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Site Home –› Self Enhancement –› Art Of Leadership
 

Trust and Leadership

 

It has been a long and demanding journey for me personally to learn about trust since leaving the corporate world two years ago. I now lack the benefit of daily contact with colleagues and our water-cooler conversations about issues related to relationships and trust. Meeting new people and arranging new relationship agreements has been a huge learning experience that has forced me to develop, accept and embrace my own judgment about trustworthiness for good or for bad. Ive made some mistakes in trusting some people, but Im grateful for these lessons because now I can share them with you. For example, I have learned to be cautious about trusting too quickly (which is admittedly part of my nature both an asset and a liability).

So, as a leader, what does it take to invite others to put their trust in you?

Why is trust so important to successful leadership?

1. Because you cant build and sustain relationships without a basic foundation of trust and sustainable relationships are essential to getting your job done.

2. Because you absolutely, positively cannot lead others without them believing that, when they follow you, they will be doing the right thing. We know that motivating others to follow a vision is essential to leadership, and trust is the foundation.

3. Because trust is easier to cultivate and sustain from the beginning of a relationship than it is to rebuild once it has been lost.

What makes us place our trust in a leader?

For many of us, this is intuitive. We either feel that we trust a person or we dont. Therefore, I asked a few colleagues and clients what behaviors and actions are needed for them to place their trust in someone. Overwhelmingly, these are their top three answers, in the order of the frequency in which they were given:

1. Demonstrate a consistent commitment for having the feet follow the mouth. Its vitally important that leaders demonstrate that they will do what they say they will do. Note the emphasis on consistent. The use of this word is intentional, because inconsistent action results in a lack of trust in a leader.

2. Exhibit integrity and honesty. These traits are hard to define, but we all know them when we see them.

3. Listen and show respect for others even when you dont need to. The leader sets the tone throughout an organization for the way employees are treated, and employees then deal with stakeholders (including customers) in that same manner. If the leader treats employees well, the stakeholders will be happy.

The bottom line is that trust is a blend of who you are as well as concrete actions that you take on commitments. Earning and sustaining trust takes dedication and practice. The hard part is remaining consistent in a world where we are continually assaulted with trials that test our trustworthiness.

The good news is that when leaders build up a trust storehouse by consistently demonstrating these behaviors, they may be forgiven for minor slippages in behavior, especially if they show good-faith efforts to get back on track. Build up your trust storehouse, and some mistakes in trust are acceptable.

When others have trust in us, it really does make it easier to lead and motivate others. You may benefit from some feedback on whether you are on the right trust path by hiring a coach or consultant to conduct a 360-degree feedback or a multi-rater feedback instrument on your behalf.

Author: Mary Jo Asmus
 
Author Bio:

Mary Jo Asmus

As President of Aspire Collaborative Services, Mary Jo Asmus specializes in leadership, partnering with senior executives, ?high potentials? and their teams to clarify and support them in achieving their professional and business goals. Mary Jo's global Fortune 500 background in business areas as diverse as human resources; research and development; organizational development; and business strategy allow her to provide valuable insights about individuals and organizational systems.

Mary Jo?s hallmark is her professionalism, honesty and integrity. Her style is facilitative and focused on the results needed to reach and surpass individual and organizational goals. Her passion for collaborative partnership and discovering strengths facilitate action suited specifically for the individual and team. She feels strongly about the role of integrity and ethics in coaching and subscribes to the ICF Code of Ethics.

Her clients are high-integrity and motivated leaders and teams in all business sectors ? public, private, non-profit and government - who appreciate Mary Jo?s ability to customize the approach to foster successful change.

Mary Jo?s area of expertise include workplace relationships and communication, engaging and motivating individuals and teams; priority-setting; improved productivity; change management; self awareness, emotional intelligence; culture assimilation; and strategic planning and development.

Mary Jo is a graduate and former advisory board member of Corporate Coach University; is active in her profession as the President-elect of the state of Michigan coaching chapter, the former President of the West Michigan Coaching Chapter, and is an active member of the International Coach Federation. She has completed the Executive Leadership Institute at the University of Michigan, and is a licensed facilitator of The Coaching Clinic?, teaching coaching skills to leadership within organization. She is qualified and/or certified to deliver ?gold standard? assessments, including Myers-Briggs Type Instrument, DiSC, Platinum Rule and Panoramic 360.

Mary Jo is recognized for inspiring and energetic keynotes and workshops for leaders at all levels on topics such as developing collaborative teams, improving work relationships, coaching skills, escalating emotional intelligence in the workplace, enhancing team and workplace communication, and strategy.

This article can be searched using: leadership skills, good leadership skills, leadership qualities, leadership skills development
 
 
 

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