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This self-assessment activity allows you and your team members to reflect on the ‘trust battery’ they individually have towards each person on the team, and encourages focus on actions that can charge the depleted trust batteries.
Tobias Lütke, CEO at Shopify coined the term: "Another concept we talk a lot about is something called a 'trust battery'. It's charged at 50 percent when people are first hired. And then every time you work with someone at the company, the trust battery between the two of you is either charged or discharged, based on things like whether you deliver what you promise."
The adoption of this concept helps to assess work relations with greater clarity. By measuring the charge on the trust battery, we have the context to frame any potential conflict. A low trust battery is the core of many personal disputes at work. When the battery is drained, things quickly get judged harshly.
A trust battery is a summary of all interactions to date. If you want to recharge the battery, you have to do different things in the future. Only new actions and new attitudes count.
A trust battery is personal: Bob may be at 85% with Alice, and 40% with Jim. While Alice may be at 25% with Bob and 60% with Jim.
So the point of this exercise is to give you and your team an honest assessment about what is your trust battery with other people on the team.
1. You may use this exercise alone as an individual reflection activity to understand which workplace relationships you need to focus on more.
2. You may use an advanced version of this exercise in a team where team members share their 'trust battery' assessments with each other, per pair.
If you allow the trust battery assessments to be shared, you need to have team members who are entirely open to honest and harsh feedback. And you as the facilitator of the activity must be prepared to deal with the potential tension in the dynamic in the group. Once you let the genie out of the bottle, you can't let the group dissolve, but encourage a constructive conversation on how people can improve their 'trust bank' in the eyes of their colleagues, one-by-one.
This exercise was inspired by a chapter from the bestseller management book: It Doesn’t Have to Be Crazy at Work, written by Jason Fried and David Heinemeier Hansson