One among my favorite thinkers, Rachel Botsman, defines belief as “a assured relationship with the unknown.”
She’s spent over 15 years learning belief, and the perception she retains returning to is that this: the higher the uncertainty, the extra belief you want.
In my joyous function steering the AgileAus conference for nearly 20 years, I’ve witnessed individuals and organisations striving to undertake higher methods of working. It has been inspiring to listen to the various tales of individuals trusted to personal their work, ship one thing useful to clients, and study from it alongside the best way.
Recently, nonetheless, I’ve discovered myself questioning whether or not one thing is slipping – I believe all of us really feel it. And maybe the factor slipping quickest of all is belief.
The belief drawback
I spoke to a buddy just lately who obtained in early to work so he may go away early to fulfill his youngster’s wants – after which was quietly warned by his supervisor that this behaviour ‘offers the unsuitable impression’.
One other buddy is simply too scared to talk up in conferences because the goalposts maintain shifting and he or she’s afraid to say the unsuitable factor, with one other annoyed by the point she spends ready for approval on even the smallest choices.
These are usually not remoted moments – they’re what Botsman would name a breakdown of belief. She says it may be very confronting for leaders to recognise that their want for management is itself a type of mistrust.
The micro-managing, the presence-as-performance tradition, the processes that reward exercise over outcomes – these are all withdrawals of belief that accumulate.
There’s a nationwide dialog about productiveness and innovation, although typically I believe we are able to miss the purpose that all of it occurs via individuals.
Too typically we use the phrases ‘expertise’, ‘workforce’ and ‘headcount’ – however innovation and productiveness really walks on two legs! And many individuals are usually not thriving – so they can’t do their finest work.
After all, there may be the load of the world weighing on many, however on this planet of labor, the influence is obvious: psychological well being compensation claims have grown 161% over the previous decade, and crossed the $1 billion threshold 5 years forward of projections. Past that, there may be proof to counsel persons are disengaged and never pleased with their work or their workplaces.
Culture Amp’s 2025 research, throughout 3.3 million staff, finds that what’s occurring is “quiet cracking”: a sluggish erosion of satisfaction, power and motivation that doesn’t present up as somebody leaving, however as somebody slowly hollowing out.
SEEK’s 2025 Workplace Happiness Index discovered that almost half the Australian workforce is someplace between impartial and sad, and 1 in 3 recurrently dread going to work.
Individuals aren’t quitting – the job market is simply too precarious for that – they’re cracking.
Adam Grant describes quiet cracking as “the brand new time period for silently disengaging from a job that slowly breaks your spirit”. Organisations that mistake retention for engagement are lacking the issue – and the chance – solely.
A lot of this quiet cracking is rooted within the sluggish erosion of belief. When individuals really feel they aren’t trusted – to make choices, to handle their work, to talk brazenly – their engagement, motivation, and satisfaction quietly drain away.
Botsman is true that belief is not only declining; it has been displaced.
The previous mannequin, the place belief flowed top-down and leaders anticipated to be trusted by advantage of their place, is breaking. Belief must be earned via behaviour, via transparency, via really letting individuals do their jobs.
Botsman writes that belief is the conduit via which all new concepts journey. You can not get good work, not to mention innovation, out of people that don’t really feel trusted.
The AI layer
Mike Walsh, the insightful Australian futurist and creator of the e-book, The Algorithmic Chief, has been saying for years that “AI ought to change what we do, not simply how we do it.”
Organisations that bolt AI onto how they already work with out altering their buildings, their tradition, or how a lot they belief their individuals gained’t get the uplift they’re hoping for. They’ll get the identical organisation, barely sooner maybe, however with a a lot greater know-how invoice.
I’m curious what number of organisations battling AI are working into the identical issues they confronted when introducing higher methods of working up to now.
Maybe the questions must shift from not solely “How will we use this?” however to “What does this imply for a way we work, how we ship, and what functionality really seems to be like now?”
That is the work
The abilities that matter most, akin to iterative supply, cross-functional collaboration, steady studying, and dealing in real uncertainty, are usually not being changed by AI. They’re the conditions for AI really working.
As Botsman says, belief is earned via behaviour, integrity and truly letting individuals do their jobs. The organisations that get this proper – that construct distributed belief moderately than clinging to manage – are those that innovate, adapt, and create actual worth. They’re additionally not coincidentally those profiting from AI.
Constructing this adaptive organisation is tough, and it’s a journey that by no means ends. Each resolution, each interplay is a chance to strengthen belief.
The agile mindset stays the compass. It guides how we collaborate, how we study, and the way we make clever instruments really helpful.
Proper now, investing in belief is the work that really issues – and it’s work value doing.
- Catch Rachel at AgileAus26, Melbourne, 19–20 Might, 2026.

