Showing posts with label Trust. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trust. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Human Resources Should Lead on Trust (Jarvis Cromwell)


The following piece written by me appeared in HR Leaders


Sure, trust is “topic A” among the pundits and in many respects it’s turning out to be one of the defining issues of the emerging century.

No news there. What is getting less attention is that the current state of low-trust is not confined to the financial markets. Public distrust in big business, Congress, even not-for-profits, reached its lowest ebb in a century… and not this past year, but back in 2002. In writing about how striking a finding this was for business results at that time, the Roper Organization grimly noted:

“It is unprecedented to see this many people with an unfavorable opinion of big business.”

For HR professionals, low-trust must now become a central issue in shaping human capital strategies, employee engagement and corporate performance initiatives. Why? Because trust is transactional and can impact relationships in every corner of your organization. No matter what the transaction may be – an interbank loan, a frank discussion with an employee, a sales pitch, or a team meeting – the outcome is aided when trust is high and hurt when it’s low. In this sense you can think of high trust as an accelerant to business performance and low trust as a kind of clotting agent that at best slows transactions down and at worst stops them dead in their tracks.

Low trust is a particularly nettlesome HR issue because it makes leadership success more difficult. A startling statistic comes from the Harris Poll, which in 1966 found that 55% of Americans had “a great deal of confidence” in the leaders of big companies. In 2007, only 16% of Americans expressed the same confidence.

Imagine you were designing an employee engagement program back in 1966 to help achieve an important operating goal. Maybe you needed to rally the troops around a new strategy, or convince sales about the quality of a new product, or persuade the union that certain proposed regulation is unwise. Now imagine that same program being implemented today amidst much lower trust among all the various stakeholders. It’s a pretty safe bet that the desired transaction in the higher trust world of 1966 would have greater chance of going smoothly than the same program delivered in 2008.

Beyond the Roper and Harris polls are literally hundreds of studies over the last few years that paint a very difficult operating environment for building trust, among the findings:

• As few as 13% of all Americans are placing their trust in big business
• Only 39% of employees in a Watson Wyatt survey said they trusted senior leadership
• On primetime TV you are 21 times more likely to be kidnapped or murdered by a businessman than by the mob. Some three-quarters of folks out there feel companies don’t tell the truth in advertising.
• Three quarters of employees in big companies observed violations of the law or company standards in a 12-month period.

Grim statistics all – but table them for now. Because the key question comes down to this: how do you lead a company to capture strong performance when trust is low?

As a performance discipline, trust today is where quality was in the 1970s before Deming and TQM were widely understood or applied. Senior executives often intuitively recognize that trust is important for driving results, but they lack an effective process to manage it. HR professionals can help their organizations close this gap by taking steps to begin institutionalizing processes that lead to higher trust.

As trust and reputation-related risk issues climb to the top of management agendas, HR can lead the way by seeking effective ways to align what the organization is doing (performance) with desired reputation (trust). The problem is that almost every management team lacks two vital components: 1) a disciplined review process to evaluate how decisions and actions across the organization have impacted trust among stakeholder groups and 2) a means for guiding operational execution and decision-making – both to achieve reputational goals and to mitigate the risk of a damaging “trust event.”

Accepting the idea that companies need to find new and more effective ways to ensure that performance is aligned with trust, how do you begin? Based on work we’ve done in the Reputation Garage, a collaborative founded to create new ways to improve organizational performance in an era of low trust, here are four steps worth considering:

1. Improve executive decision-making by sensitizing management to the issue of trust. Based on our study of this issue, the lack of understanding executives have for the downstream trust impacts of their decisions and actions is a primary contributor to the problem. The good news is that training can install a “trust lens” to guide executive decisions and improve appreciation for trust-related impacts.

2. Identify those key trust/reputation elements that are vital to achieving your mission, goals, and strategies. The first step in making trust a performance-related issue in an organization is to identify specifically where it fits into the core success drivers of the business. Call them what you will, but the strategic goals of the company need to link with your trust in meaningful ways, because it is management’s strategic goals that drive the focus of the company.

3. Consider adding a trust/reputational risk dimension to your current risk management program. Trust-related events occur with far more frequency than one might suspect. In a study conducted between 1989-99, Lippincott Mercer found a surprising number of Fortune 1000 companies experienced a serious event that damaged their stock price. To be considered serious, the event had to lead to a company losing 25 percent or more of its market value in four weeks or less—in other words, a major haircut. How many companies experienced this kind of corporate tsunami? One out of ten! The leading cause of loss was what Lippincott Mercer called “strategic missteps.” Representing some 58 percent of the events that took place during the study period, many of these missteps stemmed from trust/reputation issues. If you calculated the typical loss based on an average market capitalization for the Fortune 1,000 today, you would come up with a loss of more than $2 billion per company, on average.

4. Enhance transparency and measurement through a trust-related performance measurement program. Do you have a process in place to collect, evaluate, and report on how various operations, actions, policies, and decisions affect your brand reputation? What work have senior management teams done to identify and manage those key operational tasks that will create brand opportunity or mitigate reputational risk?

I have been involved with this issue for 20 years and the one thing I can say with confidence is that the tools for managing trust today are crude. My expectation is that in the next few years many companies will move from a state of stone knives and bearskins to a more sophisticated approach. Corporate performance and the world will be better for it.

Copyright 2008 by the Reputation Garage


Trust Redux (Jarvis Cromwell)

In founding the Reputation Garage collaborative back in early 2007, we wrote of our goals to drive trust in a low-trust world. The premise was that Trust mattered and needed to be fixed before things really want awry. Little did we know! Below is that early post.

WHY WE STARTED THE REPUTATION GARAGE

The world’s business community has reached, well, let’s just call it a low point: Practically nobody trusts big business. (In the U.S. the number who say they trust big companies and brands hovers around 13%)

So the intent behind this blog is as simple as it is ambitious: We're an experienced group of professionals who want to help change the dismally low worldview of business. We are pushing for a new era of business performance - where companies and their brands are trusted more than they are today. (Along the way, we also expect to see continuing seismic shifts in marketing practices as we know them.)

Our merry band of “trustmeisters" includes yours truly, a consultant and former big company CMO who is known for his thinking on this topic; a U.S. ad agency chairman who questions the efficacy of many traditional marketing programs and practices; a corporate social responsibility expert and U.K. native who has also served as co-head of the U.S. branding practice for a global communications firm; and a leading thinker at the intersection of marketing and technology whose day job happens to be at one of the world's leading consulting firms. We'll be adding more trustmeisters as we go along.

Are we out to change the world? No, but if trust matters, then a lot of organizations are not supported by strong footings. More importantly, a majority of customers and employees around the world are expressing unhappiness with the current state of affairs. That doesn't exactly spell brand power or, to use the catch phrase of the moment, employee engagement. Because traditional practices have failed to prevent or solve these problems, new ideas and actions are called for here.

So for the record, trust matters. Indeed, if you’ve attended any of the last several World Economic Forum meetings in Davos over the past few years, you know that there is significant hand-wringing taking place over this issue. When trust declines, the nature of virtually every exchange and transaction is altered. Brands, which are built on trust, lose value. Sales become harder to generate. Customers defect, as loyalty deteriorates. Employees disengage from their jobs and the company mission.

So where's the fix for organizations looking to improve upon this sorry state of affairs? Join us here in the Garage as we uncover, evaluate and share emerging new ideas and solutions for what may be the most important marketing issue for our times.

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

On Stephanie Fierman, Google and your Online Reputation (Jarvis Cromwell)

Listen up, because this is important to your professional reputation and career.

Readers know I blog about the impacts of low trust on all kinds of human exchange and enterprise. Do you trust me as a credible expert? If you're not so sure, what action would you take?

Did I hear the word "Google"?

Well, google me and you'll get a bunch of corroborating evidence. I'm a seasoned chief marketing officer (CMO), I've contributed a chapter on trust to a marketing book and I speak about trust and reputation at conferences around the country. Unfortunately, a Google search on my name also serves up this result:

"A 25-year-old Goldsboro man -- wanted by New York City police on two murder charges -- was arrested Tuesday by Goldsboro police."

That other Jarvis Cromwell – who apparently is a couple of decades my junior – shows up on page 7 of my Google search listings. If you ever thought he was me, your opinion would surely change. Which is why online reputation is so important, and that brings us to Stephanie Fierman.

Last week Stephanie Fierman, a well known and respected marketing executive, spoke at a CMO Club dinner in New York and shared some thinking on managing online reputation. You can find coverage on this topic by Anna Maria Virzi in ClickZ here. You can also read Stephanie's blog, here.

Stephanie got everyone’s attention by discussing how widespread gossip, innuendo and misinformation about executives are on the internet. And it is easy for executives to wake up one morning and find themselves the victim of misinformation or worse. And the more senior and visible you are in an organization, the more vulnerable you are to potentially damaging disinformation campaigns. The scary part of the story is that everyone from recruiters, to new hires to clients can and do check you out on the web.

So start taking action now. Here are a few of the tips Stephanie shared the other night:

1. Monitor your online footprint. Many people rarely if ever check out their search listings. That's a mistake. Make sure you check your online presence regularly on all of the search engines. You should also monitor online news services, newsletters, blogs, chatrooms and image banks.

2. Build your online reputation before you need it. If you haven't already done so, you need to begin creating search-engine friendly content before a crisis arises. Blog, post to other blogs, create a website, create online profiles (LinkedIn, Facebook, etc.) be active at work and in other activities that will get you mentioned online.

3.
Respond quickly to damaging, inaccurate or slanted online content. If you find yourself attacked or worse online, don't hide. You need to respond quickly and authoritatively in the realm where the original content appeared, with clear and open messages and factual information. Tell the truth.

4. Be discriminating. If you participate in social networks, be very discriminating about whom you connect and what content you post!

5. Appeal to the webmaster. Ask the webmaster to remove questionable or defamatory content. Frequently they will.

In some ways, Google is bringing us back to a Victorian age when social circles were smaller and gossip could spread throughout a community like wildfire. There was little or no anonymity in those circumstances and ladies and gentleman had to vigorously defend their reputations because ruination was a real possibility.

The takeaway for trustmeisters: today's professionals live in a google-centric world where rumor and innuendo can be used against them. All the more reason to manage your personal reputation proactively and with care.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

5 Ways to Prevent a Reputational Disaster (by Paul Dunay)

Lots of brands are finding out the hard way that there are plenty of conversations taking place about them online. For good or bad.

Many brands choose to ignore this. But hope is not a strategy.

Since consumers rely heavily on the Web as an authoritative source of information, managing a brand's online reputation has become a top priority for companies. Here are 5 tips from The Reputation Garage's "new technology" archives. They could help you avoid a major disaster and reduce the risk of a flogging in the blogosphere.

Tip 1: Monitor the New Conversational Terrain

You have to be listening. As Woody Allen said, "half of the battle is just showing up." Create a custom feed based on keyword searches using tools like Technorati, Feedster, IceRocket and news.googlecom.

Tip 2: Measure

Agencies like Nielsen BuzzMetrics and TNS Cymfony (trackback to a podcast on how to measure the blogosphere) have more advanced tools for monitoring social networks, blogs and communities. They also can measure the volume of buzz, track the sources and gauge the emotion of the content, be it positive, negative or just sarcastic.

Tip 3: Engage

If you don't join the conversation, you have no control. We'll say it again: hope is not a strategy. Tools like BuzzLogic can give you a picture of a blogger, as well as the influencers that surround any given blog. Also sites like BlogInluence.net and SocialMeter.com can provide a snapshot of any blogger's street cred.

Tip 4: Buy Keywords?

Yes. If you do end up with a firestorm surrounding your company or brand, why not buy keywords and get your story told? Jim Nail from Cymfony says "for a company to protect its brand, they should be buying keywords." Consider Wal-Mart as the classic example. "Wal-Mart Sucks" yields negative results for the first 10 listings. So why not own those keywords as paid links to sites that put Wal-Mart in perspective, covering, among other things, the company's substantial economic benefits to society?

Tip 5: Use PR to Strengthen Your Digital Footprint

Another obvious tactic would be to issue a series of press statements to address whatever the concerns are, and optimize them for the Web. Consider using a press release distribution company such as PRWeb, which sends releases to journalists' email boxes and makes them Web ready. This will help increase the rankings in news engines such as Google News, as well as in the general search results. When a press release ranks high in a search engine, it's just one more spot a negative listing won't appear!


Tuesday, May 22, 2007

You say you love me, but... (By Jarvis)

The funny, short video below says a lot about the state of relations today between marketers and customers. It’s a break-up scene. Ms. Consumer wants a divorce from Mr. Advertiser. And just like the dissolution of many relationships, trust has broken down.

Some of “Ms. Consumer’s” grievances:

“You’re saying you love me, but you’re not behaving like you love me. You’re not genuine.”

“You do all the talking…. It’s not exactly a dialogue.”

The video exposes a fundamental issue for companies looking to build trusted customer relationships: We now live in a “show me” marketplace where our words are increasingly disbelieved.

Piper Jaffray’s recent analyst report on the new advertising ecosystem (The User Revolution) highlights some of the problems plaguing advertisers.

• The effectiveness of one-way advertising messaging has been collapsing around the world. Its influence on customers is more and more suspect.

• Content is increasingly controlled by users, who are either designing their own or mixing information sources to their preference.

• The consumer decision process is changing radically. In the new age of information transparency, products and services are selected based on expert reviews or peer recommendation, not because of the marketing or sales message.

And if you’re a business-to-business marketer and think you’re immune from all this, think again. A recent study sought to identify the trusted sources of information among sophisticated corporate technology buyers. Only 3% picked the vendor itself as the most trusted source of information. Analysts took top billing.

So what’s the fix for marketers? Better spruce up your influence-building skills on all levels.

Do agencies get it? Many think not. We can report, however, that this clip was passed along to the Garage from the folks at Allen & Gerritsen. So at least one agency gets it.

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Brand Trust Was Missing from Friedman's Playbook (Jarvis)


We find Andrew Zolli one of the more interesting and relevant futurists out there these days. He recently wrote a great piece in Fast Company (here) that kicked off with a quote from renown free-marketeer Milton Friedman:

“There is one and only one social responsibility of business”, Friedman wrote back in 1970, and that is to “engage in activities designed to increase profits.”

As soon as we read this quote here in the Garage, we knew that Zolli had nailed it: Friedman’s pronouncement marked a watershed moment for global business, a tipping point for the guiding principal of the era: profitable self-interest would prove to be the only reliable endgame.

And everyone knows how things played out with the help of Friedman’s compass. The rise of the activist shareholder movement. Reagan-era deregulation. Michael Douglas’ declaration that “Greed is Good” in the movie Wall Street. The tearing down of the Berlin Wall. The creation of the Jack Welch rules of management.

All of this and more helped companies achieve higher performance throughout the 80s and 90s. “Mr. Market” surged, helped along by a long-term decline in interest rates and a speculative bubble or two. A lot of executives (and shareholders) grew rich.

Greed took a victory lap. Capitalistic self-interest flourished. Customers got better and cheaper products. All in, Friedman’s playbook worked.

Of course, playbooks rarely cover all the bases equally well. Which brings us to another quote, this one from advertising icon David Ogilvy:

“The customer is not an idiot, she is your wife.”

The point Ogilvy was making is that you can’t pull the wool over your customers’ eyes. They notice everything and apply their observations with keen self-interest. And today, with only 13% trust levels in business, the customer seems to be saying: “Yes, yes we get it. Big companies have improved performance greatly, but they are not in the game primarily to benefit us." And this means that companies live in a world where the customer may buy from them, but probably doesn't trust them and may not like them. And the key point for management? Low trust changes the nature of virtually every transaction -- for the worse. Just ask Michael Dell. It's a headwind you have to take into account as you steer the business.

All of this brings us back to Andrew Zolli and the title of his Fast Company piece: “Business 3.0: The oblivious Capitalist’s Days Are Numbered.” In this case he casts his eye to the future and the environment and concludes that a host of global forces will force a remake of the playbook for business success. Business will profit by driving a wider social agenda and “the clinical, value-neutral capitalism of old” will fall by the wayside.

We agree. Long-term growth has always come down to this: finding and keeping customers at a profit. And the playbook now requires companies to place greater attention on building trust and reputational performance. GE, Toyota and other leaders are already well on their way towards profiting from the wider social agenda.

As one example, product value propositions are being stretched by companies of all kinds to appeal to the LOHAS segment (i.e. customers who focus on lifestyles of health and sustainability.) These folks do yoga, buy Energy Star appliances, drive hybrids and read books by Andrew Weil. And guess what? There are some 50 million of them out there paying a premium for products. They make up an estimated $228 billion market and are growing.

In the LOHAS market, the reputational performance of the company you do business with matters. Further evidence that for aspiring corporate trustmeisters, it’s time once again to reinvent the playbook. After all, that’s why we’re here in the Garage, isn’t it?

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Saturday Extra: Daily Show Post

We got some emails regarding yesterday's post on the problems of Messrs. Imus and Wolfowitz. One reader wanted to know what Daily Show segment we were referring to. Hey, this is professional blog! Then again it's Saturday -- a time when the trustmeisters here in the Garage turn up the boom box and kick back a little.

So here's the Daily Show piece. Enjoy!

Friday, April 13, 2007

So Don't Do That! (Jarvis)











It’s easy to grow callous over the daily scandal sheet. On this week’s critical-care list: World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz. And for shock jock Don Imus, the lights have now officially gone out.

But so what? While Wolfowitz and Imus are clearly victims of their own bad judgment, the learning for the reputation-minded can be summed up in an old Marx Brothers bit:

“Doctor, it hurts when I do this.” (Gesturing with arm.)
“So don’t do that!”

At first blush, the cases appear quite different. Radio's famous bad boy Imus was dethroned by his notoriously noxious tongue – a thoughtless joke, he says, gone terribly wrong. The Daily Show had some fun, saying Imus offered up an excuse for his remark: he doesn’t have a PR agent.

PR can’t help much once the genie is out of the bottle.

To other matters, Wolfie, as our President likes to call him, may also lose his job - in this case over more than a slip. Indeed, a series of bad decisions could send him packing.

A quick recap of the Wolfowitz case: boss gets girlfriend generous pay package and transfer. Boss claims he got approval for his actions from the ethics committee. That claim is later called into question. Boss apologies for the mistake. Board deliberates boss’ future.

Both “trust events” will cost plenty. The Imus show brought in an estimated $20 million in revenue to CBS last year. That's gone poof. And then there’s the issue of management distraction. The growing controversy at the World Bank has overshadowed major development meetings taking place this weekend. And it has also caused further turmoil among staff, who have called for Wolfowitz’s resignation.

According to the Financial Times, the scandal has jeopardized the one asset the President of the World Bank has: his credibility. Indeed, Wolfowitz has been mistrusted by many both inside and outside the bank since his appointment. All this makes it harder for the World Bank to do what it's supposed to do: fight global poverty and raise the world’s living standards.

The take from this Garage “trustmeister” is that Groucho’s advice is sound. Don’t do that. Reputational risk is real and companies need to find effective ways to mitigate poor decision-making. Large organizations are especially vulnerable to dangerously myopic judgment. What’s often missing is a zoom out lens. In other words a mechanism to help companies look out from the point of decision and understand its impact on brand reputation.

It’s a necessary practice, whether your talking about a brand, a company, a CEO, or a shock jock.

Saturday, April 07, 2007

Why we started the Reputation Garage (Jarvis)


The world’s business community has reached, well, let’s just call it a low point: Practically nobody trusts big business. (In the U.S. the number who say they trust big companies and brands hovers around 13%)

So the intent behind this blog is as simple as it is ambitious: We're an experienced group of professionals who want to help change the dismally low worldview of business. We are pushing for a new era of business performance - where companies and their brands are trusted more than they are today. (Along the way, we also expect to see continuing seismic shifts in marketing practices as we know them.)

Our merry band of “trustmeisters" includes yours truly, a consultant and former big company CMO who is known for his thinking on this topic; a U.S. ad agency chairman who questions the efficacy of many traditional marketing programs and practices; a corporate social responsibility expert and U.K. native who has also served as co-head of the U.S. branding practice for a global communications firm; and a leading thinker at the intersection of marketing and technology whose day job happens to be at one of the world's leading consulting firms. We'll be adding more trustmeisters as we go along.

Are we out to change the world? No, but if trust matters, then a lot of organizations are not supported by strong footings. More importantly, a majority of customers and employees around the world are expressing unhappiness with the current state of affairs. That doesn't exactly spell brand power or, to use the catch phrase of the moment, employee engagement. Because traditional practices have failed to prevent or solve these problems, new ideas and actions are called for here.

So for the record, trust matters. Indeed, if you’ve attended any of the last several World Economic Forum meetings in Davos over the past few years, you know that there is significant hand-wringing taking place over this issue. When trust declines, the nature of virtually every exchange and transaction is altered. Brands, which are built on trust, lose value. Sales become harder to generate. Customers defect, as loyalty deteriorates. Employees disengage from their jobs and the company mission.

So where's the fix for organizations looking to improve upon this sorry state of affairs? Join us here in the Garage as we uncover, evaluate and share emerging new ideas and solutions for what may be the most important marketing issue for our times.