Sunday, April 12, 2009

Take a Chance

Thank you to all those who contributed online and offline to the post on Trust.  While responses varied in their illustrations, the underlying sub tone is extremely consistent. 

We are a people that desire and need to trust.  Even when that trust is violated and sometimes when we have the feeling it will be violated, we still desire to trust on some level and hope for the best.  This desire explains why we attempt to surround ourselves with people we trust.  We attempt to befriend those that we interact with on a day in, day out basis.  This friendly touch increases our sense of trust and confidence in the choices we make.  We desire to follow leaders who we feel are trustworthy.  Integrity is consistently one of the top traits desired in our leaders.  When those that we do hold to high standards of trust make mistakes, it is imperative for them to take action immediately.  Some prime recent examples are Michael Phelps and Tom Daschle.  Both are/were respected professionals in their own genre.  Both made a mistake recently that put a spotlight on their fallibility.  They both chose to do the right thing and admit their mistakes.  While Phelps has faired better than Daschle so far post admission, they can both teach us something important about the frailty of broken trust.  Amazon on the other hand may not fair as well.  It is still early so the jury is still out, but the recent #amazonfail on twitter may cost them some serious trust points.  So far, the only word from Amazon is that it was a ‘glitch’ which has not appeased the angry masses.  Perhaps they will reverse course in the next day or so, but they would have been much better suited to come out and admit they made a mistake with a new, poorly thought out policy.   That would regain trust.

It seems we are always willing to take a chance on something or someone that inspires us with hope or seeming integrity.  When they fall short, we may forgive them, or cross them off our list depending on their integrity during the fall from grace.  No matter though, it seems that there are always new faces and opportunities we are willing to reinvest our trust in around the next corner.

What does this say about our long term viability as all cultures shift from local, domestic, close circle of trust settings to distant, global, highly connected networks of geographically diverse entities?

It is clear what our choice has been, we will take a chance.  How will we fare?

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Trust

How do we know who to trust?

 

When we choose to trust, what limits do we place on that trust?

 

When that trust is broken, what do we do about it?  

 

I've been thinking a lot lately about human interaction and the topic of trust is one that I keep coming back to.  The human model for trust is really intriguing.   I'm certainly not a professional in this area so bear with my amateur wanderings. 

In the US, we trust strangers everyday with a variety of very important things.  We trust public transportation operators to deliver us safely to our destination.  We trust medical staff with our bodies and state of our health.  We trust individuals to take care of our babies while we work.  We trust educators to teach our children.  We trust individuals we enter into relationships with on many levels.  All these varying degrees of trust have different consequences on the line if the trust is betrayed.  Most, if not all of them are life changing.   Given that, how do you choose who to trust?  How do you know you can trust them?

 

In some cases, we have constructed institutions to help with trust. Medical associations help us trust physicians and hospitals.  The Food and Drug Administration helps us trust our food quality  and drug safety.   Things like the sexual offender registration help us navigate the tricky questions of who to trust or not trust in our neighborhoods.   Why do we trust these institutions?  What do we do when they break that trust?  (/cough, financial sector; S&P, Moody's, /cough)

 

We seem to be having a trust-based crisis at the moment.  I have some further thoughts about this, but I would really like to get your feedback on trust in general and how you approach it.

How do you give it, in what ways, to whom, and for how long?

 

 

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Saturday, March 14, 2009

Welcome!

Welcome to what I hope will be an interesting exploration in several topics and directions.   I'm planning to explore a wide range of items as they come up and hope for a lot of feedback and discussion.  I'm personally exploring means of innovation, design thinking, transformation tactics, as well as bigger issues like sustainability, green tech, the current political and financial climates, and many more.   You name it, its on the menu.   I hope you enjoy!

-mw