COMMUNITY TRUST MEASURE
Community Trust Measure™
Find who a community already trusts. Confirm it still does.
The Problem, for a Funder
Foundations and endowments identify grantees the way most of philanthropy always has: reputation, network, a compelling proposal, a site visit. None of that actually measures whether a local organization or leader holds real trust in the community it claims to serve — and none of it tells a funder, a year into a grant, whether that trust is still there.
The result is a blind spot on both ends of the relationship. At intake, funders can miss the organizations doing the most trusted work simply because they're not the ones with the strongest grant-writing capacity. After the grant, standard reporting tracks outputs — people served, dollars spent — but almost never tracks whether the community's trust in the recipient is holding, growing, or quietly eroding underneath a program that still looks fine on paper.
The Method
Community Trust Measure bundles Ground Truth Portrait™ and Community Readiness Index™ into a single sequenced engagement, with a fifth phase added specifically for funders who need to know not just where to give, but whether the trust that justified the gift is still there later.
| Phase | What It Does for a Funder |
|---|---|
| One — Ground Truth Portrait | A baseline read of the community's trust architecture, before any grant or program is designed around assumptions. |
| Two — Community Readiness Index | Scores how ready this community is for the specific investment or program a funder is considering. |
| Three — Partnership Mapping | Identifies which local organizations and leaders already carry real, demonstrated trust in this community. This is the grantee short list — built before a single proposal is reviewed, not after. |
| Four — Service Handoff | If the funder wants to go further, handoff into Trust-Based Communications or Trust-Based Development, depending on what the map shows. |
| Five — Renewal Read | A follow-up trust read after the grant is made, showing whether the funded organization is still holding local trust — the accountability layer standard grant reporting was never built to capture. |
Trust-Based Communications is deliberately excluded from CTM's own contract, kept as a separate engagement, so the data layer that identifies and monitors trust never blurs into the messaging layer that acts on it.
Why This Matters Before the Grant
Partnership Mapping exists to close that gap directly — surfacing the leaders and groups a community already listens to, independent of how well they present themselves to a funder. For a foundation trying to reach the people a program is meant to serve, that's the difference between funding who applies and funding who's actually trusted.
Why This Matters After It
Trust in a local organization isn't static. Leadership changes, a program stumbles, a community's circumstances shift — and a grantee can lose the very trust that made them fundable in the first place, long before that shows up in a program report. The Renewal Read is built to catch that early: a standing way to check, on whatever cadence a funder wants, whether the relationship a grant was built on is still real.
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A suite of behavioral intelligence tools that maps how trust moves through a community — who carries it, where it flows, what conditions allow it to grow — so that capital, programs, and campaigns arrive with the behavioral architecture they need to actually hold.
The communities that matter most to mission-aligned investors are the ones whose trust architecture has been most disrupted. They are not unreachable. They have not been read — carefully, behaviorally, from the inside out. That is what Community Trust Measure does. And what Generative Trust, properly cultivated, produces.
The Three-Instrument Architecture
Community Trust Measure comprises two core data instruments — the Ground Truth Portrait™ and the Community Readiness Index™ — designed to be used in sequence or independently. Together they move a community from unknown to understood. Activation is the work of Trust-Based Communications, a separate RFUTR service layer that translates behavioral intelligence into human action.
A 30-day behavioral diagnostic that produces a rich, specific picture of how a community actually works — not how demographics suggest it should, not how a survey says it feels, but what the behavioral data shows about how trust moves, where organizing strength lives, who the genuine messengers are, and whether collective action is possible in this geography right now.
Built from the Portrait data, the Readiness Index produces an integrated score — drawing on the Survivability Index, Trust Orientation, Trust Elasticity, and Contextual Flexibility Index — that tells investors and program deployers what kind of ask this community can absorb right now, and what behavioral infrastructure investment is needed before harder asks can hold. Not a verdict. A readiness map.
The activation layer is separate from the data instruments — by design and by contract. Once the Ground Truth Portrait and Community Readiness Index have been produced, RFUTR's Trust-Based Communications service translates the behavioral intelligence into human action: authentic messenger activation, media channel development, partnership brokering, coalition architecture, and creative strategy. This service involves real people in real relationships and is kept structurally separate from CI's aggregate, zero-PII data layer to protect the integrity of both. See the standalone Trust-Based Communications overview →
Trust
Every instrument in Community Trust Measure is oriented toward the same destination: Generative Trust — the condition in which a community's trust architecture is strong enough to produce collective action on its own, sustain behavioral change across time, and welcome new investment as an expression of shared purpose rather than an imposition from outside.
Generative Trust is not given to communities. It grows from within them. Our work maps the conditions that allow it to develop — and identifies the behavioral investments, authentic relationships, and sequenced engagements that accelerate it. It is the opposite of Social Default, and every Portrait, every Readiness score, every Communications plan is designed to move communities measurably toward it.
Social Default — What We Diagnose and Repair
Social Default is the behavioral gap between what a program, campaign, or investment expects a community to do — and what the community's trust architecture can actually sustain. It is the cause of most program failure in disinvested communities. It has three distinct conditions, each requiring a different response.
Institutional trust functionally gone. Civic connective tissue broken by disinvestment, failed programs, or historical harm. Standard outreach reaches fewer than 10% of residents. No program can hold until trust repair is the first investment.
Trust infrastructure exists but is under pressure. Conventional outreach reaches 20–40% — but the Moveable Middle is larger than any model shows. The right messengers and sequencing unlock significant organizing capacity that is currently invisible.
Civic infrastructure present and functioning. Trust networks active. The community can receive and sustain investment — but still requires behavioral routing to reach the messengers who hold the most credibility for the specific ask being made.
Four Dimensions Behind Every Read
The Ground Truth Portrait and Community Readiness Index are built from four behavioral dimensions, derived entirely from aggregate public data. No surveys. No individual profiling. No PII.
Where a community banks its trust — vertically through institutions or horizontally through peer networks. Determines which delivery channels have permission to land, and which ones produce friction regardless of message quality.
The functional institutions, mutual aid networks, neighborhood associations, and organizational ecosystem operating inside the ZIP code. Both formal organizations and authentic local businesses whose presence signals community stability and stewardship capacity.
The 12–30 people per geography whose word already travels through the community's trust network — not the loudest voices or the official leaders, but the ones whose relationships produce behavioral change. Identified from behavioral data, not from nomination.
How this community has responded to prior programs, investments, and asks — whether it prepared, adopted, and sustained, or whether it has a pattern of initial engagement followed by abandonment. Past behavioral patterns are the strongest predictor of future ones.
Trust-Based Communications — Beyond the Data
The instruments tell you what is true about a community. Trust-Based Communications is what you do with that truth. It is the service layer that moves from behavioral intelligence into deployed strategy — identifying not just who to reach, but the words, images, channels, and partnerships that have permission to land in this specific community at this specific moment.
This is where our knowledge of Generative Trust and Social Default conditions becomes operational. A community in Stage 1 Default requires a completely different communications architecture than a Stage 3 community — different messengers, different channels, different narrative frames, different pacing. Trust-Based Communications administers that difference.
From the Authentic Messenger Registry — the specific people whose relationships already carry weight in this community. Not spokespeople. The ones who move neighbors.
Message framing grounded in the community's actual trust orientation and cultural resonance — not generic civic language, but the specific narrative frames that land in this geography.
Which channels — faith institutions, local businesses, peer networks, community organizations — have permission to carry the message, and which partnerships amplify it most efficiently.
Trust-Based Communications is a separate RFUTR service — separate contract, separate engagement, separate ethical architecture. The data never touches individuals. The activation works with real people. That separation is not a limitation. It is the design principle that makes both halves trustworthy.
What This Looks Like in Practice
CPR adoption in 26 days. Stage 1 Social Default community. Ground Truth Portrait found the Authentic Messengers. Trust-Based Communications routed through them. Same program — different behavioral architecture.
Green infrastructure investment now underwritten by Community Readiness Index scoring — integrated into the city's resilience bond structure. The first time behavioral readiness has been built into municipal capital deployment.
Racine and Kenosha mapped at neighborhood level — revealing Social Default conditions county-level data treated identically. Different stages, different strategies, different investment sequences required.
In DC's Ward 7/8 we found a Trust Orientation of 14/86 — a community running almost entirely on horizontal peer networks where every prior institutional outreach campaign had missed. In PG County, a Moveable Middle of 38% — the largest elastic population in the DMV region, currently untouched by conventional programs. These are not data anomalies. They are the organizing opportunities that Community Trust Measure was built to surface.
Who This Is For
Pre-grant due diligence on community behavioral readiness. Know whether the receiving community can sustain what you are funding before the grant cycle begins.
Place-based investment in communities you care about — with a behavioral read of how trust actually flows there, who the real leaders are, and what kind of investment will hold.
Behavioral readiness intelligence for public programs — health adoption, green infrastructure, economic development — before deployment, not after failure.
Social creditworthiness alongside financial creditworthiness. Whether the community receiving the capital will actually use it — enroll, adopt, sustain — across a multi-year lending horizon.
Nature infrastructure fails when communities can't steward it. Community Trust Measure maps the behavioral readiness of the communities on whom every conservation investment depends.
Know your own community more precisely than any prior analysis has allowed. Surface the organizing strength, the authentic messengers, and the trust architecture you already have.
Communities are not obstacles to programs. They are the operating condition that determines whether programs work. Community Trust Measure is the instrument that reads that condition — and Trust-Based Communications is how you act on what it reveals.
Zero personally identifiable information is collected, stored, or used at any stage. The unit of analysis is always the community — never the person. Every behavioral signal is derived from publicly available, aggregated data, auditable by any skeptic in the room.
Community Trust Measure does not judge communities. It sees them clearly — often more clearly than any prior analysis they have received. A low Readiness score is not a verdict. It is a map of where the right investment produces the largest return.