The semi-professional blog of Albert Ciuksza Jr.

Thoughts on Trust

Trust model stolen from<br /> Paul English<br /> (http://paulenglish.com/trust.html)

Trust model stolen from Paul English

In my forever-ago last post, I talked about personal branding and reputation, but realized that I might have missed the point. In all the conversations taking place online, from marketing, ‘personal branding’ and credibility to religion and politics, trust seems to be at the core of what everyone is talking about. How do we build trust? How do we keep people from thinking us untrustworthy? Who deserves our trust in the first place?

A friend and I were having a couple of beers post-finals and got to the question of trust. We came to the conclusion that trust is in crisis: the Catholic Church is waging a battle for survival as a result of a sexual abuse scandal that might point to the Pope himself; a movement of vocal activists are declaring their distrust of government, accusing it of attempting to become a socialist state; and banks are being charged with fraud for purposefully selling investors funds that were specifically designed to fail.

This wouldn’t be such an issue except that we’re built to trust, we need to trust. We don’t have the energy to evaluate all of the things in our life every day, so we find those cornerstones that we can lean on. When those things crumble, we have to find something new. We’re now forced to evaluate everything in our lives for trustworthiness and are incredibly quick to pull the trigger on the least hint that it is being violated. This isn’t healthy but we’ve been given little other choice.

This article by Pete Blackshaw in Advertising Age speaks well to the current challenges facing marketers attempting to build trust. He mentions the study showing that peer-to-peer trust is down significantly as a chilling reminder that we’re not even trusting our friends’ opinions anymore. And why should we — a recent study that I can’t seem to track down concluded that Gen Yers work very hard to manage their online presence to show their ideal selves (pictures attending parties vs. winning 1st place at math camp). Perhaps the best point he makes is that we have many more questions than answers.

My personal theory on trust was well summarized by Dave Popelka from Mullen Advertising, who wrote a great article about striving to be good rather than the best. He talks about the challenges and pitfalls of measuring your business (or, as I think about it, yourself) against others and suggests that shooting for “good” is the best approach. In my world, this means being good, being consistent and doing as much as possible to avoid our human tendency to pass blame to others when I’ve failed.

Overall, I see trust as an incredibly personal thing. Attempting to manipulate people’s perceptions of you lowers that trust, makes the relationship (be it you or your products) superficial and renders already fragile brand loyalty null and void. However, I still don’t see this as an answer, but rather the beginning of a series of questions that helps us to figure out what trust means to us and how we allocate it to the people, companies and brands we interact with.

2 Comments

  1. Haseeb

    First off, I must admit that I am very impressed by your blog in general. As someone who has had difficulty in scouring the internet for useful blogs, twitter posts or similar tools, this blog comes as a reawakening. The world as we know it is in transition and some fundamental deeply entrenched notions are  being challenged everyday because of the new dynamics in play. I think trust is a very important issue for me as a consumer and as a person. I think most humans have the ability to tell whether the other person is being genuine or not. In this age of information, consumers ,such as myself, are so aware that people should think twice before trying to mislead another. As an example, I went to the sprint store to have my phone fixed. I knew the phone had similar issues reported by countless sprint customers and that the hardware itself was reportedly buggy. The first response of the sales person would have been to have it immediately replaced, but he did not. He made me go through the repair shop process which obviously did no good and eventually my phone had to be replaced. That was a breach of trust for me because I knew what the sales person assumed I did not and he tried to apply the typical maneuvers to avoid a replacement. The new phone performs noticeably (and I mean noticeably) better than the one I gave in. No crashing, no memory leaks, no problems! It even looks slightly better and feels better as well. That has made me wonder ….

  2. Albert Ciuksza Jr.

    First, thank you for your compliments.

    Second, I don’t know how great we are at understanding trust, either as marketers or consumers. As marketers, we have yet to figure out what trust means to the customer, especially since the concept of trust is so individual. As consumers, there are so many things that impact what trust means when we’re interacting with a company. For instance, how does a brand with low trust begin to gain trust (think banks)? How does a brand with high trust (Tiger Woods) blow it and can it ever be recovered?

    Third, your Sprint example — should the company really care about your trust? On the surface, probably — your trust will likely make you happier with their service and increase the likelihood that you’ll stick around. However, you’re signed on for two years and the only thing that REALLY matters to mobile providers is the closing argument, i.e. can they give you a good enough deal (or phone or service) to keep you around at the end of the contract? You like your new phone better, right? Would you then abandon Sprint today? For a $175 cancellation fee, I’d doubt it. Unfortunately, that type of policy bleeds into other companies to the point that no one trusts anyone. And that’s what we need to fix.

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