lead to behavior change, an organization can demonstrate
empathy, caring and concern that resonates with its stakeholders.
Case
study: Fear undermines trust
For
example, during the 2007-2008 financial meltdown in the US, a major financial
services firm conducted an analysis of the emotions about the crisis in the
public dialogue. By applying a social-psychological framework to the language
people were using to describe and discuss the situation, the firm found that
the three strongest likely emotions were: irreversibility, unfamiliarity and a sense among consumers that their
involvement wasinvoluntary.
Irreversibility. A risk perceived to be irreversible
elicits greater negative emotions than one that is thought to be reversible. In
this case, consumers expressed deep fears that the changes they were seeing
were permanent. This fear of permanent economic difficulty was reflected in
changes in consumer sentiment about spending.
Unfamiliarity. This concept involves the emotional
concern over the unknown risks from an issue. Risks perceived to be unfamiliar
are less readily accepted and appear greater than risks perceived to be
familiar.
Involuntary. The involuntary nature of the crisis
stemmed from consumers’ feeling that they were unable to have any influence
over the situation; that it was not a result of personal choice.
In
this case, organizations that wished to demonstrate empathy, caring and concern
with their stakeholders would communicate the steps that could be taken by each
relevant party (government, banks, consumers) in language that most people
found easy to understand. They would explain in plain language how the
situation occurred, using examples from familiar situations. And, they would
describe the role of the responsible parties and what they were doing to
address the situation.
Case
study: Blame undermines trust
More
recently, a proposition was on the ballot in California to require labeling of
genetically modified food. A recent analysis of the dialogue around the
campaigns for and against Proposition 37 identified three primary emotions: human
involvement, dread and catastrophe.
Human involvement. This is an emotional concern that derives
from the feeling that the situation is being caused by human failure or action.
Risks perceived to be generated by human action elicit greater negative emotion
than risks perceived to be caused by nature. If someone caused the problem,
that person is expected to fix it.
When
consumer commentary focuses on “human-caused risk,” consumers are assigning
blame. They are calling organizations to account. A company that fails to
understand these expectations risks looking tone deaf, which undermines its
emotional bond with stakeholders, gives rise to distrust and damages its
reputation
Dread
and catastrophe. These are
extreme emotions. When dread and catastrophe are driving the emotional tenor of
the public discussion, people are likely to be experiencing fear, terror and
anxiety. They perceive the potential for fatalities, injuries or illness.
In
such a situation, a company must respond with both empathy and action to
preserve trust, protect its reputation and contain the issue. If people fear
catastrophe, but a company responds with only the bare facts of, say, its
compliance program—that company would rapidly lose the trust of many of its
stakeholders. Such a misstep could give rise to calls for additional
regulation.
Trust
payoff … or penalty
A
strong reputation that inspires trust provides a measurable payoff.
A
company that is highly regarded by its stakeholders is more likely to enjoy
strong brand loyalty and long-term, high-value customers. It can expect to see
lower employee turnover and easier recruitment of high-caliber employees. Such
a company is more likely to benefit from higher investor confidence, a more
positive regulatory environment and even lower costs of capital, as its
reputation paves the way for greater trust from financial partners. That’s the
payoff of trust and a good reputation.
Mistrust,
resulting in a weak or negative reputation, exacts a measurable cost—a reputation
penalty—in the form of increased customer churn and elevated customer acquisition costs. Such a company will
face higher employee training costs and related service inefficiencies. It will
pay the price of regulatory constraints, increased cost of capital, lower
investor confidence and an increased vulnerability to competitors.
Leaders
are responsible for protecting both revenue and reputation. To fulfill this
dual responsibility, they must orient their organizations toward understanding
the expectations of their stakeholders as a core element of strategy.
Every
leader knows perceptions are reality; the wise leader uses the drivers of trust
to survive and thrive in the current economy.
Linda Locke is the principal of Reputare
Consulting, a consultancy that focuses on reputation, risk, crisis management
and strategic communications. Locke previously served as the group head and
senior vice president for Reputation and Issues Management for MasterCard
Worldwide. linda.locke@reputareconsulting.com
[1] Bank of
America drops debit card fees, by Sandra Block, USAToday, Nov. 11,
2011
[2] Reputation,
Stock Price and You by
Dr. Nir Kossovsky, Apress, 2012
[3] Komen
Foundation Struggles to Regain Wide Support, by David Wallis, New
York Times, Nov. 8, 2012
[4] Third
Annual Board of Directors Survey 2012—Concerns About Risks Confronting Boards—EisnerAmper,
May 7, 2012; survey of 193 U.S. company directors regarding chief concerns
beyond financial risks.
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