Infatuation Rules
Photo: Tim Samuel
Being too trusting can be a weakness if you allow the toxic actions of a few to negatively impact you or your team. All it takes is shifting your view and actions, so that you don't live in a rainbow coloured world where everybody is lovely and gets along well.
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Read More »The world needs more high-trust leaders. Leaders, who support those around them, respect other people’s viewpoints and who are open to being challenged and challenging others to bring out their best. Leaders who trust people and believe in them. It goes without saying that high-trust leaders are critical when creating a thriving culture. They model the right behaviours and don’t tolerate toxicity. After all, leadership behaviours set the benchmark for employee interactions. You can’t have a high performance culture without trust. And it starts with leaders. So could it be that being a high-trust leader can be detrimental? And I will say an unequivocal ‘yes.’ But not in the way that you think. Being perceived as high-trust leader is beneficial and produces fantastic business outcomes. Yet, there is a difference between being a highly-trusted leader and one that is too trusting. A highly trusted leader gets rated favourably for trust by their peers and direct reports. But someone who is too trusting can actually unintentionally cause trust issues. Don’t get me wrong – if you are too trusting, you are far more likely to become a high-trust leader. Much more so than a low-trust leader. But being too trusting makes those around you question whether they can rely on you to make the right decisions or hold your team to account. Not only that, what I often see from well-meaning, high empathy leaders is that they can often be an obvious target by those who like to do as little work as possible. But claim maximum credit, status and financial reward. Take for example people with a personality disorder such as sociopaths, narcissists or corporate psychopaths. They promise the world but rarely deliver. Their false charms fool many. And despite their protestations they will change, it will never be the case. Even psychologists have failed at devising methods to stop them from manipulating others and treating people as social assets ripe for exploitation. And they hate empathetic, trusting leaders – because they are the ones that will catch them out and notify the powers that be. Now, this doesn’t mean stop trusting people because if you’re too trusting, it’s pretty difficult for you to stop doing that (and the world needs more people like you!) What you need to do is work with your natural strengths. You have the ability to create a thriving happy work environment for yourself, your team and your company. You also have the ability to stop toxic workplace behaviours that cause so much pain. Surrounding yourself with the right people is key. You need allies. Other trust champions who want a happy workplace without the unnecessary politics and friction. And you need to put the right boundaries and high integrity behaviours in place. You need to serve as an exemplary role model. Time and time again, I see highly trusting people trying to get the wrong people to like them or not holding under-performers to account. Being too trusting can be a weakness if you allow the toxic actions of a few to negatively impact you or your team. All it takes is shifting your view and actions, so that you don’t live in a rainbow coloured world where everybody is lovely and gets along well. The truth is there are lots of different personality types and there will always be people who don’t like you. There will be some who behave horribly at work to others who cannot be changed and who need to be freed up to work elsewhere. While there are others who are only temporarily disengaged because they aren’t working well in a negative environment. From my research with high-trust leaders, what they do well is believe in people and give them a clear pathway to be better at their job. They support them, but put in clear boundaries and expectations so that their excuses don’t fly. They lead with integrity and compassion, but they don’t take lazy passengers on the journey. And they definitely do not tolerate bad behaviours. Here are four areas where I commonly see high-trust leaders get it right:
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