I have been addressing government and corporate audiences recently on the importance of Trust in their relationships with citizens, customers, patients etc. I find that the message gets accross immediately when I ask them to take off their 'corporate hats' and listen to what I am saying as a parent, an employee, a consumer. They then stop thinking of my 'Trust is the new Green' as a soft, warm and cuddly emotional marketing tactic and realise that this has a real measurable positive effect upon their Health, Wealth and Happiness and therefore your bottom line.
If you still need convincing here are some extracts from a recent column in Business Week:
The global public relations firm Edelman recently published its 10th annual “Trust Barometer.” This survey indicates that 62 percent of the 4,500-plus global respondents trust corporations less this year than they did last year, based upon a survey conducted Nov. 5 to Dec. 14, 2008. Seventy-seven percent of U.S. respondents say they trust corporations less this year.
A recent survey of 1,200 people conducted by strategic brand consulting firm Siegel+Gale shows that trust in financial-services companies has dropped nearly 40 percent in the past year. Nearly two-thirds of those respondents also believe that businesses complicate their processes and communications in an attempt to mask real risks. This is a stunning indictment of the financial establishment.
To quiet some of the likely cynics out there, I offer you proof — both medical and financial. The giving away of trust stimulates the release of a bonding hormone called oxytocin in humans, according to research by the Cognitive Neuroscience Group at the Center for Psychiatry & Psychotherapy at Justus-Liebig University in Germany. When released, oxytocin floods the brain with a feeling of well-being, and fear is reduced.
Trust pays dividends in the business world, too. A 2002 study of 350 buyer/supplier relationships among eight automakers in the U.S., Japan and South Korea identified a direct relationship between trust and transaction costs. The least-trusted buyer incurred procurement costs six times higher than the most-trusted. These additional costs came from the added resources that went into the selection, negotiation and compliance costs of executing deals.
You can read the complete article here
I am now talking to organisations, public and private, about providing X-RM tools and services to provide their audience with a voice. Don't market at them but listen and respond! CRM has its place and VRM (Vendor Relationship Management) will address the consumer but the same principals apply in our roles as a Citizen, Employee, Patient, Student, etc. As I have said before, if you really want to regain Trust you need to start by trusting them.
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