Company Competence Begins with Internal Trust (Reimagined)
Everyone talks about buyer trust—how to earn it, build it, protect it. But here’s the plot twist no one wants to admit:
You can’t create trust outside the company if you don’t have it inside the company.
Philosophers have said for centuries that a person who doesn’t trust themselves can’t expect others to trust them.The same applies to a business. A company full of internal suspicion will always struggle to win over prospects and customers—no matter how slick the marketing is or how talented the sales team may be.
Where Trust Really Begins
The first job of building trust actually starts long before the salesperson picks up the phone.
- Marketing sparks the interest—they create attention, curiosity, and leads.
- Sales converts that interest—turning it into customers, revenue, and growth.
A Tale as Old as Business
If you’ve ever worked in a company, you’ve seen this movie:Marketing proudly rolls out shiny new collateral—beautiful brochures, landing pages, a video with dramatic music.
Sales takes one look and says,
“Yeah… nobody’s buying because of this.”
Marketing fires back,
“Well, maybe try using it before blaming it.”
And the popcorn comes out.
Or here’s another classic:
Sales complains the leads aren’t high quality.
Marketing insists the leads are high quality—sales just isn’t closing them.
Both sides dig in deeper.
No one wins.
A Simple Fix (Seriously)
Here’s the wild part: the solution is not complicated.It starts with willingness to communicate, something so basic it’s almost embarrassing.
- Sales can tell marketing which leads are converting and why.
- Marketing can track which lead sources actually increase sales—and strengthen those categories.
- Instead of guessing, both sides can replace assumptions with data and dialogue.
Rifts Create Incompetence — Harmony Creates Trust
When marketing and sales are at odds, the entire process breaks down.
Internal distrust leads to external distrust.
But when the two work in harmony:
- Marketing generates genuine interest
- Sales confidently converts it
- Prospects feel trust—not pressure
- And the company demonstrates real competence
Because a company that trusts itself becomes a company others want to trust.