How to Cultivate The Trust Factor in Business
by Robert Moment
In today's highly competitive
economy, it is difficult to maintain a significant market advantage based on
your professional skills alone. Developing trusting relationships with your
clients is vital to your business success as well. No matter what business you
are in, the most powerful value-added contribution you can make to any business
relationship is the trust factor.
The trust factor is even more critical in today's business climate with the
level of trust in Corporate America continuing to be at an all-time low, and
suspicion of "all things corporate" remaining on the rise. To make matters
worse, large corporations and small businesses alike continue to use antiquated
techniques, such as gizmos and gadgets, to try to win over new clients. When
instead, they should be trying to address the heart of the matter by utilizing
trust-building techniques that will most effectively resonate with consumers and
new prospects.
Clients and prospects are in search of trust in their business relationships,
but building trust and credibility does not happen overnight. To cultivate
trust, it takes the risk of being open with clients and prospects. This enables
them to perceive you as a real person--one with strengths and weaknesses that
come into play as the relationship develops. When trust is reciprocal, you will
find that your confidence in others is rewarded by their support and
reinforcement of what you also stand for as a business entity.
What is Trust
What is trust? Trust can be defined as a firm belief in the honesty of another
and the absence of suspicion regarding his motives or practices. The concept of
trust in business dealings is simple: Build on an individual's confidence in you
and eliminate fear as an operating principle.
Letting Go of Fear
Let go of fear, which restricts your ability to relate to others. Letting go
frees you of behavioral constraints that can immobilize your emotional and
professional development. Fear of rejection, fear of failure, fear of success,
fear of being hurt, fear of the unknown--all these are roadblocks to developing
and growing a trusting relationship with clients. Let go of your fear of losing
an account or not having the right answers. Leave all your fears at the client
or prospect's doorstep.
Other critical steps in cultivating trust are knowing who you are and knowing
your potential value to your clients. The relationship that forms because of
this can have a tremendous impact on your sales. People don't just buy from
anyone. They buy from people they can trust. The rapport and credibility you can
establish with the trust factor go a long way toward building a client's
confidence in your ability to meet his business needs.
Trust has both an active and a passive component in a business relationship. The
active feeling of trust is confidence in the leadership, veracity, and
reliability of the other party, based on a track record of performance.
The passive feeling of trust is the absence of worry or suspicion. This absence
is sometimes unrecognized and frequently taken for granted in our most
productive relationships.
Building Trust With Care
So how do you build trust with clients? First, you need to care about them.
Obviously your clients care about your knowledge, expertise, and
accomplishments. However, they care even more about the level of concern you
have for them. Successful trust building hinges on four actions: engaging,
listening, framing, and committing. The trust factor can be realized once we
understand these components of trust and incorporate them in our daily lives.
Engaging clients and prospects occurs when you show genuine concern and interest
in their business and its problems. Maintain good eye contact and body posture.
Good eye contact signifies openness and honesty. And your body language and
other forms of nonverbal communication speak volumes about your attitude toward
them. By the same token, you want to be cognizant of your client's or prospect's
eye contact and body language.
Listening with understanding and empathy is possible if you think client focus
first. Let the client tell his story. Put yourself in his shoes when you listen
to his business concerns, purpose, vision, and desires. Show approval or
understanding by nodding your head and smiling during the conversation. Separate
the process of taking in information from the process of judging it. Just
suspend your judgment and focus on the client. Framing what the client or
prospect has said is the third action in trust building. Make sure you have
formed an accurate understanding of his problems and concerns. Confirm what you
think you heard by asking open-ended questions such as "What do you mean by
that?" or "Help me to understood the major production problems you are
experiencing." After you have clarified the problems, start to frame them in
order of importance. By identifying the areas in which you can help the client,
you offer him clarity in his own mind and continue to build his trust.
Committing is the final action for developing the trust factor. Communicate
enthusiastically your plan of action for solving the client's problems. Help the
client see what it will take to achieve the end result. Presumably, what you
have said up to this point has been important, but what you do now--how you
commit--is even more important. Remember the old adage "Action speaks louder
than words." Show you want this client's business long term. Complete
assignments and projects on budget and on time. Then follow up with clients
periodically to see how your partnership is faring.
In the final analysis, trust stems from keeping our word. If we say we will be
there for our clients, then we should honor that commitment by being there.
Trust results from putting the client's best interest before our own, from being
dependable, from being open and forthcoming with relevant information. It is
impossible to overestimate the power of the trust factor in our professional
lives. Truly, trust is the basis of all enduring, long-term business
relationships.
About the Author:
Robert Moment is a business
strategist and author of ,"It Only Takes a Moment to Score" and upcoming book
"Invisible Profits:The Power of Exceptional Customer Service". Rober show
entrepreneurs how to successfully build and grow profitable service-based small
businesses. Visit www.howtostartyoursmallbusiness.com and download the FREE
Special Report "17 Profitable Ways to Turn Your Ideas into Wealth".
Source of article:
www.goarticles.com
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