Season 13: Career Leverage
5 Skills That Build Trust With Leaders at Work
Podcast Audio Only:
Building trust with leaders at work is one of the biggest drivers of career growth, influence, and increased responsibility. Many professionals focus on doing good work, hitting deadlines, and being reliable, but still feel overlooked when it comes to promotions, leadership opportunities, or being included in important decisions.
If you’re trying to figure out how to build trust with leaders at work, the answer is not just working harder. Trust is built through how you think, how you make decisions, and how you show up in your day-to-day work.
In this episode of Control Your Career, career strategist Julia Toothacre breaks down five essential career skills that build trust with leaders and shape how you’re perceived at work to get you promoted faster. These skills directly influence how much input you’re given, how leaders evaluate your judgment, and whether you’re seen as ready for more.
Why You’re Not Being Trusted at Work (Even If You’re Good at Your Job)
You can be reliable, responsive, and technically strong, and still not be the person leaders turn to when something important is on the line. Performance is about execution like completing tasks, meeting expectations, and delivering results. Trust is about how you think through the work and shows up in how you make decisions, how you communicate your reasoning, and how you handle situations that are not clearly defined.
If you’re not being trusted at the level you want, the gap is often not about effort, but about how consistently these deeper skills are visible in your work.
5 Skills That Build Trust With Leaders
1. Judgment and Decision-Making
Trust increases when leaders can rely on your judgment. This means making decisions even when you don’t have complete information, understanding trade-offs, and knowing when to escalate something versus handling it independently. Strong judgment shows that you can think through complexity without needing constant direction.
2. Clear Communication at Work
Clear communication is one of the fastest ways to build trust with leaders. This is not about saying more, but about making your thinking easy to follow. When you can explain what’s happening, what matters, and what needs to happen next, you reduce confusion and make it easier for others to rely on you.
3. Business Awareness and Strategic Thinking
If you want that promotion, you need to understand how your work connects to the bigger picture. This includes knowing your organization’s priorities, understanding how decisions impact revenue, cost, or risk, and being able to align your work to those outcomes.
4. Pattern Recognition and Problem Solving
Leaders trust people who can anticipate problems, not just react to them. Pattern recognition allows you to see recurring issues, identify root causes, and connect information across projects or teams.
5. Strategic Execution at Work
Execution still matters, but at higher levels, it needs to be intentional. Strategic execution means focusing on high-impact work, understanding what actually moves things forward, and being willing to push back on work that doesn’t align.
What Building Trust With Leaders Actually Looks Like at Work
Building trust with leaders doesn’t show up in obvious ways at first, but with new behaviors. You’re asked for input earlier in a project, a leader checks in with you before making a decision, or you're pulled into conversations that are not technically your responsibility, but where your perspective is valued.
You’re given more ownership, more visibility, and more influence, not because you asked for it, but because your judgment and thinking have been proven consistently. Leaders begin to rely on how you approach problems, not just whether you can complete tasks.
Key Takeaways
- Being reliable at work does not automatically build trust with leaders
- Trust is built through judgment, communication, and decision-making
- Leaders evaluate how you think, not just what you produce
- Business awareness connects your work to strategy and outcomes
- Pattern recognition helps you anticipate problems before they happen
- Strategic execution focuses on impact instead of activity
- Ready to Build More Trust and Influence in Your Career?
If you’re realizing that your skills aren’t translating into the level of trust or opportunity you want, this is exactly the work we focus on in coaching:
Clarity of Self → https://ridethetidecollective.com/coaching/clarityofself
Career Action Coaching → https://ridethetidecollective.com/coaching/careeraction
Career Advancement Intensive → https://ridethetidecollective.com/coaching/intensive
Not sure where to begin?
Start here: https://www.ridethetidecollective.com/strategies
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