New Report From Deloitte Digital and Twilio Reveals Disconnect Between Leader Perceptions and Consumer Values Around Trust, Provides Pathway for Brands to Close the Trust Gap

With more than two-thirds (68%) of consumers spending more money on trusted brands than on brands they don’t trust, this new research highlights the quantifiable impact trust can have on business value and offers actionable insights for B2C leaders looking to establish a more trustworthy, and therefore valuable, relationship with their core customers

Deloitte Digital, the experience consultancy, and Twilio Inc., the leading cloud communications platform, today announced the results of a joint study exploring the divergent perceptions of trust between consumers and business leaders in the United States.

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For many consumers, trust is the deciding factor when it comes to separating a business from its competition. Not only can trust help bring customers through the door, but it can also help keep them there — reducing churn and lowering acquisition costs. While that seems like a simple concept to employ, this new research uncovered a significant chasm between the way consumers and B2C leaders define and establish trust. The findings reveal that many leaders are overly confident about almost every dimension of customer trust in their brands, and as a result are leaving sizable business value on the table. The resulting report takes a closer look at how these two groups evaluate key trust signals and offers tangible actions that brands can implement to foster trust with their customers.

The joint report, “Close the Trust Gap to Unlock Business Value,” begins by defining the four elements of trust — humanity, transparency, capability and reliability — and then dives into actionable insights developed by Deloitte Digital and Twilio. In total, the report produced dozens of insights. A sampling of these insights includes:

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  • The impact of trust is quantifiable. Research shows that among consumers who track their purchases, the majority of respondents (68%) spent more on a trusted brand compared to a brand they use but trust less. And on average, consumers spend 25% more money on trusted brands. Trust also helps brands earn permission to collect more and more valuable data from customers. In fact, consumers are comfortable with their favorite brands knowing significantly more data about them than they think the brands already know.
  • Brands are not as trusted as their leaders think. While 79% of B2C business leaders think their customers have somewhat or very high trust in their brands, only 52% of consumers report feeling those levels of trust in the brands they interacted with so far in 2021.
  • Consumers define the building blocks of trust differently than B2C leaders. Nearly 3 in 4 consumers say quality products or services (72%) and fair prices (73%) are critical to building their trust in a brand. Yet only 38% of B2C leaders recognize that fair prices are central to building trust, and only 57% recognize the critical importance of quality products or services.
  • B2C leaders overestimate performance on all core trust signals. As defined by Deloitte Digital’s “HX TrustID” study, consumers look to four key signals of a trustworthy brand: Humanity, Transparency, Capability and Reliability. According to this new joint report, B2C leaders are three times more likely than consumers to strongly believe that their company consistently exhibits Humanity through empathy and kindness toward customers (40% versus 13%) and twice as likely than consumers to strongly believe that they always show Reliability by delivering on their promises (40% versus 19%).
  • Most brands know what they need to do to earn trust — but many are still falling short. For instance, a whopping 98% of B2C leaders say customers trust their brand more when it’s easy to do business with the brand. Consumers agree on this point, with 96% saying they trust a brand more when it’s easy to do business with it, yet only 35% of consumers say it is very easy to do business with the brands they trust most.
  • Even the most trusted brands have room for improvement. Thirty-three customers in 100 believe that their most trusted brands are Transparent — that is, that those brands openly share all information, motives and choices in straightforward and plain language. A net of 48 in 100 say their most trusted brands consistently deliver on their promises.
  • Leaders are misaligned with consumer preferences regarding how to rebuild trust after it is damaged. Brand leaders rank “provide outstanding customer service” and “communicate proactively about the problem and the resolution” as the most important ways to rebuild trust —missing and significantly underestimating the importance of the three most-important actions in the eyes of consumers: providing refunds, offering replacements or exchanges, and admitting the mistake and apologizing.
  • When the right actions are taken, consumers are willing to forgive mistakes, both simple and significant. This research shows on average, consumers will accept three mistakes from a brand before losing trust — provided that mistakes are resolved to their satisfaction and not repeated.

“There has never been a more important moment for brands to get it right when it comes to trust,” added John Peto, U.S. head of Deloitte Digital and principal, Deloitte Consulting LLP. “This report makes it clear that the organizations who rest on their laurels or continue with a business-as-usual approach will be leaving immense value on the table, while those that align their approach with the trust signals of their core audience will likely benefit both now and in the future.”

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