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From AI Transparency to Human Trust: Insights from the Executive Roundtable

From AI Transparency to Human Trust: Insights from the Executive Roundtable
# Format: Event Recaps
# Role: CX/Success/Support
# Role: Founder/CEO
# Role: Marketing/Growth
# Role: Sales/Business
# Role: Community/DevRel
# Role: Product

How today’s leaders are rethinking customer connection through authenticity, community, and shared purpose

October 24, 2025
Joshua Zerkel
Joshua Zerkel
From AI Transparency to Human Trust: Insights from the Executive Roundtable
This past Wednesday at Gradual HQ, we hosted a private Executive Roundtable Dinner that brought together senior leaders across Customer Success, Marketing, Product, Growth, Brand, and Community for one table and one conversation.
The focus was on how to build and sustain trust with customers, within teams, and across an increasingly AI-powered world.

Trust starts with transparency

The evening began with a shared acknowledgment that customer trust has never mattered more. Attendees reflected on how transparency, especially around AI, product guardrails, and data use, is becoming the new standard for credibility. Companies that explain how they use AI and empower customers to make informed choices are already setting themselves apart.
Several leaders noted that the way a company communicates its technology reveals its values long before a product launch. Others pointed out that even small acts of operational transparency, such as clearly disclosing recording tools at events, can strengthen credibility in meaningful ways.

Community builds credibility

Across the table, there was clear alignment that community-led advocacy now carries more weight than traditional marketing. Participants shared how their most trusted voices are not brand spokespeople but customers who share openly and help others learn. These authentic stories build credibility that no campaign can replicate.
The group discussed the importance of closing feedback loops, elevating top contributors, and embracing even negative feedback as a signal of engagement. One participant summed it up well: “If someone cares enough to tell you what’s wrong, that’s a gift.”

Humanizing the brand experience

Another strong theme emerged around human connection. People want to engage with companies that feel personal and genuine. Attendees shared examples of how humor, thoughtful gestures, and moments of surprise can create lasting impressions. From sending handwritten notes to designing experiences that spark joy, small touches often make the biggest difference.
Several leaders reflected that customers respond best when brands act with personality and empathy rather than formality or fear of being “too fun.” As one guest said, “Enterprise buyers are still human. They laugh, they scroll, they want to feel seen.”

Cultural and generational shifts

The conversation also explored how culture shapes trust. Guests compared markets in Korea and the United States, noting that Korean companies rely heavily on national word-of-mouth, while U.S. organizations must work harder to reach segmented audiences. Both approaches underscored that trust grows through familiarity and consistency.
When the topic turned to Gen Z, one participant described trust as “a video game with five hearts.” Every mistake costs one, and brands must earn them back through quick and authentic responses. The group agreed that younger customers decide quickly whether to trust a brand, and they expect honesty and creativity from the start.

Cross-functional collaboration and alignment

Leaders also discussed how internal collaboration shapes the customer experience. Many spoke about the need to stop “shipping the org chart” and instead create a unified journey that connects marketing, community, support, and product teams.
Examples included mapping shared goals, designing joined-up customer programs, and treating alignment as a cultural practice rather than a structural fix. Planning season, several noted, is when silos often appear most clearly. One takeaway was that alignment starts with shared purpose and mutual respect across teams.

Looking ahead

As dessert was served, the discussion became lighter and more personal. Attendees shared stories about customer empathy, favorite restaurants, and cultural touchpoints that connect business with daily life. It was a reminder that even among data-driven leaders, conversation and connection remain at the heart of meaningful work.
Trust does not come from scale or automation. It grows through listening, transparency, and shared purpose.
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