It’s easy to build walls to protect ourselves. There are messages all around to support taking a self-protective stance.
You’ve heard phrases like “once burned, twice shy,” and “fool me once, shame on you but fool me twice, shame on me.” You may even use these phrases and thoughts like them to fortify the walls you’ve built.
The more you find yourself withholding trust and being suspicious of your team members’ motives or intentions, the stronger your walls are becoming. However, building walls doesn't work if you're trying to develop skills for leadership in management.
Here’s the problem with walls. They keep others out. But they also keep you in and restrict your leadership development.
So instead of walls, consider building bridges. This includes building bridges between you and the people who have violated your trust in the past.
I’m not suggesting, by the way, that every person gets their own bridge. You’ll decide, one person at a time, who to build that bridge with. Bridges are narrow and pretty easy to manage. You will still be in control.
With a bridge, you’ll be able to consider some possibilities that you may not have considered before. Put yourself in the shoes of the other party. Maybe there is something more to the story than you realized. This skill is absolutely essential for being an effective leader.
Here are some common reasons your team members might fail to come through on what they’ve promised:
Of course, your first response was disappointment and a feeling of betrayal. You were counting on your team member to come through in the way you expected.
You may have responded emotionally rather than giving the opportunity for an explanation. Or, perhaps, no explanation was going to be good enough so you barely heard the “excuses” and exacerbated the situation by letting your hurt and anger take over. By doing so, its possible their trust has been violated, too. As a leader, your team members must be able to trust you to keep a cool head.
Broken trust doesn’t mean it’s too late. Grace is something you can extend at any time. Grace is a merciful pardon, something you give without evaluating whether or not the other person deserves it or not. You do it to build a bridge and tear down a wall. It helps you build trustworthiness as a leader.
To handle a situation where trust has been violated, start by considering this perspective: “Together, our mutual trust has been broken.”
That’s quite different from the usual mindset of “You broke my trust.” It gives you a lot more to work with, and it opens the lines of communication to repair the damage regardless of who’s to blame, how much each party should assume the blame, etc.
You may be thinking of another “yeah but…” I’ve used it just as much as you have. It’s the one that goes “yeah, but she hurt me. She’s the one who should try to rebuild the trust…”
Do you see the wall you’re building with that perspective, and how it might impact your leadership authority? Chances are good that the other person is saying something similar about you. So you can be the bridge builder without giving up anything at all – your approach that says “together, our mutual trust has been violated” acknowledges that you are both responsible for the repair work.
One final note. Everyone deserves grace and a chance to explain. You will feel more confident in your leadership skills when you build bridges that you choose, bridges that keep healthy relationships intact for you.
This perspective may not be the best one for you to take with repeat offenders, people who have broken your trust over and over again. That’s why you will be selective in the bridges you build, and use your discretion as a leader to handle these situations.
Editor's note: This blog was updated September 2017.