Nurturing Interpersonal Trust in Knowledge-Sharing Networks

 

Lisa C. Abrams
IBM Institute for Business Value
55 Cambridge Parkway, 9th floor
Cambridge, MA  02142
(617) 588-5825
Fax (617) 588-2305
labrams@us.ibm.com

 

Rob Cross
McIntire School of Commerce
University of Virginia—Monroe Hall
Charlottesville, VA  22904
(434) 924-6475
Fax: (434) 924-7040
robcross@virginia.edu

 

Eric Lesser
IBM Institute for Business Value
55 Cambridge Parkway, 9th floor
Cambridge, MA  02142
(617) 693-6418
Fax (617) 693-6459
elesser@us.ibm.com

 

Daniel Z. Levin
Management and Global Business Department
Rutgers Business School – Newark and New Brunswick
Rutgers University
111 Washington Street
Newark, NJ  07102
(973) 353-5983
Fax (973) 353-1664
levin@business.rutgers.edu

 

 

Academy of Management Executive, Vol. 17, No. 4, November 2003, pp. 64-77

Finalist, AME Best Paper Award (2003)

 


Executive Summary

In many organizations informal networks are the primary means by which employees find information, solve complex problems and learn how to do their work. Two forms of interpersonal trust—trust in a person’s competence and in a person’s benevolence—enable effective knowledge creation and sharing in these networks. Yet, though conceptually appealing, trust is an elusive concept that is often difficult for managers to influence. We conducted interviews in 20 organizations to identify ways that interpersonal trust in a knowledge-sharing context develops. Based on this work, we summarize behaviors (e.g., discretion, consistency, collaboration) and practices (e.g., building shared vision, ensuring transparency in decision making, holding people accountable for trust) for managers interested in promoting trust (and thereby knowledge creation and sharing) within their own organizations.

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