Trust doesn’t appear on most leadership dashboards. It’s treated as a culture variable, something that
gets assessed annually through a survey, acknowledged in a values document, and then left to
operate on its own until something goes visibly wrong. That approach has a significant blind spot: by
the time low trust shows up in measurable business outcomes, you’re already behind where you
needed to be.
The relationship between employee trust and performance isn't theoretical. Gallup’s meta-analysis of
183,000 business units across 53 industries and 90 countries found that high-engagement
environments, which are strongly correlated with high-trust leadership, showed a 23% increase in
profitability and 13% higher productivity than low-engagement units. These are not marginal
differences. They are the kind of performance gap that changes competitive position over time, and
they trace back to something as fundamental as whether employees believe the people leading them
are being straight with them.
What Low Trust Actually Does to a Team
The most expensive thing low trust produces isn't turnover. It’s the quieter cost that precedes
turnover: (1) the information that doesn’t surface because people have learned that raising concerns
is risky; (2) the ideas that don’t get shared because the environment doesn’t feel safe enough; (3) the
problems that compound in silence because nobody wanted to be the one to name them.
Leadership operating in a low-trust environment is functionally making decisions with an incomplete
picture of reality. They believe they have visibility. What they actually have is a filtered version of
organizational truth, shaped by employees who have calibrated exactly how honest it's safe to be.
Unfortunately, that filter costs more than most organizations ever calculate.
Trust Erodes Fast and Rebuilds Slowly
One of the most important things to understand about workplace trust is that its timeline is
asymmetric. A single highly visible moment where leadership’s actions contradict its stated values
can undo months of credibility. Rebuilding that credibility requires sustained consistency over time.
not a single corrective gesture.
This is why organizational change is so consequential for trust. Every restructure, leadership
transition, or strategic pivot, is a moment when employees are watching very closely to see whether
Leadership’s communication matches its behavior. When it does, trust can actually strengthen through
disruption. When it doesn’t, the damage lingers well past the change itself.
Trust Is Built at the Manager Level, Not the Executive Level
Senior leadership sets the organizational tone, but employees experience trust, or its absence, directly.
primarily through their relationship with their direct manager. A company can have a strong employer
brand, a well-crafted values statement, and an executive team that communicates thoughtfully at all-
hands meetings. If an employee’s direct manager withholds information, avoids difficult
conversations, or fails to follow through on commitments, that employee's experience of the
Organization is low trust.
This means that building organizational trust requires building manager capability, not just improving
executive communication. Managers need to be equipped to explain the reasoning behind decisions.
not just the decisions themselves. They must acknowledge uncertainty honestly rather than projecting
false confidence. More importantly, they must follow up consistently after hard conversations rather
than avoiding the relationship until the next crisis.
At World of Consulting LLC, these specific trust-building behaviors are embedded in the Decode to
Lead™ program and assessed through the Exec Decode Circle™, which gives senior leaders real
visibility into how trust is actually functioning across teams, rather than waiting for an annual
engagement score to tell them something has gone wrong. The truth is that trust doesn’t wait for your
measurement cycle to start eroding. Building it deliberately is the only way to stay ahead of it.