Trust and Competence - Building these two important first impressions through your website.
A Harvard psychologist says people judge you based on 2 criteria when they first meet you
Craig Barritt/GettyHarvard social psychologist Amy Cuddy.
People size you up in seconds, but what exactly are they evaluating?
Harvard Business School professor Amy Cuddy has been studying first impressions alongside fellow psychologists Susan Fiske and Peter Glick for more than 15 years, and has discovered patterns in these interactions.
In her new book, "Presence" Cuddy says people quickly answer two questions when they first meet you:
- Can I trust this person?
- Can I respect this person?
Psychologists refer to these dimensions as warmth and competence respectively, and ideally you want to be perceived as having both.
Interestingly, Cuddy says that most people, especially in a professional context, believe that competence is the more important factor. After all, they want to prove that they are smart and talented enough to handle your business.
But in fact warmth, or trustworthiness, is the most important factor in how people evaluate you. "From an evolutionary perspective," Cuddy says, "it is more crucial to our survival to know whether a person deserves our trust." It makes sense when you consider that in cavemen days it was more important to figure out if your fellow man was going to kill you and steal all your possessions than if he was competent enough to build a good fire.
While competence is highly valued, Cuddy says it is evaluated only after trust is established. And focusing too much on displaying your strength can backfire.
Cuddy says MBA interns are often so concerned about coming across as smart and competent that it can lead them to skip social events, not ask for help, and generally come off as unapproachable.
These overachievers are in for a rude awakening when they don't get the job offer because nobody got to know and trust them as people.
"If someone you're trying to influence doesn't trust you, you're not going to get very far; in fact, you might even elicit suspicion because you come across as manipulative," Cuddy says.
"A warm, trustworthy person who is also strong elicits admiration, but only after you've established trust does your strength become a gift rather than a threat."
Recent Comments
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To me, trust is only built over time and goes hand in hand with how people experience dealing with you. First impressions are important, however, especially with our websites where people either respond to it or pass it by.
Erica,
You're right. We only get a few precious moments on our websites to begin to develop the trust needed for our readers to stay.
What do you think will develop trust on our websites on first impressions?
I think if they can see immediately that you want to help them rather than expect them to buy something, that would go a long way.
It sounds like you really respect what Cuddy has to say and I agree with what he says people are never going to do business with people they do not trust . all the best Max
Hi Jeff
We are often told not to judge a book by its cover but I reckon first impressions are made very quickly and can lead to a relationship (real or virtual) with somebody or not in the blink of an eye.
Mark
Hey Mark! Thanks for your perspective. You're right - first impressions are a natural way of life - real or virtual.
Blessings...
Very interesting. It makes a lot of sense too.There are so many 'wolves in sheeps' clothing out there.
Once you earn the persons trust, then he will drop his guard and listen attentively to what you have on offer.
Thanks enjoyed this read.
Thanks for your thoughts. I appreciate them. I want to add to what you said.
I think also that once the trust is earned, we need to perform with competence. We have to show we can be trusted to do the job, provide the service/education, and do what we say we can do. I think that just earning the trust is not enough. Trust may get us in the door, but to stay, we have to deliver.
Blessings...
Jeff
This is the exact way we have to be seen by the person who is viewing our site but very hard to do with s new site
I agree. After reading this article, I wonder how my site is viewed. Does my site elicit trust and competence in those who view it?
I think so. People are people and don't we want to do business with those we trust and who we believe can help solve our problems?
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Great post and it is something we tend to do, thanks for your insights,, hope you do not feel offended but you have affiliate links in this post and it is not allowed
Katie, thanks for letting me know about the affiliate links. Those two got by me. All fixed now.
Jeff