Explore how top industry voices unpack trust in today’s fast-changing world—from responsible AI and crypto finance to authentic LinkedIn messaging and leadership in the future of work.
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From Silence to Signals: How to Build Trust in the Age of AI, Crypto, and Digital Change

By Yoll | Your Insider at Market Me More, Inc.
On-the-ground coverage and critical insights from Market Me More’s sponsored and supported events.

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This month, I kept hearing one-word echo through every conversation I covered: TRUST.

 

Not just trust in technology. Or branding. Or finance. But trust in people—and in the decisions we’re making about what’s worth investing in, sharing, or believing.

 

This month, three conversations kept circling back to a single question: How do we build trust in a world moving faster than ever?

 

From boardrooms where silence can quietly erode organizations, to inboxes overflowing with robotic pitches, to power grids straining under the weight of AI innovation—the real challenge isn’t just about technology, sales tactics, or leadership frameworks.

 

It’s about how we stay human while everything around us transforms.

 

At Top Voices Tuesday, Michael J. Lopez and Matt Stone pulled back the curtain on how low trust festers in hidden corners of organizations—and how speaking uncomfortable truths becomes both a cultural and economic necessity.

 

On Blue TV, Denise Murtha Bachmann reminded us that even digital sales messages don’t have to feel manipulative. Authentic outreach can still be the bridge that turns strangers into trusted partners.

 

And at Live with TVU, Nikki Estes explored how the future of AI—and the digital currencies fueling it—will only thrive if built on ethical principles and human-centered design.

 

These aren’t just isolated conversations. They’re threads in the same tapestry of modern business:

  • Why organizational trust is the invisible engine behind sustainable business performance
  • How digital trust and authentic messaging shape meaningful professional relationships
  • Where responsible AI development intersects with sustainability, ethics, and human impact

Because whether you’re leading a team, building your brand, or designing new technology, one truth cuts through all the noise:

 

Trust isn’t optional. It’s the foundation for the future we’re all creating—together.

 

Content Overview:

This issue explores how trust fuels leadership, communication, and innovation across industries. Featuring insights from “Top Voices Tuesday: The Destructive Power of Low Trust,” “Blue TV: DMs That Don’t Feel Gross,” and “Live with TVU: How to Power AI Responsibly,” it offers practical strategies for navigating authenticity, technological change, and global business challenges.

 

Join us as we unpack why staying human might be the smartest business strategy of all.

Top Voices Tuesday: The destructive power of low trust

May 27 | Hosted by Michael J. Lopez | Featuring Matt Stone

Michael J. Lopez and Matt Stone discuss the hidden costs of low organizational trust during Top Voices Tuesday.

We’ve all felt it. That tension in a room where people smile politely, but stop talking the moment someone leaves.

 

This week on Top Voices Tuesday, Michael J. Lopez hosted a candid conversation with Matt Stone, founder of Behavioral OS, about a topic quietly draining organizations from the inside out: the destructive power of low trust.

 

“Every business transaction has trust at its foundation.”
— Matt Stone

 

From boardrooms to patient care units, Matt explained that trust issues rarely begin as huge failures. Instead, they start in conversations people avoid. Left unchecked, low trust metastasizes—breeding entrenched narratives, hidden resentments, and ultimately sabotaging business performance.

 

Why Organizational Trust Is Essential for Business Performance

Throughout their conversation, Michael pressed Matt for practical ways leaders can tackle the hidden costs of low trust. Early on, Michael asked:

 

“Where do we even start?”

 

Matt’s answer cut to the heart of American business culture: 

 

“Trust is not just an organizational problem—it’s an interpersonal one.”

 

He emphasized that many trust breakdowns happen because people feel unsafe speaking up. Instead of addressing conflict directly, they create narratives about who’s at fault. Michael highlighted this dynamic when he shared his own client experience:

 

“You are much more comfortable talking about each other than you are talking to each other.”

 

That single observation is critical for anyone working on personal branding or leadership presence in the U.S. workplace. Whether you’re a leader, entrepreneur, or content creator, your credibility and community impact hinge on how openly you address friction and disagreement.

 

Matt connected these insights directly to community building:

 

“The first three letters of the word trust are the first three letters of the solution, which is truth.”

 

But the conversation also made clear that trust doesn’t just shape culture—it shapes economies. Recent research underscores this link:

 

Countries where businesses, governments, and other institutions have engendered more trust experience stronger per capita real GDP growth, a standard measure of economic prosperity (Deloitte, 2023).

 

In the U.S., leaders who model honesty—even when it’s uncomfortable—don’t just solve problems; they help create environments where people contribute fully, sparking both innovation and economic resilience. Silence, on the other hand, fuels rumor mills and weakens trust across teams and communities.

 

How Psychological Safety and Trust Building Shape Global Workplace Culture

Globally, Matt stressed that while trust building is universal, the rules for how it’s earned or given are deeply cultural.

 

Michael helped draw out this distinction, asking:

 

“Is it always a cultural thing, or is it just individual?”

 

Matt explained that in some cultures, trust is a ledger to be earned. In others, it’s freely given until broken. These differences ripple through cross-border teams, shaping how people perceive authenticity, transparency, and leadership.

 

Michael described a practical exercise he uses with teams to navigate these differences. He asks people to identify whether they believe trust is earned or given, then pairs them for dialogue. His lesson:

 

“You don't get to decide for someone else how they handle conflict or how they build trust.”

 

That insight is pure gold for professionals navigating personal branding and community building on a global scale. When your audience or partners come from diverse cultures, how you communicate trust and vulnerability can either build bridges or unintentionally create distance.

 

Even mundane decisions—from who speaks up in meetings, to how direct feedback is delivered—are shaped by cultural norms around trust. Matt summed it up simply:

 

“Trust is the infrastructure of society. We don’t even think about it when we take an Uber or buy coffee. But when it breaks, everything stops working.”

Visual representation of psychological safety and cultural dynamics shaping global leadership practices

    Globally, professionals can’t afford to treat trust as an afterthought. It’s the currency of community, and the foundation for every successful brand, relationship, and organization.

     

    Trust Building Insights from the Frontlines of Organizational Leadership

    Listening to Michael and Matt’s conversation left us with one clear takeaway: trust is invisible, but its absence is impossible to ignore.

     

    Matt’s stories painted a vivid picture of how organizations collapse into silence when trust erodes. Teams become skilled at talking about each other, but not to each other.

     

    Michael’s examples showed that even well-meaning leaders can mistake quiet meetings for alignment, when silence might actually signal fear or disengagement.

     

    Trust isn’t just a cultural challenge—it’s central to the future of work in AI-driven, global organizations.

     

    And perhaps the most profound insight from the session was this: low trust isn’t always born of betrayal—it’s often born of avoidance. Of fear. Of the stories we invent when no one is speaking the truth out loud.

     

    From our vantage point, here’s what we’re carrying forward together:

    • Measure trust like you measure profit. It’s invisible but crucial to sustainable business performance.
    • Friction isn’t the enemy—secrecy is. Honest conflict strengthens organizational leadership.
    • Authenticity and clear corporate communication are crucial for maintaining psychological safety and driving sustainable business performance.
    • Authenticity beats perfection. People “can smell authenticity and BS,” as Matt put it—a key for effective corporate communication.
    • Trust-building is leadership’s job. Modeling vulnerability fosters psychological safety and healthy workplace culture.
    • No problem fixes itself. The longer distrust festers, the harder it becomes to untangle.

    Matt left us with this thought:

     

    “There’s no stasis. We’re either moving apart—or coming together.”

     

    In a world captivated by technology and transformation, it’s easy to forget that trust-building remains the ultimate human technology—the thing that decides whether all our systems actually work.

     

    🎥 Watch the full session of The destructive power of Low Trust 👇

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      Blue TV: DMs that Don't Feel Gross

      May 29 | Hosted by Denise Murtha Bachmann | Live at BlueTV

      Denise Murtha Bachmann presenting live on LinkedIn messaging strategy during Blue TV’s special broadcast

      We’ve all been there. You open your LinkedIn inbox and find a message that feels pushy, robotic, or just plain awkward.

       

      But this week on Blue TV, Denise Murtha Bachmann reminded us that it doesn’t have to be that way. Broadcasting live from Houston in the middle of a thunderstorm, she explored how selling through DMs can feel authentic rather than manipulative.

       

      “Everybody is selling something on LinkedIn… but it's how you approach it that matters.”
      — Denise Murtha Bachmann

       

      From the start, Denise made one thing clear: authenticity and human connection should drive every outreach, not just the hope of a quick sale.

       

      Why Authentic Sales Messaging Is Crucial for U.S. Social Selling

      For American professionals—especially those working in sales, consulting, or entrepreneurship—Denise’s message cuts through the noise.

       

      She pointed out how many U.S. sales teams fall into the trap of thinking that more outreach equals more results. But Denise argued that the opposite can be true when messages lack personalization:

       

      “When you send a message that sounds just like everybody else’s, people either delete it or just don’t even respond. And that’s what makes it gross.”
      — Denise Murtha Bachmann

       

      Her point was simple yet powerful: Americans value individuality and connection. Even in a fast-paced business culture, people crave interactions that feel human, not robotic.

       

      She emphasized how automation can damage trust if used carelessly:

       

      “People buy from people they know, like, and trust with credibility. And that doesn’t happen when you leverage automation.”
      — Denise Murtha Bachmann

       

      Instead, Denise urged professionals to treat DMs like conversations, not transactions. Her point echoes broader research showing that “trust is personal. People trust people, not faceless systems, and certainly not technology alone” (Deloitte Insights, 2023). In other words, the very essence of authentic sales messaging lies in human connection, not automated scripts.

       

      Denise laid out practical ways to make DMs more human-centered:

      • Don’t start with generic phrases like “This is Denise from Sellovatorz.”
      • Avoid sending canned pitches without knowing anything about the person.
      • Reference something real from their content or About section.
      • Be upfront that you have something to offer, but never push for a quick close.

      In the U.S. business landscape, authentic sales messaging isn’t just polite—it’s a competitive advantage that drives social selling success and long-term relationships.

       

      How Personalized Outreach Builds Global Digital Trust

      While Denise broadcasted from Texas, her message reached far beyond American borders. She acknowledged that cultural differences shape how people perceive connection and trust.

       

      For example, she highlighted that in some cultures, people expect a direct approach in business, while in others, relationships must be nurtured carefully over time:

       

      “Some cultures want you to get straight to the point… others want to know who you are first before they’re going to open the door to a conversation.”
      — Denise Murtha Bachmann

       

      This insight is crucial for professionals involved in LinkedIn marketing or international networking. A DM that’s perfectly normal in the U.S. could feel abrupt—or even rude—somewhere else.

       

      Denise also stressed that digital trust is fragile in a global context:

       

      “It's like talking to your best friend. You share a little bit about yourself, but it's mostly about them. And that's how you start to build a relationship.”
      — Denise Murtha Bachmann

       

      And:

       

      “I don't know how you build trust without having a conversation and taking the time to get to know someone.”
      — Denise Murtha Bachmann

       

      Her session highlighted that no matter where we work, authentic connections are universal. A global professional community demands respect, listening, and personalized outreach—not just cookie-cutter sales scripts.

      Visual representation of social selling techniques fostering authentic connections worldwide

      Ultimately, in any culture, digital trust is the currency that determines who responds—and who stays silent.


      Trust Building Insights from the Frontlines of Digital Communication

      Covering Denise’s session left me thinking about something bigger than just DMs.

       

      This conversation isn’t simply about avoiding “gross” sales pitches. It’s about redefining how professionals connect and build trust in a digital world.

       

      Denise’s advice was refreshingly practical:

       

      “Be honest that you're selling something, but don't make it feel transactional. And focus on them, not you.”
      — Denise Murtha Bachmann

       

      From my vantage point—as a journalist and as someone navigating my professional networks—the biggest lesson is this: Trust isn’t built in a single DM. It’s built in all the small signals that show we’ve listened, that we care, and that we see the person behind the profile.

       

      And if I’m honest, this session resonated with me even more because I’ve had the chance to work directly with Denise before. She’s the one who taught me how to approach sales as a real, human conversation rather than just a transaction.

       

      I don’t know if anyone reading this has felt the same, but maybe some of you have. For the longest time, my instinct when pitching something—whether in an email or a LinkedIn message—was to jump right in and explain what I was selling. And in a way, that’s not entirely wrong; we do have to be honest that we’re in business and selling something.

       

      But what Denise helped me realize is that it’s how you do it that makes all the difference.

       

      And she reminded us that real relationships take time:

       

      “You have to be patient. You can't just go in for the kill. You have to nurture relationships. It's not always going to be a quick hit.”
      — Denise Murtha Bachmann

       

      It takes patience. Because before you pitch anything, you need to know who you’re talking to. You have to build a real relationship first. That’s where Denise’s teachings came in for me:

       

      I learned that I need to:

      • Check people’s bios.
      • Read their posts.
      • See what they’re up to.

      So I can find something meaningful that connects us—something I can use to start a real conversation.

       

      In that way, the first message doesn’t feel like a cold pitch. Instead, it’s about finding common ground. About being genuinely curious about who they are, not just what they can buy from me. And honestly, the relief that comes with knowing I don’t have to “sell” in the first message is huge. It’s given me confidence and made my outreach feel authentic instead of awkward.

       

      And I know I’m not alone. Many of us have felt that tension between wanting to be honest about our business goals, yet also craving real human connection. We’re figuring out how to approach new conversations with curiosity instead of a sales script. Whether you’re an entrepreneur, a consultant, or building your brand on LinkedIn, we’re all searching for that balance between growing our business and staying true to who we are.

       

      Here’s what we’re carrying forward from Denise’s talk:

      • Personalization beats automation. One thoughtful, human message is worth more than a hundred generic pitches—and it’s the cornerstone of social selling.
      • Selling isn’t gross when it’s built on genuine interest and empathy. Conversations, not cold pitches, are how trust and credibility grow.
      • Digital trust is the ultimate differentiator. It takes time, honesty, and consistent human connection to build—and it’s what truly sets successful professionals apart online.

      Because whether we’re selling a product, a service, or our own expertise, one truth remains clear: people buy from people who feel human.

       

      🎥 Watch the full session of Blue TV: Creating DMs that Don't Feel Gross 👇

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        Live with TVU: How to Power AI Responsibly

        May 29 | Hosted by Nikki Estes | Live with TVU

        Nikki Estes speaking at Top Voices on the ethical AI principles shaping future innovation

        From conference floors in Las Vegas to lively Zoom panels, this week’s Live with TVU wasn’t just about AI, Bitcoin, or the latest financial tools—it was about what it means to build our digital future responsibly.

         

        Nikki Estes anchored the session from Las Vegas, weaving together insights from a powerhouse lineup of speakers across fields like ethical AI, digital currencies, and sustainable tech infrastructure. A single message came through again and again: technology is only as powerful as the values guiding it.

         

        “Humans can’t be replaced… but those who understand AI and digital currency will be leading the trail.”
        — Nikki Estes

         

        Why Responsible AI Development Matters for U.S. Professionals

        Across the U.S., AI is quickly shifting from hype to reality. But as Nikki Estes made clear, American professionals can’t afford to think about technology without considering how it impacts people.

         

        She explained that while humans won’t be replaced, the professionals who learn to navigate AI and digital currency will be shaping the next era:

         

        “Humans can’t be replaced. But those that understand AI and digital currency, those are going to be the folks that are leading the trail…”
        — Nikki Estes

         

        It’s not just about writing code or designing new systems. Nikki pointed to how AI infrastructure—from crypto mining rigs to massive servers—demands proper engineering and cooling systems, and how renewable energy is becoming a critical factor in supporting this new digital backbone:

         

        “As we’re using more of these machines and building cryptocurrency mining tools… we’re going to find that they need to be cooled down, they need to be properly engineered.”
        — Nikki Estes

         

        She also highlighted that even as businesses chase cost savings, trust and responsibility remain at the center of technology adoption. Without them, new tools risk becoming just another passing trend rather than lasting change.

         

        How Global Digital Financial Inclusion and AI Adoption Impacts Everyone

        While Nikki was broadcasting from Las Vegas, the ideas she shared stretched far beyond U.S. borders. During her session, she described moments from the Bitcoin 2025 Conference, which drew nearly 30,000 attendees, where conversations explored how blockchain and digital currency are transforming financial systems worldwide. Nikki Estes explored how the future of AI—and the ethical AI principles guiding it—will only thrive if built on human-centered design.

         

        Nikki shared how innovations like the Lightning Network could slash transaction fees for small businesses, from 2–4% down to under 1%. For entrepreneurs working with tight profit margins, that difference is significant:

         

        “If you’re saving money on your business, what else can you do with that money?”
        — Nikki Estes

         

        She also highlighted how digital currencies are offering stability in places facing economic turbulence. In Argentina, she noted, more than 60% of crypto users regularly swap pesos for stablecoins to protect their savings from inflation.

         

        And for millions of families relying on remittances, blockchain solutions promise major relief. According to the World Bank, the global average cost of sending remittances still sits at around 6.4%, underscoring how traditional services continue to impose significant costs on those sending money home (World Bank, 2024). Nikki explained how Filipino workers sending money home often face these fees, which erode the funds their families ultimately receive.

        Digital financial inclusion tools reducing cross-border remittance costs for global communities

        But there’s hope. Recent research from Coinbase highlights how stablecoins enable cross-border payments at costs as low as 0.5% in some corridors, dramatically undercutting traditional services (Coinbase Institutional, 2025). With these new digital tools, more funds can reach the people who need them most.

         

        Amid these changes, Nikki made it clear that the goal is for tech like Bitcoin to become seamlessly integrated into daily life, invisible yet dependable—echoing the sentiment Elizabeth Stark shared during the conference:

         

        “Bitcoin needs to be boring. We need to have it in our everyday lives… just as invisible as the internet.”
        — Elizabeth Stark, quoted by Nikki Estes

         

        It’s a vision that frames digital currencies not as speculative trends but as tools for genuine financial inclusion and practical change. Yet Nikki underscored that such transformations require understanding, responsible use, and protections for those engaging with these new systems:

         

        “It’s not about just the technology—it’s about understanding it, using it responsibly, and making sure people are protected.”
        — Nikki Estes

         

        Commentary from the Frontlines: Balancing Innovation and Responsibility

        Reporting on Nikki’s session reminded me that our conversations about AI and digital currencies are never just technical—they’re fundamentally human.

         

        It’s easy to get swept up in the excitement of new tools and breakthroughs. But Nikki’s perspective was a steady anchor, reminding us that while innovation can open doors, it also raises critical questions about who benefits and who might get left behind.

         

        She painted a picture of a future where tech should feel as normal and “boring” as logging onto the internet—an everyday tool, not a source of confusion or fear. Yet that vision only becomes real if we choose to build systems grounded in ethics, transparency, and practical protections.

         

        For anyone reading this—whether you’re a founder exploring AI applications, a finance leader considering crypto to streamline costs, or someone simply trying to keep up with this whirlwind of change—Nikki’s message was clear: we’re all responsible for how the future unfolds.

         

        Because, as Nikki said, it’s not just about technology—it’s about understanding it, using it responsibly, and ensuring it serves people first.

        🎥 Missed our previous dispatches? 

        We’ve spent the past few weeks and months stepping into rooms that mattered — spaces filled with real conversations, bold ideas, and meaningful connections. If you’re curious about what’s been unfolding, every dispatch below captures a piece of that journey. We’d love for you to catch up and be part of it.

        📌 Issue #001 – Coverage from Market Me More’s Frontlines

        Explore how climate equity, healthcare access, and authentic storytelling are reshaping the systems we build. Read the full issue below 👇 

        Read the full issue of Issue #001 – Coverage from Market Me More’s Frontlines

          📌 Issue #002 – AI’s Tipping Point: Can We Build at Scale Without Losing Trust?
          Go inside three sessions where leaders tackled the ethical cracks in AI, data infrastructure, and human-centered healthcare innovation. Catch up on the edition here 👇 

          Catch up on the edition of Issue #002 – AI’s Tipping Point: Can We Build at Scale Without Losing Trust?

            📌 Issue #003 – Content Is Everywhere. Trust Isn’t. Here’s What Top Voices Are Doing About It
            Inside the room with Michael J. Lopez, Rachel B. Lee, Bobby Umar, and Wendy Shore as they unpack content, storytelling, and scaling with intention. You can check it out below. 👇

            Check it out here the Issue #003 – Content Is Everywhere. Trust Isn’t. Here’s What Top Voices Are Doing About It

            Also, don't forget to catch the replay of Live with TVU: How to Power AI Responsibly 👇

            Shared replay link of Live with TVU: How to Power AI Responsibly

            What It All Means — And Why Trust Will Shape the Future We Share

            This month, we didn’t just talk about trends—we uncovered the quiet forces shaping how we lead, connect, and innovate.

             

            We sat in on conversations where low trust revealed itself as the silent saboteur of teams and business performance. We listened as digital experts reminded us that even a single LinkedIn message can either build bridges or break trust. And we explored how responsible AI development is not only about coding systems, but about designing a world where people still come first.

             

            Across these three events, one idea stood out:

             

            Trust isn’t a buzzword—it’s the invisible infrastructure that holds our professional worlds together.

             

            In this issue, we dove into:

            • How low organizational trust leads to silence, hidden narratives, and lost business potential
            • Why authentic communication and digital trust are now competitive advantages for professionals
            • And how responsible AI demands ethics and transparency from the very start

            And in these conversations, these aren’t just theories. They’re blueprints for how we can show up—more human, more honest, and more courageous—no matter how digital our future becomes.

             

            Because whether we’re leading a team through conflict, crafting a DM that feels real, or engineering AI systems with ethics at their core, one truth remains:

             

            Trust decides whether our future works—or falls apart.

             

            And that’s the journey we’re committed to continuing—not just as observers, but as partners in building workplaces, networks, and technologies that truly connect us.

             

            Until next time,

            Yoll Yvette Eredera — Your Insider at Market Me More, Inc.

            💬 Reflect with Us

            Which conversation in this issue made you rethink how you build trust in your business, your community, or your tech projects?
            Where do you see the biggest opportunities to lead with authenticity and courage?

             

            Reply to this email or DM us. We feature reader reflections in every issue—because your voice shapes where we go next.

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