Traditionally, what happened inside a privately owned company was accessible only to the owners and top executives. Employees were kept in the dark, ostensibly to reduce internal conflict over differing compensation packages and lower the likelihood of competitors accessing company secrets.
However, many modern companies now share information with their employees in an effort to be transparent, fair and honest. The results are striking and include increased employee morale, higher employee retention rates and a boost to the bottom line.
We’ll explore ways to implement transparency in your company, explain why it’s crucial and point out some transparency pitfalls to avoid.
Business transparency has become an indispensable element of running a successful company in modern times. With information more readily available and accessible than ever before, organizations must embrace transparency to earn trust, boost engagement, and make smarter decisions. Though transparency may feel uncomfortable at first, the long-term benefits greatly outweigh any short-term growing pains.
What Does Business Transparency Really Mean?
At its core, business transparency is about openly sharing relevant information with key stakeholders in a clear and timely manner. This includes employees, customers, partners, shareholders, regulators, and the general public.
Transparency can relate to many aspects of business. such as
- Company values, mission, and strategic direction
- Organizational policies and procedures
- Financial performance and forecasts
- Product development plans and pipeline
- Supply chain operations and sourcing
- Executive compensation and incentives
- Corporate social responsibility efforts
- Business risks and mitigation strategies
Transparency is not about divulging confidential information that could compromise competitive advantage. Rather it means communicating what stakeholders need to know to make informed decisions and hold the company accountable.
Why is Transparency So Critical for Businesses Today?
The information age has drastically reshaped consumer and employee attitudes. People now expect much greater visibility into how businesses operate. Withholding key details undermines trust and tarnishes brand reputation.
Here are 5 key reasons transparency has become imperative:
1. Transparency builds trust and loyalty
Trust is the foundation of every strong relationship, including the connections companies forge with employees and customers. Research shows that [transparency strengthens business accountability] by making data readily available. Leaders can then hold their businesses accountable and ensure all decisions align with the company’s best interests.
When people feel a company is being upfront and honest, they are much more likely to trust that organization. The 2021 Edelman Trust Barometer found thattransparency leads to deeper employee and customer loyalty. Loyal stakeholders advocate for and stand by organizations during good times and bad.
2. Transparency enables collective accountability
Sharing goals, metrics, and progress updates across the company allows every employee to align their efforts with business objectives. When all stakeholders have access to the same information, a culture of collective accountability emerges. Everyone understands their part in driving the organization forward.
Studies show that transparency and accountability reinforce each other in a positive loop. Exposing performance metrics motivates employees to hit targets. Taking ownership of results compels people to reveal obstacles so they can get the support needed to overcome challenges.
3. Transparency facilitates agile decision making
Reactive decisions made in silos lead to suboptimal outcomes. When employees at all levels can access accurate data and understand the reasoning behind key decisions, organizations gain an information advantage.
With a baseline of transparency, insights can flow quickly across departmental boundaries. Leaders can course-correct proactively when conditions change. Aligning around the same information accelerates both communication and execution.
4. Transparency simplifies performance tracking
Consistent transparency takes the guesswork out of performance evaluations. When employees and managers agree upfront on expectations and have access to the same data, it’s easy to track progress.
Standardized reports give leaders an accurate snapshot of organizational health. Blind spots due to hidden data hinder leaders’ ability to diagnose problems and kickstart change. Transparency around both successes and failures is crucial for driving continuous improvement.
5. Transparency attracts top talent
Today’s top performers carefully assess company culture when considering job opportunities. Professionals, especially younger generations, have little tolerance for secrecy or opacity. Lack of transparency is a huge red flag.
The most capable candidates gravitate toward open, collaborative environments. A [Forbes] survey found 86% of Americans believe transparency is more important than ever before. Companies perceived as ethical and forward-thinking have a recruiting edge in competitive labor markets.
How Can Businesses Become More Transparent?
Transitioning to a transparent culture is a process requiring company-wide buy-in. While executive mandates set the tone, every team member must commit to openness for transparency to take hold.
Here are some best practices to increase transparency:
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Clarify the “why” – Help all employees understand why transparency matters by connecting it to company values and strategic goals.
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Communicate context – Don’t just share data. Provide the reasoning behind key decisions to give employees meaningful perspective.
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Cultivate two-way dialogue – Create safe forums for employees across the company to pose questions and weigh in constructively.
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Simplify data access – Use central repositories and self-service analytics to democratize information access. Eliminate gatekeepers.
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Align on common KPIs – Get all stakeholders using the same metrics to track performance and make data-driven decisions.
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Automate reporting – Build dashboards that routinely surface objective data points and reduce reliance on hearsay.
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Normalize vulnerability – Leaders must model openness about missteps, unmet goals, and development areas. It sets the tone for others.
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Discuss challenges transparently – Loop in cross-functional partners early when dealing with setbacks to tap collective knowledge.
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Reward transparency – Recognize and promote employees who exemplify openness, candor and collaboration.
What are the Benefits of Radical Transparency?
“Radical transparency” takes cultural openness to the extreme by making virtually all information visible to all employees. Is full disclosure better for business? The pros and cons of radical transparency include:
Potential benefits:
- Builds deep employee trust and engagement
- Promotes free flow of ideas and uncensored debate
- Reduces wasted time spent securing approvals
- Encourages accountability and optimal decision making
- Surfaces operational problems early
Potential drawbacks:
- Can undermine competitive advantage if confidential data is leaked
- Exposes leadership to criticism and second-guessing
- Blurs boundaries between company and personal information
- Fails to account for needs of different personality types
- Requires thoughtful systems design and change management
Radical transparency is powerful but high-risk. Wise companies stick with pragmatic transparency, carefully evaluating what information needs open sharing versus controlled access.
Final Thoughts on Fostering Transparency
Business transparency leads to smarter decisions, faster innovation, and closer alignment across organizations. Although adopting a radically transparent culture has some risks, moderate transparency is a must for building thriving and resilient companies.
Leaders play a pivotal role in sparking transparency by championing its benefits and leading by example. However, creating an open company requires everyone’s participation. A shared commitment to transparent communication, information sharing, and collective accountability unlocks performance gains that opaque organizations can only dream of.
How to implement transparency in your business
Businesses can introduce various transparency types:
We’ll discuss implementing these transparency types in more detail.
Salary transparency has been a hot topic of debate. Companies like Buffer have made waves by making their salaries visible to all employees (and even the general public). People generally recognize that being open about salaries can significantly help end perceived and actual salary discrimination based on gender or race.
At the same time, even business leaders who don’t discriminate on salaries tend to fear internal repercussions. One of the main arguments against salary transparency is that employees paid less than their peers may not work as hard or will be unhappier at work. According to a Visier report, employees who discover new hires are being paid at a higher rate are more likely to resign. A ResumeBuilder study concurs, finding that 1 in 20 employees will quit if they discover their co-workers earn more.
The accessible salary matrix
You may be able to mitigate the negative impact of pay discrepancies if you can justify the differences in pay. An accessible salary matrix is one way to justify pay differences. Within the matrix, each department’s roles are listed vertically by seniority (think entry-level marketer up to head of marketing). Then, each individual role has an assigned salary and projected salary increases.
These numbers are set using the following system:
- Salaries can be determined based on research into averages for equivalent roles in the area where your business is based.
- During the hiring process, people can try to negotiate their seniority level but can’t negotiate salaries within a particular role’s level. When the matrix is fixed, all employees receive equal pay at the same level.
- Outside of promotions, everyone at the company receives a raise when the company achieves a predetermined collective goal.
- All of this information is available to everyone internally.
An accessible salary matrix involves a great deal of upfront effort. You must put in the work to build a solid compensation system because you’ll be held to it. But isn’t that what you should be doing in the first place? Cutting corners on compensation will always bite you in the end.
The silo is one of the most-used metaphors in business. We hear so much about breaking down silos because, unfortunately, it’s an almost universal issue. Business silos create bottlenecks, and information gets stuck at the individual, team and organizational levels (as well as inside software). The following occurs:
- People keep information that could benefit colleagues in their brains or inboxes.
- Teams don’t share achievements or insights that could help other teams.
- Over time, organizations develop cultures of intentionally or accidentally hiding information from employees, partners or clients.
These bad habits grow with the company, becoming more significant issues as you scale. For this reason, it pays to make task transparency part of the culture early. Here’s what you can do:
- Hold weekly meetings. One way to break down silos and improve internal communication is to have an all-hands company meeting during which team leaders share wins and failures from the previous week and check in on team goals. This is a standard way to provide visibility across teams and create a culture of openness regarding achievements and areas that need improvement.
- Post information for all to see. Companywide meetings might be difficult to scale as you grow. (Does your office even have a space that could fit 50 or 100 employees?) An alternative is to ask everyone to post information in a public Slack channel for the entire company to see or use another internal communication app to share information.
Task transparency can help your company do the following:
- Discover new opportunities. Teams can easily find new opportunities in the work of other teams or colleagues they may not have otherwise encountered. For example, someone on the data team might see a marketing initiative they feel deserves more testing. Your customer service team might have a call with a client who could make a good beta tester for a new product.
- Improve accountability. Sharing your tasks with the team is also a way to improve accountability. Even if nobody else reads your daily update, the short amount of time you spend thinking about the previous day and planning the next one has enormous value. It keeps the team on task, and the fact that anyone can scrutinize these lists anytime provides healthy pressure to follow through on your planned work.
Did your company achieve its quarterly goals? How close is it to achieving its financial, sales and other targets for the year?
You may also decide to provide strategic and financial transparency during your weekly meetings or less frequently. Sharing how the business is performing and whether you’re hitting your targets can empower every individual to make better, faster decisions. It can help your team prioritize – without involving senior leadership.
Being close to achieving company goals can empower and encourage your staff to put in a little more effort to reach the finish line. If not, the team can brainstorm to find out where the problem is and how to fix it.
Openly sharing individual employees’ progress on their goals is a controversial topic. On the plus side, visibility into goals – and progress on those goals – may help employees prioritize and empathize. For example, if you see that a colleague has achieved only 10 percent of a complex key result with two weeks left in the quarter, you may not bother that employee with small passion projects. Or, if you’ve made solid progress on your own goals, you may even offer to help.
On the other hand, knowing that a colleague is not performing as expected can lead to conflict, pressure and shaming from peers.
One way to get around this problem is to periodically solicit anonymous informal feedback about every employee, including management and the executive team. Managers can review each employee’s feedback and combine it with that person’s employee data and performance results.
With the understanding that no one is perfect, managers can communicate this information to the employee one-on-one; team members can use the feedback to improve their performance in areas where they’re falling short of expectations.
“Hiring” and “transparency” are rarely heard in the same sentence. When you find a candidate you want to hire, you don’t want to share anything that might push them away from the job. If you’re unsure whether they’re the right fit, you don’t want to give them too much access. You also don’t want the power dynamic to shift in their favor, especially in salary negotiations.
However, being upfront with new hires sets the tone for a positive work environment. New hires understand that no company is entirely free of challenges and problems, and being prepared for them reduces stress and builds their trust in management.
One way to increase transparency in your hiring process is by bringing candidates into your work environment for a pilot project. Bringing a potential new hire in on a contingent basis allows them to experience what a workday looks like and lets the company test that candidate’s skills during the hiring process.
They’ll have lunch with the team, interact with employees, ask questions and get a true sense of what it’s like to work with you. This will give you (and the potential employee) a good idea of whether the new hire fits the company culture.
While it’s beneficial to have all employees in your company on the same page, it’s equally important to be transparent with your customers. Hiding information from customers is viewed as shady and can backfire, wiping out any advantage you may have had.
According to an often-cited study on transparency from Label Insight, 94 percent of shoppers prefer brands that are completely honest and transparent, and 70 percent actively seek insights into a company before purchasing. Corporate executives surveyed by Deloitte agree, citing these top reasons consumers lose trust in a consumer product company:
- Brands not being open and transparent (90 percent)
- Brands not meeting consumer environmental, social and governance expectations (84 percent)
- Brands engaging in greenwashing (82 percent)
To earn customer trust, be transparent with customers about your pricing, product ingredients, labor and sustainability practices, as well as how you use customer data. If you make a mistake, own up to it, and let customers know how you plan to fix it and prevent similar mistakes in the future.
What is transparency in business?
Transparency in business is sharing information about your business results, strategic direction, operations and compensation with others outside your executive team and ownership. This includes various stakeholders, primarily employees and customers.
Different transparency levels exist, and sharing everything isn’t a good idea. For example, trade secrets should be accessible only to a select few (and protected by nondisclosure agreements). Similarly, sensitive information like business bank account balances and customer payment data should be access-restricted and protected. However, there are several areas where sharing information with stakeholders is appropriate and beneficial.
Simon Sinek Reveals What Transparency Really Means in Business | Inc.
FAQ
What is transparency and its importance?
Why is transparency and accountability important in business?
What is the purpose of corporate transparency?
Why is transparency important in a company?
When your company makes an active effort to share knowledge across the organization, it’s demonstrating that management trusts, respects, and values employees at all levels. Leaders are responsible for setting the precedent that transparency is valuable, and expected across the entire organization.
What makes a business transparent?
Transparent businesses publicly share information about their company — information that has traditionally been kept private. There’s a wide spectrum of transparency, and it often looks different from business to business. However, these are some common elements that companies consider when they’re looking to increase transparency:
Why is workplace transparency important?
Workplace transparency is proven to breed long-term success. Implemented properly, increased transparency creates trust between employers and employees, helps improve morale, lowers job-related stress (which is especially important during the Covid-19 pandemic), while increasing employee happiness and boosting performance.
Why is task transparency important?
Task transparency can help your company do the following: Discover new opportunities. Teams can easily find new opportunities in the work of other teams or colleagues they may not have otherwise encountered. For example, someone on the data team might see a marketing initiative they feel deserves more testing.