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Don’t Make Assertions That Will Later Prove Untrue
By: Dave Berkus
Sometimes it is easy for someone at the top of an organization to make a statement that, in the enthusiasm of the moment or to make a point, crosses the line between fact and fiction. Sometimes it seems to you to be just an unimportant little stretch of the facts. An estimate of the number of customers, of the amount of traffic to your website, of the numbers of products sold or hours spent in development—there are thousands of areas where a number sounds better when it is larger.
Often, the number you state cannot easily be challenged, sometimes justifying the use of a larger number as a way to impress at potential customer, or make a point at an industry meeting.
In this age of readily available information, the risk involved in making a statement that can later be proved untrue is too great. It goes to your credibility itself when discovered or challenged. And often, when someone discovers or uncovers the truth, you’ll never hear of it, even as that person lowers his or her trust in your future statements by some level as a result.
Yet, we have all done this in one form or another, some harmlessly, some with intent to deceive. An often-expressed example seems to come from the salesperson who quotes a larger number of users or customers than the facts support. Yes, we’ve seen gray areas. In one example in an industry I know well, there are direct customers and then central systems that in turn support direct customers. The company in mind provides systems to serve both, but its salespeople count as customers all of the indirect customers served by the one system sold to oversee them. The result is an inflated number of total customers, which when compared to the competition counting only direct customers, makes the company look much larger and with greater market share.
Is there any harm in this activity? Yes, in two ways, this hurts credibility and confidence. Competitors have every incentive to research the truth of your statements and every incentive to broadcast findings of inaccuracies. And the creator of the knowingly inaccurate statement will always be a bit wary about being challenged, sapping just a bit of energy away from other communications with the same constituents, and knowing that a previous statement is vulnerable to attack.
It is best just to not make those statements in the first place. They probably don’t do the job expected in enhancing the person’s or company’s reputation as intended anyway.
This article was originally published by Berkonomics
Published: December 22, 2014
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