The Trust Dividend: Why High-Trust Teams Outperform
By Jonathan Justus | jonnynow.com | 1 June 2026
Teams that score above average on trust are 3.3 times more efficient and 5.1 times more likely to deliver on their objectives than teams that score below average, according to McKinsey research on team effectiveness. As organisations enter the second half of 2026 leaner and flatter than ever, the finding reframes a familiar leadership question: the differentiator is not talent density or technology, but the quality of trust a leader builds within the room.
Trust Is Now a Measurable Performance Driver
For decades, trust was treated as a soft virtue — desirable, but difficult to connect to output. McKinsey's analysis dismantles that assumption. The firm found that a cluster of team-health drivers, with trust prominent among them, explains between 69 and 76 per cent of the difference between low- and high-performing teams across three outcomes: efficiency, results, and innovation.
The timing matters. McKinsey's State of Organizations 2026 report, drawn from more than 10,000 respondents, identifies structural upheaval — flatter hierarchies, wider spans of control, and accelerating automation — as a defining pressure on today's teams. As the scaffolding of formal structure thins, the informal scaffolding of trust carries more of the load.
📊 Key Statistic
3.3×
High-trust teams are 3.3 times more efficient and 5.1 times more likely to deliver on objectives than low-trust teams, McKinsey research finds — a gap no incentive scheme replicates.
The Manager Remains the Pivot Point
Trust does not assemble itself. Gallup's long-running workplace research attributes roughly 70 per cent of the variance in team engagement to the manager — a figure stable across two decades of data. Where managers create the conditions for candour and mutual reliability, engagement follows; where they do not, no benefits package compensates.
Yet capable managers remain scarce. Gallup estimates that only about one in ten people naturally possesses the full set of competencies great managers display, among them the ability to build trusting relationships, sustain open dialogue, and hold teams accountable without eroding goodwill. The implication is not that good leaders are born, but that the behaviours underpinning trust must be taught deliberately.
Three Behaviours That Build Trust at Speed
Across the McKinsey and Gallup evidence, three observable behaviours recur among leaders whose teams report high trust.
Reliability under pressure. Trust compounds when commitments are kept consistently, especially when conditions are difficult. Leaders who name what they can and cannot guarantee — and then deliver on the former — earn credibility faster than those who over-promise.
Psychological safety. Teams perform when members can raise concerns, admit error, and challenge decisions without fear of penalty. Harvard's Amy Edmondson has shown that safety is not the absence of standards but the foundation that lets high standards be met, because problems surface early instead of festering in silence.
Transparent reasoning. Leaders who explain the rationale behind a decision — not merely the directive — preserve trust even through unpopular calls. In flatter organisations where employees have fewer formal cues about priorities, visible reasoning becomes the mechanism that keeps teams aligned.
From Insight to Discipline
The 2026 research carries a pointed message for organisations chasing productivity through tooling alone. Technology amplifies a team's underlying health; it does not create it. A low-trust team handed a faster workflow simply reaches its bottlenecks sooner.
Building trust, by contrast, is a repeatable discipline — a set of leadership habits that can be named, practised, and measured. Organisations that treat it as such convert McKinsey's trust dividend into durable advantage. Those that leave it to chance forfeit it.
🎬 Watch: Amy Edmondson — "Building a Psychologically Safe Workplace" (TED Talk)
Harvard's Amy Edmondson explains why psychological safety is the foundation of trust — and how leaders build it without lowering their standards.
Turn Trust into a Leadership Discipline
Elevana's PRO Leader programme equips managers and team leaders with the specific, practisable behaviours — reliability, psychological safety, and transparent reasoning — that the 2026 research links to high-trust, high-performing teams. It replaces leadership-by-instinct with a structured, evidence-based method.
Explore PRO Leader →In a flatter organisation, trust is no longer the soft part of leadership — it is the load-bearing one.