The B2B zeitgeist is asserting trust is at an all-time low.
Buyers don’t trust vendors.
Buyers don’t trust marketing.
Buyers don’t trust new anything.
I think it’s a convenient misdiagnosis benefiting everyone.
The “trust crisis” puts the burden on sellers — just build more credibility, just produce more case studies, nurture longer, be more transparent.
An entire colony of sales trainers, advisors, and marketing consultants has organized itself around helping sellers navigate this dearth of buyer trust. If you just get your approach every more perfect, the deals will close.
It reminds me of the résumé optimizers promising jobseekers more interviews if they just tweak the formatting, strengthen the action verbs, optimize for keywords. All seller-side technique applied to a buyer-side disengagement. The hiring side isn’t. No amount of résumé polish changes the fact there’s a hiring freeze even though the job description is still up.
Exact same dynamic.
The buying side just isn’t.
The majority of deals I’ve lost over the past two years haven’t been lost to a competitor. They haven’t been lost on price or credibility. They’ve been lost to: “Nah, we’ve decided not to do this at all.”
Maintaining the status quo isn’t saying “I don’t trust you”, it’s saying “We don’t actually have capacity for this” or “Turns out, we don’t think doing this will be worth it.”
For one company I talked with, it wasn’t lack of budget, nor credibility concerns on my part. It was lack of strategic alignment within their departmental leadership.
A professional services firm wants 30% growth this year but is too busy delivering (awesome!) to draw a strategic roadmap to the goal. No board politics. No bureaucratic layers. The leadership is the decision-maker.
That’s not a trust gap. It’s lack of strategic bandwidth.
Working in the business vs. Working in the business
“Uncertainty” and “Volatility” are often the next scapegoats.
Yes, conditions might change dramatically in the next 90 days. This has been true for the past 5 years, 10 years, 25 years, but every year prior. I had a project back in 2018 around trying to navigate geopolitical uncertainty. CNN’s 24-hour headline news has existed since 1980 and every new headline is terrifying. But at a 12-18 months horizon, it quickly becomes irrelevant noise.
In 2025, U.S. business investment grew nearly 6%, heavily concentrated in data centers and IT infrastructure. According to Harvard economist Jason Furman, excluding those categories, GDP grew at 0.1% annualized in the first half of 2025. Not a typo. Zero point one percent.
“Our economy might just be three AI data centers in a trench coat.” – Rusty Foster
It looks that way because no one else is doing anything.
For, it’s not that AI responses are highly trustworthy. Claude, Gemini, ChatGPT all have warnings about their lack of trustworthiness (“Claude is AI and can make mistakes. Please double-check responses.“). If trust were actually the concern, AI — the least proven, most hallucination-prone, lowest-quality-output category in B2B — would be the last thing getting funded. Instead it’s the first. An MIT study of 300 generative AI initiatives found 95% delivered zero measurable return on $30-40 billion in investment.
Last year, each of my engagements was three weeks from initial call to kickoff. The difference wasn’t trustworthiness. It was whether leadership had a specific, unavoidable, urgent, project. No amount of effort on my part could manufacture it if they didn’t.
- GDP growth of 0.1% outside data centers.
- 86% of B2B buying journeys stalling before a decision.
- Buying committees doubling in size.
- 95% of AI initiatives delivering zero return.
None of this is a trust problem.
All of it is a leadership problem.
In 2025, a record 234 CEOs were swapped out — up 16% year-over-year. Tenures less than 36 months increased 79% year-over-year. A CEO who knows they have 30 months before the board reconsiders them isn’t going to invest in a bold 36 month bet.
Thus the strategic vacuum perpetuates itself.


