Tag Archives: leadership

CORPORATE REPUTATION STRATEGY – THE LEADERSHIP WORK BEHIND TRUST

CORPORATE REPUTATION STRATEGY – THE LEADERSHIP WORK BEHIND TRUST

A corporate reputation strategy should begin with a simple question. What would make this organisation easier to trust?

Not easier to like. Not easier to recognise. Easier to trust.

Trust is not a communications theme. It is a leadership condition

That distinction matters. This year, at Anthropy, the leadership conference focused on creating a better, fairer Britain, two conversations on the trust deficit and the role of reputation in national prosperity returned to the same idea, that trust is not a warm value or a communications theme. It is a condition for leadership. It’s the thing that allows people to follow, invest, support, work with, forgive or believe an organisation when the stakes are high.

One contributor described trust as predictability. We trust people and institutions when we can predict that they will do what they said they would do, especially when circumstances become difficult. Trust is not only a value. It is behaviour under pressure.

This is the point many organisations underestimate. Trust is not built in the moment of scrutiny. It is built in the months and years before, through consistency, competence and the way leaders respond when they are challenged. It arrives slowly and leaves quickly. Or, as one Dutch saying quoted during the discussion puts it, trust comes on foot and leaves on a horse.

Why leaders now need to act as trust brokers

The context is not forgiving. People are becoming more insular in where they get information and who they are willing to believe. If audiences are more fragmented, organisations cannot assume that authority, scale or goodwill that has been built up over the past will carry the argument. That makes the role of business and institutions more important, not less. One of the more useful ideas from the panel was that leaders increasingly have to act as trust brokers. Not by smoothing over disagreement, but by creating spaces where shared goals can be found, tensions can be acknowledged, and people can argue without losing sight of common purpose.

That calls for empathy and active listening, but above all it calls for courage. Leaders need to be able to speak with candour, even when the message is uncomfortable. They must make difficult trade-offs visible where they can, and resist the temptation to govern by opinion poll.

Trust depends on giving people a fair picture

Trust becomes harder to earn when people feel they are being managed rather than informed. That does not mean every detail can or should be shared in every situation. But it does mean organisations need to communicate in a way that is accurate and grounded in reality.

The behaviours that damage trust are often not dramatic. They are the small decisions that make people question the organisation’s judgement. Claims start to run ahead of the evidence. Important context gets left out. Communications is used to make a difficult situation look tidier than it is.

That is why communications needs to be involved before the message is written. For boards, CEOs and leadership teams, the value of communications is not simply in finding better words after a decision has been made. It is in helping leaders see whether that decision will stand up to scrutiny, and what needs to change before the organisation asks people to believe it.

Trust is built or weakened in the gap between words and behaviour

Trust is earned through what an organisation does and how it communicates when people are watching closely. Communication also has to be two-way. Listening that changes nothing is not listening. Compassion that leaves behaviour untouched is sentiment. Purpose that is not delivered becomes branding.

The panels were clear that trust rarely collapses because of one act. It is weakened by patterns people start to notice such as leaders sticking to a line after the evidence has shifted, organisations hiding behind partial transparency, cultures that blame elsewhere, or a gap between public values and private behaviour. Each can feel small or explainable at the time. Together, they start to erode trust.

Reputation risk starts before there is a visible issue

That is why reputation risk communications should begin before there is a visible issue. The useful question is not “what would we say if this became public?” but “what are people already experiencing that would make our explanation harder to believe?”

The answer is often cultural. Do people feel safe enough to raise bad news, and can leaders hear criticism without becoming defensive? Is there room to say “we got this wrong” or “we have changed our mind” without that being treated as failure? Vulnerability was raised in the trust discussion not as a performance of openness, but as evidence of leadership maturity. Politicians should take note. A policy U-turn can be weakness, but it can also show that new evidence has been heard. The media has a role here too. If every change of mind is treated as humiliation, leaders have little incentive to learn in public. In a culture that treats every change of mind as weakness, it takes discipline to show learning in public.

Reputation and trust are economic assets

The same themes appeared in the discussion on national prosperity. Reputation and trust were described not as soft intangibles, but as economic assets. Admiration and respect do not simply happen. They come through performance, genuine engagement, stewardship and confidence that an organisation will still be here, and still be behaving responsibly, in ten years’ time.

That matters for large companies, but it is just as relevant to mid-sized businesses, charities and public-facing organisations with leaner teams and smaller communications budgets. Trust is not a luxury reserved for institutions with large corporate affairs departments. It is part of the licence to operate.

Crisis readiness

Crisis makes this visible. One panellist reflected that a crisis can destroy value, but handled well it can also build it. The formula was not complicated: grip, action, then communication. Not communication instead of action. First, show that someone capable is in charge. Then explain what is being done.

Many organisations may not have a crisis in front of them, but they may already have a trust gap ie between what the business promises and what stakeholders experience; between the confidence of the leadership team and the confidence of employees; between the ambition of the strategy and the evidence available to investors, customers or communities.

Stakeholder communications strategy should work from the outside in

The organisations that handle this best tend to work from the outside in. They make the customer, beneficiary, employee or community the centre of the story. They understand that a stakeholder communications strategy is not a static map, but a live reading of who needs confidence, what they fear, and what proof they need.  There was a strong reminder from the charity and community sector here. Smaller organisations often hold deep trust because they put the individual at the heart of decisions. They may look messier than large institutions, but they can be closer to lived experience. Larger organisations have something to learn from that proximity.

The leadership challenge is becoming more demanding

The leadership challenge is also changing. Results matter. But the best leaders act as stewards as well as operators. They create a future others can believe in. They stop behaving as the hub through which every answer must pass. They trust their teams, build human connections and make it safer for the organisation to tell itself the truth.   This is not a softer view of leadership. It is a more demanding one. It asks for clarity about why the organisation exists, simplicity in how decisions are explained, and delivery that people can see and feel. It asks the question one panellist put plainly. The ‘so what?’

So what changed for the people we serve? So what did we learn? So what are we doing differently because we listened? So what would make someone trust us more tomorrow than they did yesterday?

Before AI disrupts trust, is the organisation itself trustworthy?

The same questions will become sharper as AI changes how organisations make decisions and explain them. That deserves its own discussion. For now, the test is simpler: if technology makes trust harder to earn, is it strong enough inside the organisation itself? Trust is built long before a moment of scrutiny. It grows when organisations do what they said they would do, and when their behaviour under pressure matches the promises they make in calmer moments. It is strengthened when leaders listen early enough to change course before confidence is lost.

For any company, charity or institution operating in public view, the work is not to sound more trustworthy.

It is to become easier to trust

Zambia Forward

By Vinesh Parmar, in Lusaka

Amongst the economic malaise of the last few years, it seemed as though the Zambian flag had been flying at half-mast. In contrast, the fish eagle soared high above a crowded Hero’s Stadium in the capital Lusaka as newly elected president Hakainde Hichilema was sworn in.

Attendees at the presidential inauguration had packed wings of the venue by 7am. Seems like Zambians can be on time, especially for moments of this magnitude. Again demonstrated ahead of the general election, some voters turned up at polling stations five hours before they opened.

It was those early signs that had the nation feeling that we were on the cusp of change. Voter turnout was at historic highs, as Zambians turned up with camping chairs in anticipation of long queues. The will of the people would be delivered at the ballot box, a triumph and protection of a democracy the country was once renowned for.

As the result was confirmed in the early hours of Monday 16th August, the nation would prepare for its third peaceful transition of political power. The masses took to the streets, dancing in jubilation as the sun began to rise on a new dawn.  The markets seemed to feel the same, with the local currency, the kwacha, gaining almost instinctively against the dollar.

Reaction of the wider regional and international community was equally upbeat. Together we reveled in the history of the country’s largest election victory, by votes. A victory for all Africa as one of the continent’s beacons of democracy again placed their faith in, and were rewarded by, the electoral process.

Through social media, where the election was arguably decided, messages of positivity poured in from all corners of this very young continent. The youth of Africa took note of how decisive their vote could be. This served in many ways as confirmation that Zambia will rebuild itself for generations of tomorrow, while hopefully inspiring others around us to do the same.

When President Hichilema addressed the nation, once confirmed as the president-elect, what stood out was his projection of values. Ahead of the 2016 general election, I had the privilege of being invited to Mr Hichilema’s residence to interview him for my university dissertation. Against a backdrop of opulence, a result of his business success, was a most humble man.

Welcoming, respectful, and gracious, he valued our time and played his role as host very well, even shifting the patio furniture we were sat on into the shade, away from the scorching mid-summer sun.

President Hichilema’s appointment is a significant reminder of the importance of people power and a landmark moment for Zambian and African democracy.

Zambia forward.

Female Leadership – insights on International Women’s Day

One of the good things about celebration days in the international calendar is that they give us the excuse to pause and think about important issues amidst the rush and clamour of busy schedules. Female leadership is still a big issue, particularly for those who subscribe to the belief that diversity in leadership enables better decision making – at a time when our business leaders are taking on so much responsibility for the wellbeing of society and the environment, alongside their usual stakeholders.

In the FTSE, where many international companies choose to list, The Hampton Alexander Review’s final report into female leadership was published on 24 February. Amidst the positive increase in the number of women overall in the last decade, it was noted that we need more women in executive positions to see sustained growth at the Board level. As we work towards gender parity and a more prosperous and sustainable world (SDG 5), International Women’s Day – this year themed #ChooseToChallenge – offers an opportunity to showcase our top picks of outstanding examples of female leadership, and how they stand out for challenging the status quo.

Here are ours – who would you add to the list?

Mayyada Abu Jaber, renowned female activist

Attendees at DiveIn’s festival in Amman in 2018 were treated to a speech by Mayyada Abu Jaber, the renowned female activist and inspirational leader who discussed her lifetime dedication to female empowerment.  As a Brookings Institution Global Scholar for Leaders in Girls Education, Ms Abu Jaber conducted research to evaluate gender bias in the national Jordanian curriculum. Armed with evidence of inequality, she founded JoWomenomics as an independent non-profit organization to foster mindset change towards greater women’s economic participation. This in turn influences labour law policies and provides job opportunities to more than 600 marginalized female communities in Jordan. In recognition of her #ChoicetoChallenge, she has been recognized by the World Bank as an inspirational leader in the Middle East and North Africa, among many more accolades.

Marianne Tikannen and Elba Horta, co-founders of Puro.earth

With backgrounds in engineering and geosciences, these two outstanding female founders of the world’s first marketplace for selling ‘carbon removal’, are united in their ambitions for protecting the planet. Unafraid to challenge traditional methods, the two entrepreneurs forged new career paths in their pursuit of sustainability, as outlined in this Forbes article. As Ms Tikannen reportedly says, “It’s really important to move from words to action… we only have one climate.”

Rashmy Chatterjee, CEO of ISTARI

Rashmy Chatterjee has made a habit of #ChoosingtoChallenge. As the first female engineer to join the Indian Navy, she was commended by the President of India for her work. After two decades at IBM, she is now the CEO of Istari – the global cybersecurity platform established by Temasek to help clients increase their cyber resilience, earn digital trust and secure their business growth in this time of rapid digital transformation. As an advocate for women in technology, Mrs Chatterjee is a prime candidate for mention on this International Women’s Day.

Elizabeth Wangeci Chege, CEO and co-founder, WEB Limited Group

Frequent viewers of our blog and video content will know about Elizabeth Chege – a true pioneer in the sustainable construction sector in Kenya and green building throughout Africa. In our #AfricaNetZero interview series, Ms Chege speaks openly about her initial decisions to focus not on box-ticking and meeting building standards, but in putting sustainability first in the construction sector. Coining herself as a ‘sustainable engineer’, she was told by her professors that “we’re not sure anything like that exists” – a true example of a #ChoosetoChallenge female leader.

Charlotte Boaitey-Kwarteng, Barrister

In 2018, Charlotte Boaitey-Kwarteng was recognised by the prestigious GUBA awards for work in criminal and human rights law. Speaking of her Professional of the Year award win, Mrs Boaitey-Kwarteng told of her bold decision (having come to the UK from Ghana) to “run her own Chambers in the middle of Lincoln’s Inn surrounded by a sea of all-white Chambers.” She is an exemplar of the importance of diversity and inclusion in the workplace.

Jacinda Ardern, Prime Minister of New Zealand

Ms Ardern responded to the Covid-19 crisis with the strictest regulations in the world, closing New Zealand’s borders with the response that she would “make no apologies” for doing so, while other countries remained open. Her choice to challenge the practice of other nations was made from listening to scientific expertise, and her accomplishment was in uniting her country through communication and strong leadership. She had the self-confidence to stand by her conviction to act quickly and maintain her stance. Her success? A record-breaking victory resulting in re-election.