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Trust in the financial services sector starts at the workplace

Business Transformation leaders, Purposeful Change, support people to navigate complexity and deliver results with soul. That means doing the deep work as individuals, as teams, and across whole systems. From one-to-one transformational coaching, to team journeys and cultural interventions, the focus is always on uncovering whatโ€™s hidden, surfacing what matters, and shifting how people show up and lead. We look how this translates into trust in financial services…

Trust in the financial services isn’t a nice to have – it’s essential

Founder Simon Lamb believes โ€œTrust in the financial sector isnโ€™t a nice to have. Itโ€™s a strategic advantage. In a world of increasing regulation, complexity, and scrutiny, trust is the currency that underpins performance, not just reputation.

But letโ€™s be clear. Trust isnโ€™t about being liked. Itโ€™s about creating the conditions where truth can be told, decisions can be challenged, and people feel safe to do their best thinking. In finance, where the stakes are high and the consequences real, that kind of culture separates firms that endure from those that erode under pressure.

Simon-Lamb-consultant-talks-about-trust-in-the-financial-services-sector

The role of regulation in building trust

You canโ€™t regulate your way to psychological safety. It has to be built choice by choice, conversation by conversation.

And itโ€™s not just about culture. Itโ€™s about process. In many financial institutions, good people have made poor or ethically compromised decisions not out of malice, but because the system rewarded silence, punished dissent, and prioritised staying safe. Thatโ€™s what happens when compliance is valued over conscience.

At the same time, trust doesnโ€™t mean freedom to act without scrutiny. In fact, high trust cultures are also high accountability cultures. Itโ€™s because we trust one another that we can challenge decisions, examine assumptions, and hold each other to a higher standard without blame.โ€

Simonโ€™s Five Principles for Building Trust in Financial Services

1. Make the invisible visible

โ€œEvery organisation says it values integrity. But whatโ€™s really rewarded? What gets overlooked?โ€

Trust begins when we surface the gap between stated values and lived experience. In financial services, legacy hierarchies and compliance-heavy environments often reward confidence over competence or silence over challenge. Simon works with leaders to name these hidden norms and shift them.

2. Create systems for truth telling

โ€œIf people donโ€™t feel safe to say what they see, trust dies in silence.โ€

Simon helps organisations embed structural psychological safety through leadership routines, peer challenge processes, and feedback mechanisms. Trust isnโ€™t a feeling. Itโ€™s a design choice. Truth must be expected, not just permitted.

3. Close the loop

โ€œThe fastest way to destroy trust? Ask for feedback and do nothing.โ€

Trust is built in the follow through. In financial firms, leaders are often stretched and time poor, but even small visible responses to feedback show people their voice matters.

4. Reward vulnerability

โ€œIn a high performance culture, admitting you donโ€™t know isnโ€™t weakness. Itโ€™s leadership.โ€

In todayโ€™s volatile and AI disrupted landscape, people donโ€™t trust false certainty. They trust clarity and openness. Simon promotes leadership cultures where itโ€™s safe to say, I donโ€™t know, but hereโ€™s what Iโ€™m thinking.

5. Integrate trust into performance

โ€œDonโ€™t bolt it on. Build it in.โ€

Trust must be embedded in performance systems, not just tacked on as an HR initiative. One investment firm Simon worked with reweighted their evaluation model to equally measure how results were achieved, not just what was delivered. That single shift created immediate changes in behaviour.

For more great insights, connect with Purposeful Change.

More about Purposeful Change

Purposefulโ€ฏChange is a business transformation consultancy founded by Simon Lamb, a trained therapist with a background in theatre and diversity leadership. For over 20 years, they’ve collaborated with organisations globallyโ€”reaching over 470,000 individuals across 61 countries in 20+ languages

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