Confidence in institutions, businesses, and media has steadily declined, and that shift is particularly visible in technology.
Customers and candidates now scrutinize companies more carefully before committing, whether they are signing a contract or accepting a job offer. What they’re looking for is alignment between what a company says and what it does.
Years ago, I signed up for a phone plan after confirming it included unlimited long-distance calling. (Yes, they used to charge by the minute for calls outside your area code.) When the first bill arrived, it was full of long-distance charges. And when I called about it, the company sided with what their system had recorded over what their rep had promised me. The charges stood.
The money was a small thing. What lingered was how they handled the gap between what was promised and what showed up on the bill. The account stayed open because switching wasn’t worth the effort, but from that point on, I verified every interaction with that company instead of taking anything at face value.
That’s how trust breaks. One small dispute handled badly, and afterward everything the company says gets double-checked.
Gaps like this usually trace back to misaligned incentives.
Sales teams get measured on closed revenue within the quarter rather than whether the customer renews two years later. Marketing gets measured on list size and engagement rather than whether re-opted contacts ever convert.
Implementation teams inherit commitments they weren’t part of making. No single person is responsible for the full customer experience, so no single person feels accountable when it frays.
The companies that hold their reputations over time tend to close that accountability gap by how they structure incentives and what behavior gets reinforced internally. When a sales rep loses commission on a deal that was misrepresented and later churned, the calculus during the sale changes. When a manager is evaluated on year-two retention rather than year-one bookings alone, the conversations during the sales process change too.
The behaviors that erode trust tend to be mundane rather than dramatic, usually tied to the kind of internal pressure described above rather than deliberate deception. Some of the most common ones in technology sales and services include:
Any one of these can be explained away, but together they tell a coherent story about how the company operates versus how it presents itself.
Candidates evaluate companies the same way customers do. They’re looking at whether the process matches the reality, and whether the people they speak to during interviews have an accurate picture of what working there is like.
Sometimes that verification falls to me. I once recruited a top producer, five years with his company, for a SaaS client of mine. He got a great offer and was ready to go. But the recruiter I was working with seemed skeptical, parts of the interview process felt inconsistent, and some of the company’s claims did not fully add up.
So I started digging.
On LinkedIn, I found three reps who had all left the company at the beginning of the year, and I called them. Two called back. I asked whether the company really had 35 paying Fortune 500 clients, the number the CEO had given me. They used to, the reps told me. Everything else they described pointed to a company in serious disarray.
So I called my candidate and told him what I had learned. He was recently engaged, looking to buy a house, and had five years of tenure in a strong position. The CEO’s story had not survived two conversations with former sales reps who had lived the reality. He declined the offer.Â
That call cost me a $35,000 placement fee, but my reputation was worth far more.
When the picture holds together, candidates move through the process with confidence. When it doesn’t, the most experienced candidates, the ones with options, are the most likely to withdraw.
This is what experienced software sales recruiters bring to the process: the willingness to identify gaps between the role being presented and the company’s operating reality before they become a bad hire, an early departure, or reputational damage.
That alignment gives both sides a clearer basis for moving forward and, just as importantly, a reason to step away when the story does not hold together.
A useful question to ask inside any company is whether the things measured at the end of the quarter would still look successful two years later.
If sales bookings, marketing-qualified leads, and time-to-hire all hit target, but renewal rates, repeat purchase rates, and one-year employee retention slip, the gap between what’s promised and what’s delivered is already widening.
That gap is where reputations are built or eroded, and it tends to register in the operating numbers long before it shows up in the brand.