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5 Ways to Grow and Build Trust Trust is built on good, reliable behavior over time.

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From your creditors to your employees, good business relationships are built on trust. Can the people who depend on you, confidently rely on you to treat them fairly? Once you have proven your dependability, they will make allowances for you and extend their level cooperation. This is essential to your business success.

How much will you save on loan interest with extended credit, easier terms and complementary warehousing? How much will you save on hiring and training by reducing turnover, engaging your people and having them go the extra mile for you? How much will you save on advertising with cooperative distributers, loyal consumers and customers who become advocates? The sooner you demonstrate your trustworthiness, the sooner you'll receive these benefits and more!

So be proactive. Constantly be looking for ways to demonstrate that you have the best interest of everyone you work with at heart. That's the key! Here's our top five ways to grow and build trust:

Related: Are Your Co-Workers Driving You to Quit?

Be honest

If you try to manipulate or trap others by deliberately withholding critical information or if you pursue hidden agendas, you risk losing your relationship and your industry reputation. On the other hand, when you expose loopholes voluntarily, you assure the people you depend on that they will not be taken advantage of. Demonstrate true partnership by watching their back, not stabbing it! If you want the benefit of the spirit and not just the words, of your agreements, don't put them on the defensive.

Related: Why Office Perks Are Traps, Not Benefits

Communicate frequently

What you are doing and why, should be clear. If you leave them in the dark, guessing about your intentions, they will worry about what you're up to. Schedule regular meetings with your suppliers, creditors, your own team and your outsourced services. Share vital information early and often to alleviate their anxiety. The more they know about you, your plans and your status, the more confident they'll feel about making allowances for you.

Related: We Can All Agree These 16 Things Make Us Miserable at Work

Build strategic alliances

Discover who wins and how if you win. These are your natural strategic allies. Treat these key players like business partners. Share your plans for growth. Show them how your plans for expansion will translate into increased business for them! Reduce your need for capital by gaining their cooperation. Perhaps a long-term contract will ease their mind about potentially losing your business after building it. Give them a reason to give you better prices, longer terms and even hold on to your quantity discounted purchases until you need them.

Related: The 5 Must-Ask Interview Questions to Determine if Someone's a Fit

Mend fences

Don't blame others or try to cover-up your mistakes. You will only exacerbate the situation, lose you precious credibility and hurt your relationship. When you look at your cash flow projections and realize you can't make a payment on time, call your creditors immediately. Don't wait for them to call you. Look at your receivables and have a payment plan ready to bring your account current. Show empathy for the risk they have taken on you. Show empathy for the bills they have to pay with your payment. Give them the time they need to make other arrangements. When everything goes according to plan, they know little about you. But, when there is a glitch, mistake or problem, how you handle it, shouts volumes.

Related: 10 Examples of Companies With Fantastic Cultures

Service what you sell

When you won't leave them alone until you make a sale, but are nowhere can't be found to fix a problem, you kill your long-term business security and you invite competitors. Don't let your poor customer service say, "I have your money and you're stuck with my product!"

Customer service says more about your integrity than your product itself. Don't make your customers feel obligated to "warn" others about their bad experience. Treat them like you would a close friend. Make them loyal advocates. Don't throw advertising dollars away trying to get new customers when you are losing the one's you have.

Trust is not something you get instantly. It is built on good, reliable behavior over time. Telling experiences that build or break trust can reduce the time. Trust can easily be lost in the early days of a relationship. How you handle an awkward situation is "the tell" that validates their risk or causes their regret. Just saying, "Trust me" won't work in business. You can't ask for trust, you have to earn it!

Michael Houlihan and Bonnie Harvey, founders of Barefoot Wine, co-authors the NYT’s bestseller, The Barefoot Spirit: How Hardship, Hustle, and Heart Built America’s #1 Wine Brand, and The Entrepreneurial Culture, 23 Ways to Engage & Empower Your People. Both recommended by CEO Library for CEO Forum, the C-Suite Book Club, and widely used in school of entrepreneurship. Contact: info@thebarefootspirit.com for keynote speaking, trainings or consulting.

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