Trust Me
Some say that trust is a gift. Others say it must be earned. Still others refuse to trust anyone at all. Andy Grove, chairman of Intel, even wrote a book called Only the Paranoid Survive. Great title, but in practice it is a tough way to live!
What we know is that when you trust your employees, most will be trustworthy. They will feel honored and respected when you trust them with important tasks and heavy responsibilities and when you let them do things their way. When you fail to trust them, they will often feel dishonored, disrespected, and undervalued. And you can bet they will leave when a better opportunity presents itself.
If you doubt this, think about a time in your career when you had a boss who trusted you implicitly, trusted you to excel, trusted you with information or assets. How did you feel? How committed did you feel to the boss or the organization as a result?
Alas
He simply could not learn to trust us. It was as if he thought we were all out to get him, and in the end it was almost a self-fulfilling prophecy. We knew we were worthy of his trust, and yet we almost began to feel guilty as he micromanaged us and constantly looked over our shoulders. We had to account for every minute of our time and every nickel we spent. Finally, it was just too demeaning. The entire team decided to find other employment and a boss who trusted us.
—Director, engineering firm
If only the boss had trusted his team. They were truly not out to get him—they were just trying to do their jobs. To trust someone implicitly shows tremendous respect for that person.
Nine out of ten employees say that true success is about being trusted to get the job done.
To Do
Check out your own ability to trust others. Do you tend to offer trust as a gift or demand evidence of trustworthiness before you give it?
Try trusting your employees. Say you trust them, act like you trust them, and really trust them. Give them responsibility and then let them carry it out.