In every profession, one invisible factor decides how far you will go.
Not talent.
Not qualifications.
Not even experience.
It is trust.
People buy from people they trust. Teams follow leaders they trust. Managers promote employees they trust. When trust is high, everything moves faster—decisions, collaborations, opportunities.
But the real question is: How do you build trust?
Interestingly, trust can be understood through a very simple formula known as the Trust Equation.
Trust = (Credibility + Reliability + Intimacy) / Self-Orientation
At first glance, it looks like mathematics. But in reality, it describes human relationships at work.
Credibility: Do People Believe Your Knowledge?
Credibility is about how much you know and how confidently you communicate it.
When people feel you understand your subject deeply, they start trusting your words. But credibility is not about pretending to know everything. In fact, sometimes credibility increases when you honestly say, “I’ll check and get back to you.”
People trust expertise. But they trust honesty even more.
If you continuously learn, stay updated, and speak with clarity, your credibility naturally grows.
Reliability: Do You Do What You Promise?
Many professionals damage trust not because they lack skills, but because they fail to keep small commitments.
- “I will send the details tomorrow.”
- “I’ll call you at 4 PM.”
- “I’ll share the proposal tonight.”
When these promises are not fulfilled, trust quietly decreases.
Reliability is simple: Do what you say. When you say.
Even small actions build a strong reputation. When people know you keep your word, they feel safe depending on you.
Intimacy: Do People Feel Comfortable With You?
Intimacy in professional relationships does not mean personal closeness. It means emotional comfort.
Can people speak openly with you?
Do they feel heard?
Do they feel respected?
Some professionals are knowledgeable and reliable, yet people hesitate to open up to them. Why? Because they feel judged, rushed, or ignored.
When people feel comfortable sharing their concerns, trust grows naturally.
Sometimes, trust is built simply by listening without interrupting.
Self-Orientation: The Silent Trust Killer
This is the most powerful part of the equation.
Self-orientation means how much the conversation revolves around you.
- “My target.”
- “My product.”
- “My promotion.”
- “My incentive.”
When people sense that your main focus is your own benefit, their trust automatically drops. That’s why self-orientation sits in the denominator of the formula. The higher it goes, the lower trust becomes.
The moment the focus shifts from “I” to “You,” everything changes.
Instead of pushing your solution, start understanding their problem.
The 80/20 Listening Rule
One simple habit can dramatically improve trust: listen more than you speak.
A powerful rule is the 80/20 principle.
Speak 20% of the time.
Listen 80% of the time.
Ask thoughtful questions:
- What challenge are you facing?
- What would the ideal solution look like?
- What is most important for you right now?
Then listen carefully—without interrupting or preparing your next pitch.
When people feel truly heard, they naturally begin to trust you.
Small Promises, Big Impact
Trust does not grow from big speeches.
It grows from small actions repeated consistently.
- Send the document when you promised.
- Return the call when you said you would.
- Follow up when people expect you to.
These small commitments slowly build a reputation that no marketing can create.
The Real Impact of High Trust
When your trust score increases, many things begin to change.
- Clients feel comfortable investing in your solutions.
- Managers feel confident giving you responsibility.
- Teams become willing to follow your leadership.
Opportunities start coming not because you chase them, but because people believe in you.
In the long run, trust becomes the most powerful advantage in any career.
How Avinash Chate Explains This in His Video
In his insightful talk, Avinash Chate breaks down the Trust Equation in a simple yet powerful way, showing how professionals can increase credibility, reliability, and intimacy while reducing self-orientation.
Through practical examples from sales and leadership situations, he explains how shifting the focus from “my target” to “your problem” instantly strengthens relationships.
His explanation of the 80/20 listening rule and the importance of keeping small promises makes the concept easy to apply in everyday professional interactions.
The video beautifully highlights how building trust is not complicated—it is simply a matter of consistent behavior and genuine focus on others.
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Avinash Bhaskar Chate
India's Leading Corporate Trainer | TEDx Speaker | Author
With 1000+ organizations trained including RBI, JSW Steels, and Ferrero, Avinash Chate delivers high-impact corporate training across India. Creator of the KITE Leadership Framework and bestselling author of "The Winning Edge."