Study: Trusted Advisors are poor at assessing how much they are trusted

Study: Trusted Advisors are poor at assessing how much they are trusted

Recent research from Zenger Folkman on Trusted Advisors within organisations revealed that those people identified as Trusted Advisors struggle to understand the levels of trust in which their managers, peers and others see them.

The study gathered data from 2,571 contributors across a range of functions including marketing, operations, research and IT. All were asked to participate in a leadership development programme by their organisations, even though many weren’t in management positions.

Using Zenger Folkman’s 360-degree assessment, each participant was evaluated on their level of trust by obtaining feedback from others.

The level of trust from lowest to highest from all raters except self highlighted a gap between their own perceptions of trust. Those with the lowest trust didn’t realise they had a serious trust problem. Those with the highest didn’t realise how trusted they were.

Trusted advisors need accurate data on how they are trusted and how effectively they influence trust. The conclusion is that using 360-degree assessments with trusted advisors was the most accurate and consistent method to evaluate trust levels.

Joe Folkman
Co-Founder Zenger Folkman

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