The Culture of Trust

Most companies are starting to track their employees' activities, and with the evolution of artificial intelligence (AI), we can expect to see more monitoring and a new form of micromanagement: digital micromanagement. While collecting data can be helpful, it can sometimes affect morale.

When an employee is performing, we should expect this to be evident in their outcomes.
It will add negative stress and distrust, causing employees to worry about maintaining their status as green or red, rather than focusing on solving problems. Employees could start “performing” instead of doing the valuable work for which they were hired.

Of course, the monitored data could be helpful, for example, to detect burnout patterns or find our most productive time, but that can only be true in a culture of trust, where data is a tool for everyone to improve, rather than a toxic tool for managers. Some managers might take advantage of these tools and permanently damage the culture of trust.

I wonder if employee monitoring can ever be a tool for empowerment, or if it is always a tool for control?

Three Key Points on Fostering a Culture of Trust

  1. Employee Monitoring as a Double-Edged Sword:
    • Monitoring employee activity can be beneficial in some contexts, such as identifying burnout or understanding when employees are most productive. However, these tools must be used with transparency and in a way that aligns with the company’s goals for growth and empowerment. In the absence of trust, these tools can easily be abused, turning into instruments of control that stifle creativity and autonomy.
    • According to a report from Gallup, employees who feel trusted by their leaders are more engaged, perform better, and exhibit higher levels of innovation (Gallup, 2020). On the other hand, micromanaging employees through constant monitoring only reinforces negative behaviour and breeds resentment (HBR, 2017).
  2. The Role of Trust in Promoting Deep Work:
    • Trust allows employees the freedom to engage in deep work—meaningful, focused tasks that require extended periods of concentration. As the graph suggests, when managers place trust in their employees, these individuals are more likely to engage in deep work, where innovation and real growth occur. In contrast, micromanagement fosters an environment focused on busy work, which is often reactive and lacks depth.
    • According to Cal Newport’s Deep Work (2016), the ability to focus without distraction is one of the most valuable skills in the modern workplace, and it thrives in environments where trust is paramount.
  3. Empowerment vs. Control:
    • The question posed in the statement—whether employee monitoring can ever be a tool for empowerment—raises an important issue about leadership styles. When leaders view monitoring as a means to empower their teams, they enable employees to reflect on their own performance and make improvements. However, when it is used solely to exert control, it stifles the autonomy that is essential for personal and professional growth.
    • Studies show that empowering employees to make decisions and giving them control over their work increases job satisfaction and performance (McKinsey & Company, 2018). A culture of trust nurtures this empowerment, whereas over-reliance on monitoring undermines it.

In today’s data-driven world, monitoring tools are increasingly ubiquitous, but they must be used with caution. When companies foster a culture of trust, data can serve as a tool for mutual improvement.

However, in a climate of micromanagement, employees may feel pressured to focus on their status rather than meaningful work, leading to burnout and disengagement. Ultimately, for monitoring tools to be empowering rather than controlling, leaders must focus on trust and respect for their employees' autonomy.

When trust is high, employees can engage in the deep work that drives real innovation.

 

Emile Fakhoury

Corporate Expert Writer, Business Professional in Energy/Water/Oil/Gas, Specialist in Coaching/Training, Association of Project Management UK Fellow Member. The professional who believes that adaptation to various social or corporate environments is the only way to survive and strive. Master the rules of the game in order to reach the top and change the rules.
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