Customers have a lot less faith in companies than executives think they have.
Driving the news: 87% of business leaders "think customers highly trust their companies," but only 30% of consumers actually do, according to a new survey by PricewaterhouseCoopers.
- Recent price spikes have had a deleterious effect on people's trust in companies — in part because companies aren't doing a good job overall of explaining their pricing decisions, PwC U.S. chairman Tim Ryan tells Axios.
- "It calls for a different way of thinking ... around transparency," Ryan says.
Threat level: 71% of consumers say "they’re unlikely to buy from a company if it loses their trust," PwC reports.
- Customers say their top "trust drivers" are affordable products and services (34%) and companies treating their employees well (33%).
Yes, but: Employees are much more likely than customers to trust their companies.
- 69% of employees say they "highly trust" their employer, PwC found.
- "Employers are connecting with their employees" better than they're connecting with customers, Ryan says. "They have more opportunity to communicate."
Related: The 2022 Axios Harris Poll 100 reputation rankings.
Editor’s note: This final quote from PwC U.S. chairman Tim Ryan has been corrected. The original publication mistakenly said “employees” are connecting with their “employers” better than with customers.