Issue #15 · July 2026
This Week's Topic
What Changes When You Stop Trying to Be Liked and Start Trying to Be Trusted.
Being liked feels good in the room. Being trusted changes what the room is capable of. Most founders do not realise they are optimising for the wrong thing until they see the cost of it.
6 minute read · Every Wednesday
Why I Am Writing This

The desire to be liked by your team is not a character flaw. It is a natural human instinct, and in the early days of building a company, it is often what makes you a good person to work with. The problem is when it starts making you a less effective person to work for.

Most founders do not notice when this shift happens. They think they are being empathetic. They think they are being collaborative. What they are actually doing is making decisions based on how they will be received rather than what is actually right.

This week: What the difference between being liked and being trusted actually looks like in practice, why the pursuit of approval is quietly limiting your team, and what changes when you let it go.

He told me he had not had a single difficult conversation with any of his team members in over a year. Not because everything was going well. Because every time a difficult conversation came up, he found a way to soften it, delay it, or reframe it into something that did not require anyone to feel uncomfortable.

His team liked him. By every visible measure, the culture was warm and the energy was positive. What was also true is that two underperformers had been in their roles for eighteen months without any meaningful feedback. A key hire had been made badly and nobody had said so out loud. And the founder himself was carrying the weight of problems he had never given his team the chance to solve, because surfacing them would have required someone to feel criticised.

Likability, in his case, had become a cost centre. The warmth in the room was real. So was the quiet dysfunction underneath it.

The Difference Between Liked and Trusted

Being liked means people enjoy being around you. Being trusted means people believe you will do the right thing even when it is hard. These two things are not the same, and they are not always compatible. The founder who always says yes to keep the peace is liked. The founder who says a hard no when something is not working is trusted. Over time, only one of those founders builds a team that can operate without them.

Trust is built through consistency and honesty, not through warmth. Your team trusts you when they believe your feedback is accurate, your decisions are principled, and your word means something because you have shown them it means something under pressure. None of that requires you to be cold. But it does require you to be willing to be uncomfortable.

The team that likes you will tell you what you want to hear. The team that trusts you will tell you what you need to hear.

That distinction determines the quality of information you will ever have about your own company. And the quality of that information determines everything.

From My Own Journey
The Feedback I Did Not Give

Early in building VisionVoyage, there was someone I worked with closely whose output was not where it needed to be. I knew it. They probably sensed it. But I kept framing it gently, adjusting my expectations quietly, and finding reasons to delay the direct conversation.

I told myself I was being kind. What I was actually doing was protecting myself from the discomfort of being the person who delivered hard news. And the cost of that, beyond the work itself, was that the person never had the information they needed to actually improve. My avoidance was not kindness. It was a way of keeping the room comfortable at their expense.

When I finally had the direct conversation, something shifted. Not just in the work. In the relationship. There was more respect in it than there had been during all the months of careful softening. That taught me something I did not expect: people do not trust you because you make things easy. They trust you because they know you will be honest with them when it matters.

Three Ways to Build Trust Instead
This Week's Tools
Shifting from Likability to Trust as a Leadership Standard
1
Say the thing you have been not saying
Most founders have at least one conversation they have been avoiding. Not because the conversation is impossible, but because having it requires accepting that someone will be temporarily uncomfortable with them. The willingness to have that conversation, clearly and without cruelty, is one of the fastest ways to shift a team's relationship with you from warm to solid. Warmth is enjoyable. Solid is what they will rely on when something goes wrong.
2
Hold the standard even when it is inconvenient
Trust is built in the moments when you do what you said you would do, even when doing it costs you something. If you said something matters, and then let it slide because the moment felt awkward, your team learns that your standards are conditional. Conditional standards are not standards. They are preferences. And a team that knows your standards are conditional will quietly stop taking them seriously.
3
Let people be disappointed in the short term
The founder who optimises for not being the source of disappointment will eventually make decisions that serve that goal rather than the company. Letting someone be disappointed in a decision you made, without immediately trying to manage their reaction, is a form of respect. It tells them you believe they can handle the truth. People trust leaders who believe in their capacity to handle reality, not leaders who protect them from it.
This in Practice

The shift from liked to trusted is not a personality change. It does not require you to become harder or more distant. It requires you to stop making decisions based on how they will make you look in the room, and start making them based on what is actually true and what the company actually needs.

The founders whose teams will run through walls for them are not always the ones who are easiest to work with. They are the ones whose teams know exactly where they stand, know that the feedback they get is real, and know that when their founder says something it means something. That is what trust produces. And it is worth far more than being liked.

This Week's Reflection

Is there a conversation you have been softening or avoiding with someone on your team? And if you ask yourself honestly, is the reason you are avoiding it about them, or about how you want to be seen by them?

You do not have to choose between being a good person and being a trusted leader. But you do have to choose between being comfortable and being honest. The ones who choose honesty, consistently, are the ones whose teams build something that lasts.

See you Wednesday.
Riddhi
Founder, VisionVoyage

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