Tag: moralDNA results

The best way to find out if you can trust somebody is to trust them.”
Ernest Hemingway

Trust_by_occupation-e1366991313906What makes someone trustworthy?  We trust people every day: the teacher, the policeman, the nurse; a host of acquaintances and complete strangers as we go about our lives and work. But who considers themselves most trustworthy?

If we believe that trust is earned before it is given, then a lot of our daily lives would become impossible.  We wouldn’t get on a bus before seeing the driver execute a number of manoeuvres to show us his or her skill and therefore trustworthiness. So it’s fair to say that within reason, we trust first and ask questions later.

MoralDNA™ is a psychometric profile that has measured 10 moral values including Trust in a sample of over 80,000 people in 200 countries around the world and we have some surprising results from different occupations concerning their perceived trustworthiness.

Our data analysis reveals that those working in banks, real estate, utilities, insurance, engineering and industrial goods and services describe themselves as people that regard themselves as most trustworthy. High too on the list are the retired, oil and gas workers, accountants and those in consulting and business services. Whilst this list may surprise many, most of these occupations have to be trusted, because without them our society just wouldn’t function.

On the list of those who see themselves as less trustworthy we find those working in news media, arts and crafts, religion, charities and not-for-profits.  Creative professionals also doubt themselves, together with politicians. So isn’t it interesting that those responsible for reporting and legislating on others’ behaviour consider themselves less trustworthy?

The gap between the most and least trustworthy is considerable.  In our broad sample, news media thought themselves more trustworthy than only 35% of the sample, while bankers considered themselves more trustworthy than 58% of the sample.

To trust is to take a risk and make a judgement call. It also confers a responsibility on those we trust.  When trust breaks down, chaos, fear and anger follow this breach in our basic human value system.  To betray someone’s trust goes a lot deeper than we often like to admit.  Major banks fail through the lack of it, media empires shudder, fortunes are lost and lives ruined.

Truly trusting others and being considered trustworthy in return is a cornerstone of personal integrity, not only in our workplaces but in our personal lives as well.

How trustworthy do you consider yourself to be?  What stops you from “doing the right thing”?  Join over 80,000 people from over 200 countries around the world and find out more about your values and how you make decisions. 

Take the Test

 

“Who should you trust? was last modified: April 26th, 2013 by MoralDNA

Honesty-by-occupation1-e1365098234601“Cretans, always liars”, so reckoned Epimenides of Crete in around the 6th century BC. Have the fibbing Cretans changed their habits or are we, as a society, still playing fast and loose with the truth today? In a recent survey by People Management, one third of their poll* of HR professionals believed that they were being told more lies than two or three years ago. Drawing on research from our worldwide MoralDNA™ Profile we’ve unearthed some interesting data about how people in different occupations view their capacity for honesty.

Our psychometric test asks the individual to respond truthfully about themselves and their values – including Honesty – measuring how important each value is to them and how they rank them against each of the other values and against the rankings of other people.

It’s interesting to discover that the police, utility, oil and gas workers, industrial goods and services, and bankers, all declared that in their opinion they rarely tell lies.  High too on the scale were the retired and our data shows us that as people age they feel less inhibited by telling the truth.

At the other end of the scale we find those who think of themselves as less honest and these include: advertisers, PR, media, charity and not-for-profit workers. Perhaps not surprisingly politicians also appear to be quite comfortable telling lies.

Even though we find measurable differences between these groupings of occupations, the gap between them is not large; advertisers and PR employees were on average more honest than 33% of our sample, while the police were more honest than 57% of the sample.  It is also interesting to see the groupings of occupations.  At the “honest” end were professionals that deal with services delivered by multiple-layered organisations, such as law enforcement, utilities and banks, engineering and the military.  At the other end our less than honest workers are employed in communication – in PR, media, politics, broadcasting and arts and crafts only a little way below marketing.

If people feel that they are not being honest within their daily working lives where does that leave them and their role in the wider society? Closer inspection may show us just how this lack of truthfulness affects their lives and those that they influence.

Our research continues to offer valuable and insightful data and now offers even greater depth, showing us the differences in people’s values at home and at work.

How honest do you think you are?  Join over 80,000 people from over 200 countries around the world and find out more about your values and how you make decisions.

Take the test

*People Management Survey (sample 820 HR professionals polled)  Read the full article 


All in an Honest Day’s Work was last modified: April 4th, 2013 by MoralDNA