How Important is Trust in Your Business?

By Deborah Anderson

Trust

Building trust among your professional connections is absolutely critical to your success. It may take a long time to earn the trust of the other person in many cases; however, it will be well worth it in the long run because your business will flourish because of it.

People should be respected and treated people with equality, and sometimes (especially in the marketing field), there is so much hype and teaching about how to persuade someone they need something that they do not need. It is refreshing to read about building trust instead of manipulating people’s emotions. And, that is what I did this week, while reading “Flawless Consulting: A Guide to Getting Your Expertise Used” by Peter Block.

We Are On a Journey

Maister, Green, and Galford, in their Consulting to Management journal article called, “What is a trusted advisor?” remind us that we do not start out as trusted experts in our field, but many times, that is our goal in life. It is often apparent in those who have succeeded at reaching that goal.

Three Key Principles

So, from that awareness of the journey comes three key principles that can be gleaned, especially from Peter Block’s book, Flawless Consulting:

  • Being authentic.
  • Being thorough.
  • Being fair.

Being authentic means discarding all of the techniques on how to “win someone over” or “impress them.” In the marketing field, that would be tossing out the very hype that we are often taught to use. There are some wonderful people who have combined degree paths of marketing and psychology. Those who apply it well realize the value of the human. Those who do not, seem to think that the study of psychology is the ticket to understanding what makes people tick and manipulating them into a sale. Even Mr. Block pointed out that people can see through that. They know when a consultant is being fake. Therefore, it is essential, in building trust, to be authentic.

One of the sections in Flawless Consulting included a discussion on “Completing the Requirements of Each Phase.” Skipping steps can cause the client or line manager to become edgy. Also, it does not enforce the foundational steps needed in building trust. Just like a house requires the foundation before framing and before the sheetrock, consulting needs to be thorough and built in the right order.

Being fair is a good ideal for life, but it also applies to consulting. Building trust does not mean becoming a doormat as a consultant, but finding balance and approaching it in a healthy manner, especially in the area of communication. This, too, will help the client or line manager to have a balanced view of the contract and working relationship and build further trust.

Personal Example

In one of my positions as Director of IT, I was often put in a position of serving other capacities. In that capacity, I became a consultant of sorts, offering answers to our wealthy clients’ questions and offering suggestions on how they could use their technology to help them reach their goals. After I had helped one particular client, he requested that his financial advisor put me on the access list for his bank account. That is trust. And, that is an example of building trust.

After graciously declining, with the explanation that I could still assist him in the same capacity without that access and that I appreciated the trust, I pondered the situation, wondering what it was that built trust in that situation. I realized that the respect of the person and understanding the client’s emotional needs was really what built up that trust. It is nice to have an explanation of what it is that happened. To me, it was about treating the client with respect and kindness because he was a human being and not because he had a lot of money. Somehow, that respect must have been what he needed, emotionally, being accustomed to good treatment based on his status, and it caused more trust than I was expecting.

Conclusion

Being able to learn new skills and re-frame past experience in light of this new-found knowledge not only helps us to see the success but also helps us to see it in practice. Are you ready to strive to be a respecter of people and not just implementing ways to manipulate people into thinking they are satisfied with the consulting? That method of really caring about people, in the process of consulting, seems to be a foundational cornerstone in building that trust. And, trust, well, it just seems to pay off in the long run.

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Deborah comes from a corporate background, as a Chief Technology Officer and operational management, and combines that with her entrepreneurial spirit and her success as a writer and Los Angeles Jazz singer. Her educational background is in software architecture and project management. She teaches professionally, including teaching companies how to use Twitter Chats to enhance their social media campaigns.

With her SocialWebCafe.com, she is continually navigating the newer realm of Google+ Hangouts to iron out the glitches and present a platform that is workable for most businesses, as well as personal use.

You can connect with her on Google+ and follow her at @SocialWebCafe.

Tags: authenticity, Business Etiquettes, business relationships, Online Reputation, Reputation Management, trust, trustworthiness