One of the worst things you can do in business and in life, and we all do it all the time.
I caught up with one of our investors in Auckland a few weeks ago – Peter, a wise chap who’s had a lot of success. Our conversation drifted from a company update to general advice and on to a deep discussion about life itself. This gentleman has everything: high-performing investments, a great family, many friends and an awesome lifestyle in New Zealand. So I asked him, what’s the secret? I expected a reply like ‘never give up’, or some other standard, bumper-sticker answer. What he said took me off guard. ‘The most important key to success in business and life is to never ever ever tell a lie.’
Wow. That took me a couple of minutes to process; I’d never thought of honesty like this. As a child, I learned that telling lies was bad. To be good, I should tell the truth. As an adult, I don’t tell outright lies but there are times when I’ve been guilty of exaggerating or omitting facts for my own advantage. I’d only ever thought about honesty as bad verses good. Peter views honesty as the access to ultimate power.
If we were honest about it, we’d admit we all lie every day. A recent study of 2000 Britons found that the average man lied six times per day and the average woman three times per day. The same study found that 40% of people lied on their resumes and a whopping 90% of people looking for a date online lie in their profile. The study didn’t investigate the number of lies told by entrepreneurs looking for investment, but it would be interesting.
Peter asks the same two questions after every pitch he sees. “What is your customer delight story?” and, “What’s the lie in what you just told me?” He says there’s always one, and as soon as the entrepreneur admits it and opens up with the truth, they can start managing what to do next.
Some lies are big and others small. Children lie to avoid punishment or impress other kids in the playground. Adults can lie to gain respect, like a former coffee getting intern who told an employer he’d worked with us as a ‘research assistant’. People lie to stave off the consequences of making a mistake or to spare someone’s feelings. Their heart may be in the right place, but they’re still telling a lie.
Peter thinks telling lies is the #1 reason why entrepreneurs fail. Not because telling lies makes you a bad person, but because the act of lying takes you out of the present moment and prevents you from facing the truth about your business. Every time you exaggerate a metric, under-report a cost, or are less than transparent with your team, you create a false reality, and start living in it. In that moment when you told a lie you knew the right action and chose another. You separated yourself from what was happening around you, lost control of the situation and soon focused on managing the fallout from the lie. I know people who appear to spend their entire careers inflating the truth and fighting to meet the expectations they’ve set.
Peter’s philosophy is based on Buddhist teachings: the present is a more peaceful, creative and productive place from which to operate. Everyone knows the right actions to take; by having the confidence to accept your surroundings you can make right decisions and be open to opportunities that come your way. His commitment to remaining in the present borders on spiritual; only by remaining in the moment, being honest with yourself and others, can you trust that the true outcome will emerge.
Our conversation inspired me to test the theory over the past couple of months. I’ve focused on telling the absolute truth all the time and being ultra transparent even when I didn’t need to be. It wasn’t easy but I have to say it transformed my sense of peace, and coincided with the company’s most productive period yet. Coincidence?
Two weeks ago, I experienced the dark side of dishonesty. I’ve been involved in a charity organisation for a few years now. We do a lot of great work in the community, but as a group we’ve always floundered, and our projects never reach their potential. We’ve had a stream of difficult people in the organisation but I couldn’t identify the root cause of the problem. Then it struck me: I discovered a senior member of the organisation lying. Not a whopper, just insignificant tales about why someone couldn’t make a meeting, why emails hadn’t been read, why he was late and so on. When I confronted him, he immediately admitted them, justifying his actions by saying they avoided irritating consequences.
As soon as I caught the first lie, it was obvious why the organisation wasn’t working. Within it lay a culture of avoiding reality; no one trusted each other. The result was a culture of obfuscation and back stabbing in which nothing was achieved. Volunteers became disheartened with the politics and lack of progress, and eventually they left.
Truth and its relationship to creativity, peace and ultimately success have played on my mind in the past couple of months. If you’ve read this post and thought, “that doesn’t relate to me – I never tell a lie,” then you’re probably lying to yourself. For one week, try being honest and transparent about everything. I’m confident you’ll find it both difficult and worthwhile, and that it’ll make a big difference to your business. I seldom adopt esoteric business philosophies but its impact has been such that I believe this powerful secret should be talked about.
I’ve not been able to find other articles or books on this topic. If you have, it would be awesome if you could share them on the comments below.

Lovely post. Honest – I listen to Brene Brown’s piece on vulnerability often : http://youtu.be/iCvmsMzlF7o . The trait I find most impressive in people is courage. If you practice courage, fear takes a hit – thereby lies and deciept are further limited. Courage and honesty go hand in hand.
Totally agree. Courage & honesty go hand in hand. It’s easy to be dishonest but takes a lot of guts to be 100% honest all the time!
This is, in fact, the focus of Sam Harris’ Kindle Single “Lying” – see more at http://www.amazon.com/Lying-Kindle-Single-Sam-Harris-ebook/dp/B005N0KL5G. Harris comes to a similar conclusion.
Thanks Brady! Will check out the book.
Hi Rebekah,
Confronting and interesting. Will take it on!
Will report back in a few months.
Cheers
Adrienne
Thanks for sharing this Rebekah. You are so right, we are surrounded by people at best stretching the truth constantly and while they are often trying to impress, it doesn’t.
I tend to ignore them, but occasionally I’ve been taken in and burnt very badly. I like to see the best in people and trust them as I like to be trusted myself.
I remember stretching the truth as a kid, so that I wouldn’t get a hiding, but even little lies, like saying I hadn’t broken my father’s special pencil, still sit badly with me today.
Funnily, one of my early employers who I remember for both his great advice and his marital infidelity, once gave me the following advice, which I hold to as well as I can. He said “If you never tell lies, you never have to remember what you said.”
I treasure that advice.
The challenge I have when I hear people telling lots of little lies, is ignoring them. I feel challenged. Whether it is big ones, for example where people have told me that they have undertaken certain activities that are critical to the viability of a company, and haven’t. Or little ones, like “I know that person really well” when they don’t.” They seek to prop up their reputation, but if they really knew that person, the relationship could be very useful.
The question is, do you confront them in a positive way and ask “Awesome, will you drop them an email today and introduce me?” when you know they don’t and can’t, especially when the meeting is in public. They’re likely to be straight into that mode as you discussed in your blog of having then to cover up, or worse still, add to the lie to try to cover up any fallout from it.
I have a real thing about honesty and integrity and often wonder if by sticking to my guns, I limit my progression in business, because a lot of people ‘succeed’ in their careers and businesses by effectively being dishonest.
Hi Luigi,
Interesting perspective. Thanks for sharing.
Rebekah
Bravo, fantastic post and very confronting Rebekah.
I few years ago I was working for a joint venture on a project. One time I was with a colleague who was particularly manipulative, but successful within the project team in his own right. On this occasion I witnessed him tell a whopper of a lie to an employee, and later asked – how do you do it? He said “you have to learn to lie to yourself”. I never forgot this.
Thanks for this post Bek. I really appreciate the perspective you bring to these kinds of discussions.
I remember a while back you told me that you’d decided not to work with people you thought weren’t good people. That was a real insight for me. Why bother wasting your time when there are millions of incredible people just waiting to be asked to be part of something exciting and fun?
Keep up the great work and I’ll take on board Peter’s advice and keep it front of mind!
Wow!
Frequency of saying “I don’t know” is something I’ve noticed correlates with honesty. If someone never says it then they have the habit of making things up before speaking (which is a superset containing acts like lying but also “casting a vision” etc)
I concur, I’ve also a policy of not taking sales from customers I believe are rude, dishonest or arrogant. Usually they cause more trouble than they are worth in the long run. Why work with them?
I had a big discussion around town about lying a couple of months ago & everyone agreed that lying is bad and truth is good. But we did come up with a circumstance when lying is not wrong, when trying to save an innocent person from an evil person eg, hiding jews from the nazis. When a lie is for your own gain it is wrong when it is to protect someone or someone’s feelings it is kind.
The simple truth is that the truth is simpler.
A strong idea. And it brings up some questions, for me.
a) Is honest equal to transparent? An old answer we’ve all seen says there are lies of omission (not speaking, not being transparent, not telling everything the other might value hearing) and lies of commission (speaking, saying things that are not factually true, or not emotionally real).
More simply, I am most transparent with those I feel most intimate with. For example, when someone says, “How are you?”, I give a short cheery answer, most often. I guess that the words spoken were not the same as the meaning, which I often guess is more like, “I’m feeling calm and polite, and want to say hello with respect.” And telling them how I slept last night, when they don’t know me well, might be heard as, I’m self-absorbed, and I need your full attention. It may seem selfish.
Or, I may be trying to say that emotional connection, which varies, is part of what I use when I connect on all levels, and it feels “honest” to be less transparent in some cases, just to save time, for example.
I guess I’m saying that I like to connect emotionally, and not always reach for maximum depth right away.
And, to your point, I don’t like to hide or point towards illusions and lies about facts. But I do accept some level of privacy and formality, as fits the local culture as I am feeling it.
b) Other ways to connect intimately and emotionally make a useful list, I feel. For example: letting “actions speak louder than words” meaning using facial expression and body language to let someone know what I am feeling, and not feeling stuck with saying everything I can with words. And letting some things go, that is ignoring small things, like a spot of dirt on someone’s shirt, so I guess I’m saying “prioritizing” and not letting everything become important.
In short, forcing the strongest types of intimate honesty may be dishonest, since it doesn’t come from your full self. With practice, I have learned to be more and more honest with strangers, but as a 59 year old, I remember trying to be a true “hippy” and trying to be honest all the time. I found that it becomes a bit dishonest, and that others didn’t want to hear all my feelings.
So I come back to the differences between times for intimate honesty and times for a more formal honesty – which may be more “true” to yourself and your personality, than always being deeply intimate. I’m suggesting a balancing act between inviting everyone you see into your deepest self, and being as honest as suits the person’s needs and your own needs, for that time.
I do love honesty. So I hope that comes through in this long memo. First ran into this blog today, and like the folks on it. Thanks for this work.
Hi Rebekah
Fantastic blog, and very inspiring. I’d heard about Posse through meeting Jeremy Colless (Artesian) at a VentureCrowd launch here in Perth, and have loved reading your story.
Thought I’d mention a TedTalks from 2011 that you may have already seen – but in case you haven’t this might be relevant!
http://www.ted.com/talks/pamela_meyer_how_to_spot_a_liar
All the best for the future,
Rebecca