Terence Mauri: Why trust and co-creation are workplace priorities
HRD Thought Leader Terence Mauri discusses why a value like trust is now essential to organisational and team success
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HRD Thought Leader Terence Mauri discusses why a value like trust is now essential to organisational and team success
Not only can HR and business leaders help organisations to co-create the future, but perhaps they can also energise the workplace along the way. Whether this comes down to technology, the race to reskill or diversity, Hack Future Lab founder and global management thinker Terence Mauri sets out why it’s time to rethink the importance of trust in supporting an inclusive, human-led and sustainable future.
Is it time to rethink the importance of trust? Trust is the basis for clarity and connection and it’s the foundation of every leadership action, relationship and transaction. Customer. Employee. Digital. Financial. Ethical.
A nice-to-have is now a must-have; a value is invaluable. Yet, around the world, we see truth decay and records levels of distrust across businesses, governments and the media. At no time has trust been more tested or more valued by our customers, our leaders and each other.
Hack Future Lab’s Truth Decay study has identified that despite trust in the workplace being a key driver of wellbeing, motivation and performance, only 44% of employees feel they are ‘often’ or ‘always’ trusted by their managers. The data should set alarm bells ringing, especially when trust has never been more important for morale, productivity and psychological safety.
Trust is the number one driver of commitment and contribution. It is a catalyst for moving from outdated boss-led leadership models to a style of leadership which I define as human-led, tech-enabled; intentionally diverse; purpose-driven and built for trust.
The commercial and human implications of truth decay are significant, with the impact on businesses alone estimated to cost over $1.5 trillion globally. Trust was historically considered a ‘soft’ corporate issue. Its connection to a company’s value was always there, but unclear. Fake news, data breaches, and digital skulduggery are a few modern trends that’ve undermined trust globally.
According to Hack Future Lab, ten out of 15 industry sectors have reported a decline in trust over the last three years and there are plenty of recent events to justify this. Consider the VW diesel emissions scandal in 2015, the Boeing Max 737 crashes, and Wirecard crashing into insolvency in 2020 after admitting that €1.9bn in cash was missing.
With truth decay on the rise, can leaders rebuild years of eroded trust? According to Edelman’s Annual Trust Barometer, 58% of people do not believe today’s organisations are fit for purpose, and a third of employees believe their job will not exist in a few years due to AI and automation.
Now is not the time to adopt a ‘wait and see’ strategy. As beacons of trusts, leaders need a more expansive view about their mandate and should make trust a priority across competence and reliability (how you do things) and integrity and empathy (why you do things). It’s time to reassess and reaffirm the importance of trust as leaders’ north star for leadership success.
Here are three imperatives for leaders to prioritise trust alongside growth and profitability.
To thrive, every organisation must prioritise three things:
What’s more, the pandemic and the accelerating shift from doing digital to being digital has highlighted that current ‘business first’ leadership models that prioritise compliance are broken, and has provided an opportunity to reset to ‘human-first’ leadership, which prioritises value creation and ultimately personal contribution. This inclusive mindset shift includes:
Leaders who are the most trusted capture the most value when difference, divergent thinking and diversity is not just a set of beliefs, but is recognised and celebrated. It’s clear to me that people want values and value at work, and that this starts by moving from an ego (me) to eco (we) mindset.
As we transition to new ways of leading, there is fear and excitement. In the short term, leaders must face the unknown business consequences of the pandemic and, in the medium term, the continued impact and opportunities of AI, robots and automation. Hack Future Lab’s research shows that 83% of leaders see trust playing a far greater role in sustaining a thriving workforce in a post-COVID world.
As leaders prepare to return employees to the workplace, they must ask the question: ‘How do we cultivate a high-trust and energised workforce willing to own the transformation journey, and be resilient enough to handle the challenges brought by disruption?’ Organisations such as games developer Roblox and e-commerce leader, Square report that high-trust employees are:
At this time of unrelenting change, leaders may find themselves alternating between three distinct phases depending on the course of the pandemic:
Hack Future Lab’s research shows that the best leaders go big on truth, transparency and trust, and place ethical drivers at the heart of their leadership style.
Hack Future Lab’s research shows that leaders who unlock trust have made the decision to transition from command-and-control leadership to care and co-creation. Not only that, they are more energising to work for and more resilient in the face of adversity. Now, it’s the people delivering the experience who are driving the advantage — and the differentiator for them, too, is trust.
Without trust, relationships break down, organisations stop working, and societies fail. In an age with record levels of distrust brought on by social tension, economic nationalism and technological revolution, it’s time for leaders to re-assess how to bake trust into the DNA, strategy and day-to-day operations of their business and measure, amplify and sustain trust across the whole stakeholder mix from employees, to customers, suppliers, investors, analysts and the media.
Put trust at the forefront of your leadership, strategy, and culture, and your customers and people will put trust in you. Are you ready to rethink the importance of trust?