• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

Vested

Based on research with…

HASLAM College of Business. The university of Tennessee, Knoxville
  • Home
  • What Is Vested?
    • Vested FAQ’s
    • The Story of the Vested Movement
    • About the Vested Faculty
  • Books
  • Blog
  • Speaking
  • Resources
    • Books
    • Vested Courses
    • Vested White Paper and Case Study Library
    • Workshops
    • Assessments
    • Vested Toolkit
    • Vested Certified Deal Architects
    • Vested Centers of Excellence Coaching and Consulting
  • Toolkit
  • Courses
    • Overview of Vested Courses
    • Online Courses
    • On Site Courses
    • Certified Deal Architect Program
    • Courseware FAQ
  • Login

Creating a Real Circle of Trust

May 28, 2014 by Kate Vitasek

I was flipping through movies on a mindless Saturday night and stopped at the classic comedy hit Meet the Fockers, featuring Ben Stiller and Robert De Niro. For those that missed it (or the hundreds of times it appeared on cable since its release), family bonding goes incredibly haywire when Stiller’s character, Greg Focker, meets the parents of his fiancé.

Greg is in a no-win game with Jack Byrnes, a retired CIA operative and the father of Greg’s fiancé, Pam. The situation devolves into comic absurdity as Greg tries to prove he is worthy of becoming a member of the Byrnes’ family “Circle of Trust.”

Here’s a short YouTube compilation about Jack’s Circle of Trust:

You can see that Jack’s version of trust and what it entails is so skewed and impossible to fathom that Greg has to spend nearly the entire movie trying to meet Jack’s impossible standards, not to mention figure out what he means by trust.

Actually, trust for Jack is all about Jack and his own foibles, remember he’s ex-CIA and his mindset is mainly rooted in maintaining security and control—by him. There can’t be any “chinks” in the chain of trust.

Get Your Free Copy of THE VESTED WAY

What’s good about all this is that Greg finally figures out that Jack does not have a patent on his particular, and erroneous, vision of trust.

What does this mean for business relationships? Well, for one thing trust is not a one-sided affair, and for another, it should not be defined or administered by one party at the expense of another. Trust is also not a fortress protected by a chain.

Maybe Greg and Jack needed to do a Compatibility and Trust Assessment! It’s certainly what businesses embarking on a strategic relationship should consider—but in the case of Meet the Fockers, a CaT would have removed all the comedic antics.

 

Related posts:

  • David vs Goliath: Play by the Rules to Change the Game
  • What If…?
  • What Prevents Radical Collaboration?
  • Trust is a Two-Way Street

Filed Under: From the Blog Tagged With: Compatibility and Trust Assessment, Kate Vitasek, Meet the Fockers, trust, Vested

Vested 411

  • What is Vested
  • Vested FAQ's
  • Vested Faculty

Support

  • Technical Support

Join the Movement

  • Courses
  • Books
  • Speaking

Resources

  • Assessments
  • Books
  • Case Studies
  • White Papers
  • Toolkit
  • Centers of Excellence

Media

  • Contact

Privacy Policy

  • Privacy Policy
11410 NE 124th St. #311 Kirkland, WA 98034
Ph 762-475-8378
[email protected]
Vested

© 2025 Vested Outsourcing Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Contact Kate to Book
  • About You

  • About Your Event

  • MM slash DD slash YYYY
  • Additional Information