a brief glimpse of trust in organizations a colloquium presented to
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations A colloquium presented to. HAP 873 Topics in Health Administration. Dr. Christopher J. Evans. A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations. Introduction To examine issues of trust and decision making in organizations by examining: - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
A Brief Glimpse of Trust in OrganizationsA colloquium presented to
Dr. Christopher J. Evans
HAP 873Topics in
HealthAdministration
IntroductionTo examine issues of trust and decision making in organizations by examining:
Interpersonal and organizational trustKey studies on trustInstruments and methodologies to study trustHow trust affects human decision processes
Introduction
Background
Studies
Applications
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
Introduction
Background
Studies
Applications
The time is ripe
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
Three questions to guide and remind usOur definitions and assumptions today
•What is trust?
•Why is trust important between people?
•Why is trust important in organizations?
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
DefinitionsTrust: the willingness of a party to be vulnerable to the actions of another party based on the expectations that the other will perform a particular action important to the truster, irrespective of the ability to monitor or control that other party (Mayer et al., 1995)
Trust is the mechanism by which risks associated with social complexity are transcended (Luhmann, 1988)
Introduction
Background
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
DefinitionsDispositional Trust: a consistent tendency to trust across a broad spectrum of situations and persons (Lewicki et al., 1998)
Situational Decision to Trust: the extent to which one intends to depend on a non-specific other party in a given situation (McKnight & Chervany, 1996)
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
DefinitionsInterpersonal Trust: an expectancy held by an individual or group that the word, promise, verbal, or written statement of another individual or group can be relied upon (Rotter, 1967)
It is conceptualized as one’s generalized expectancy to rely on another
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
DefinitionsOrganizational Trust: the degree of trust between units of an organization or between organizations (Cummings & Bromiley, 1996)
It has been conceptualized as a matrix of dimensions of belief (keeps commitments, negotiates honestly, and avoids taking excessive advantage) and types of beliefs (affective state, cognitive state, and intended behavior)
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
DefinitionsDistrust: confident negative expectations regarding another’s conduct (Lewicki et al., 1998)
The reciprocal of trust through separate but linked dimensions (not opposite ends of a continuum)Probably a matrix construct of affect, behavior, and cognition often conceptualized by behaviors opposite those of trusting behaviors
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
DefinitionsTrustworthiness: the degree to which the truster evaluates the trustee’s perceived ability, benevolence, and integrity and of the truster’s propensity to trust in a specific situation (Mayer et al., 1995)
It is measure of the perceived trust-related characteristics of the referent trustee
Ability: They are competent and able to do what is asked of themBenevolence: They will do what is right, are loyal, not manipulative, and will not act opportunisticallyIntegrity: They have sound and moral principles
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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TrustMost often conceptualized as an expectancy or beliefA “conceptual confusion” existsLittle consensus has developed on the meaning of trust in common usageTrust is always situational and highly personal to the perceptions and predispositions of the truster
Which trust and when? (Bigley & Pierce, 1998)11
A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
Introduction
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TrustCognitive/affective trust versus behavioral manifestations of trustThe trustee referent
Personal - includes organizational referents and reputationSystem - generalized well-being, e.g., trust in a CPA, a lawyer, the government
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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TrustTrust and risk: Two sides of the same coin
Willingness to trust constitutes both a cognitive and affective series of processes, that a person feels secure (affective) with respect to his or her willingness (cognitive) to depend (McKnight & Chervany, 1996)
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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Trust versus trustworthiness
AnEvaluation
TrustOutcome
PerceivedTrustworthiness
of the Subject
Truster’sWillingness
to Trust+
Situation
Trust-relatedCharacteristics
of Trustee(Subject)
+
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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DistrustSeen as concerning:
Lack of confidenceThat the other may act so as to harmThat the other does not care about one’s welfare or intends to act harmfully, or is hostile
Seen also as:A rational choiceA practical response to perceived threats
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
Introduction
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Distrust and suspicionSuspicion is a psychological state where the perceivers “actively entertain multiple, possibly rival, hypotheses about the motives or genuineness of a person’s behavior.” (Fein and Hilton, 1994)
Distrust and suspicion are linked with common elementsSignificant body of work exists on trust- building and trust-destroying antecedents
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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High Trust High-value congruence Trust but verify
Characterized by Interdependence promoted Relationships highly segmentedHope and boundedFaith Opportunities pursuedConfidence Opportunities pursued andAssurance New initiatives down-side risks/vulnerabilitiesInitiative continually monitored
Low Trust Casual acquaintances Undesirable eventualitiesexpected and feared
Characterized by Limited interdependenceNo hope Harmful motives assumedNo faith Bounded, arms-lengthNo confidence transactions Interdependence managedPassivityHesitance Professional courtesy Preemption; best defense is a
good offense
Paranoia
Low Distrust High Distrust
Characterized by Characterized byNo fear FearAbsence of skepticism SkepticismAbsence of cynicism CynicismLow monitoring Wariness and watchfulnessNo vigilance Vigilance
Integrating Trust and Distrust: Alternative Social Realities
Lewicki et al., 199817
A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
Trust instruments and methodologiesAh, what to measure?
Which trust construct, and when? - revisitedAffective (dependability, emotional bonding, expectancy, faith)Cognitive (game theory, social expectancy, strategic choice)Behavioral manifestations (the behavior-belief question)
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
Trust instruments and methodologies, contSo what scales are being used?
Wrightsman (1964) Philosophies of human natureRotter (1967) - Interpersonal trust scaleThornton & Kline (1982) - Belief in human benevolence scaleMayer et al. (1995, 1999) - scales on trust and trustworthinessCummings & Bromiley (1996) - OTIYamagishi (1986)- various scales on generalized trust, social values orientation
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
Trust instruments and methodologies, contMost scales examine dispositional (or generalized) trust, a general belief in human benevolence
That [the referent] will do what is right, is loyal, not manipulative, and will not act opportunistically
Most methodologies are laboratory-based (chiefly rational models), though field and quasi-field approaches are increasing
Introduction
Background
Studies
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
Yamagishi trust scaleMeasures dispositional trust and propensity (willingness) to trust
Developed by factor analysis beginning with 60 itemsValidated and used in approximately one dozen published studiesNo normative dataMost often used to dichotomize subjects into high and low trustersYamagishi, T. (1986). The provision of a sanctioning system as a public good. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 51, 110-116
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
Yamagishi trust scale in actionIntroduction
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Distribution of Trust Scores N = 123
12
0
11 11
16
22
1920
16
3 2
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
Trust ScoreMedian = 17 Mean = 17.43
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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Noteworthy and seminal studies on trustRotter, 1967
Interpersonal Trust ScaleGabarro, 1979
Trust in leadershipMayer, Davis, Schoorman, 1995
Trust as risk & vulnerabilityCummings & Bromiley, 1996
Organizational Trust Index (OTI)Mayer & Davis, 1999
LMX, higher level of trust empirically linked to profits
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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Study: Mayer & Davis, 1999Can trust in senior leadership be improved?Manufacturing industryPre-and post-test methodology, 6 month intervalIntervention: Revised personnel management policies and compensation systemsResults: Trust level of employees improved
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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Study: Evans, 2003Trust and decision making in hospitalsSelf-response survey of 123 hospital CEOs in NC and SC, predominantly malesDid hospital CEOs make changes in their financial operations as a result of the reported wrongdoings of public corporations and financial services firms?Was trust level of the CEO a factor?
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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Study: Evans, 2003, cont.Results: 51.2% made changes reflecting confident negative expectations
19% changed accountants or auditors42% changed internal policiesCEOs in NC were more likely to make changes than CEOs in SC
Trust level was not a factor - high trusters were not significantly different from low trusters
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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Study: Evans, 2003, cont.Other findings:
CEOs reported that the relative importance of dimensions of trustworthiness was integrity, ability, and benevolenceCEOs reported that they had a clear tendency to trust in an individual in matters of routine business importance, but preferred to trust in a professional service firm in matters of potential personal volatilityNo difference was found for gender, organization size, or years of experience
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
Introduction
Background
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Study: Evans, 2004Organizational trust, decision making, communication, and collaboration in hospital managers: A quasi-field experimentPre- and post test methodology - 96 midlevel managers over a 9 month intervalIntervention: Leadership development program for 120 managers administered in small groups
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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Study: Evans, 2004, cont.Results: All measures (trust; decentralization of decision making processes; openness, fullness, and fairness of communications; and level of collaborative activities) were highly positively correlated with each otherTrust level increased
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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Discussion Prompt - Trust and Distrust•Generalized trust frames our outlook•Strong social norms influence behavior•Communication is a large part of
meaning-making•Boundary-spanning is a critical
competency of effective culturesQuestion: How can leaders influence a culture of trust as it influences engaging across organizational boundaries?
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Group 1
A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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Discussion Prompt - TrustworthinessSituational variables can influence the order of importance of the dimensions of trustworthinessGabarro (1978) found from executives:
Integrity valued more than competenceThe relative importance of dimensions of trustworthiness was based on the relative positions of the truster & trustee
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A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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Discussion Prompt - Trustworthiness•Issues of trustworthiness in human interactions may be related to
–Integrity–Ability–Benevolence
• or some combination of these three dimensions
Question: Integrity, ability, benevolence - how can leaders engage discussion with subordinates on these issues and their relative importance to improve trust?32
Group 2
or some combination of these three dimensions
A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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Discussion Prompt - Trust & Decision MakingDecision making styles are learned and habitual, with “a habit-based propensity to react in a certain way in a specific decision context” (Scott & Bruce, 1985)
Question: How can leaders engage discussion with subordinates on these issues and their relative importance to each party to improve trust?
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Group 3
A Brief Glimpse of Trust in Organizations
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Bonus Tracks for staying with meThe following resources are available by emailing me or visiting my website:
Literature review on trust, organizational trust, trustworthiness, and trust in the healthcare industryBibliography on trustDetailed PowerPoint summaries of my two studies on trust in organizations
Bonus
www.christopherevans.org34