At first glance, everything looks healthy. Goals are being met. Deadlines are on track. Performance metrics look solid.
But something feels different.
People aren't stepping up with new ideas. They're avoiding risk. Conversations have become more transactional. Instead of asking, "How can I help?" employees are asking, "What exactly do I need to do?"
In this episode of Culture Over Coffee, Beth Sunshine explores why this shift happens and why many organizations are unintentionally creating compliance instead of commitment.
Accountability alone doesn't strengthen culture. Accountability only drives engagement when it's built on a foundation of trust.
Without trust, accountability changes behavior, but not in the way leaders hope.
Many organizations have spent the past few years raising expectations and increasing accountability.
There's nothing wrong with that.
The problem is that trust hasn't kept pace.
According to the ENGAGE 2026 Company Culture Report:
Those numbers point to more than dissatisfaction.
They point to a credibility gap.
And credibility directly affects how people show up at work.
When trust is strong, accountability creates alignment.
People understand expectations, believe they're fair, and feel confident taking ownership.
When trust is weak, the opposite happens.
Employees still meet expectations, but they do so cautiously.
You may notice:
The work still gets done.
But discretionary effort begins to disappear.
Employees stop asking, "How can I contribute?"
They start asking, "What's the minimum required?"
That's the difference between commitment and compliance.
Trust isn't built through occasional moments of strong leadership.
It's built through consistency.
One finding from the ENGAGE 2026 report stands out:
86% of employees who wouldn't recommend their company say leadership doesn't consistently follow through.
Every missed commitment, inconsistent decision, or exception to the rules sends a message.
Over time, employees begin wondering:
Trust rarely disappears overnight.
It erodes one interaction at a time.
One of the most overlooked findings from the episode involves middle managers.
Only about one-third fully trust organizational leadership.
That matters because managers are responsible for translating:
If the people responsible for reinforcing accountability don't fully trust leadership themselves, that uncertainty spreads throughout the organization.
Culture becomes inconsistent, not because managers don't care, but because credibility has weakened.
Strong accountability isn't simply about holding people responsible.
It's about creating an environment where people believe expectations are:
Beth offers several practical ways leaders can strengthen accountability without sacrificing trust:
Employees watch what leaders do far more closely than what they say.
Trust grows through repeated consistency, not occasional excellence.
High performers shouldn't receive exceptions that undermine credibility.
When expectations are understood, employees spend less time second-guessing and more time contributing.
Accountability works best when employees believe leadership is living by the same standards they're expected to follow.
Instead of asking:
"How can we increase accountability?"
Try asking:
The answers often reveal whether accountability is strengthening culture or quietly weakening it.
Trust influences everything from initiative and accountability to retention and engagement.
The ENGAGE 2026: The Company Culture Report explores how trust, leadership consistency, and accountability are showing up across today's organizations (and what leaders can do to strengthen all three).
Download the report to see where organizations are building trust, where they're losing it, and how culture impacts performance long before it shows up in the numbers.
Yes, but accountability works differently depending on the level of trust. High accountability combined with low trust often produces compliance rather than commitment.
Trust gives employees confidence that expectations are fair, leadership is consistent, and taking initiative is safe. Without it, people naturally become more cautious.
Trust grows through consistent leadership behavior, reliable follow-through, transparent communication, and applying standards fairly across the organization.