Throughout my 30 years working with entrepreneurs, CEOs, and organizations worldwide, I’ve seen firsthand how trust transforms possibilities… and while we’re often taught to think of trust as an abstract idea, it’s actually a lot more practical, measurable, and transformative than we’ve been led to believe…
What Makes Trust Work?
What Makes Trust Work?
The Trust Formula emerged from my work moderating confidential forum groups at EO and YPO. In these high-stakes environments, members share their most challenging business and personal issues, creating a natural laboratory for observing what builds or erodes trust. Working with five colleagues, I identified consistent patterns that determined whether trust flourished or failed, distilling these observations into a practical framework: :
Trust = Credibility + Reliability + Adaptability + Vulnerability – Ego
Each element of The Trust Formula addresses a fundamental human need in working relationships: the need for truth, consistency, flexibility, authenticity, and genuine collaboration. By understanding these elements and the specific ways they show up (or don’t show up) in our professional lives, we can diagnose where trust breaks down and repair those specific areas.
The Elements of Trust:
An Overview
The Trust Formula in Action
Implementing the Trust Formula involves a structured approach that helps organizations identify and strengthen specific trust components. The process typically includes assessment, education, practice, and integration. Teams learn to recognize trust gaps, develop shared language around trust elements, practice new behaviors in safe environments, and ultimately embed trust-building practices into their operational systems.
Rather than focusing on temporary interventions, this work creates sustainable patterns that continue to strengthen over time, allowing organizations to develop their own unique expressions of the formula.
Why This Matters Now
Several specific factors make trust-based leadership essential today:
These days, command-and-control leadership is failing because it assumes leaders have better information than those closest to the work–an assumption that no longer holds true in most industries. It also creates bottlenecks where decisions wait for approval, slowing organizations in environments that demand speed.
Distributed Teams
With teams spread across time zones and cultures, traditional oversight is impossible. Organizations must choose between paralyzing micromanagement or building trust-based accountability systems that allow work to continue across distance and time.
Accelerating Change
When market conditions shift weekly rather than yearly, organizations need employees who can respond immediately without waiting for permission. This autonomous decision-making only works when people deeply understand organizational priorities and trust exists in both directions.
Talent Expectations
Today's professionals, particularly knowledge workers, join and leave organizations primarily based on culture rather than compensation. Trust-based environments create the conditions where talent thrives and chooses to stay.
Knowledge Specialization
As work becomes more specialized, leaders cannot possibly understand all aspects of the tasks they oversee. They must trust experts within their organizations while ensuring those experts understand their broader goals.
Stakeholder Complexity
Organizations answer to diverse stakeholders: from customers and employees to communities and regulators. Navigating these competing interests requires trusted teams who can make nuanced decisions aligned with company values.
Let’s talk about what matters most
Whether you’re navigating growth challenges, considering leadership transitions, or building more meaningful connections within your team, I welcome the conversation and opportunity to collaborate. Share what’s on your mind, and let’s figure out how I might help you achieve your most important goals.