Jason Chura on Confidence, Credibility & Client Trust

Jason Chura, head of global consulting at Voya Investment Management, is urging financial advisors to rethink a foundational assumption: that expertise alone drives client outcomes. In today’s environment, he argues, technical proficiency is table stakes. Differentiation now hinges on what he calls “performance psychology” — the ability to consistently project confidence and credibility in high-stakes, deeply personal interactions.

Speaking during a recent webcast, Your Hidden Superpowers of Confidence & Credibility, hosted with Cinthia Murphy, director of research at TMX VettaFi, Chura laid out a behavioral framework rooted in human psychology. As the industry shifts from a product-centric model to what he describes as the “person business”, the variables that matter the most are often the least discussed: body language, emotional control, and mental preparation. They’re no longer peripheral. They’re how clients decide whether to trust you.

The Pre-Meeting Reset

For Chura, influence begins before the meeting starts. The few minutes beforehand — in the car, the elevator, or outside the conference room — set the tone, whether advisors realize it or not.

At the center is a simple constraint: the brain cannot process fear and gratitude simultaneously. Advisors who enter a meeting anxious, risk projecting what Chura describes as “fear pheromones.” Shift to gratitude, and that signal changes.

He also points out the role of physiology. Small physical triggers — spreading the toes or applying pressure to the palm — can help interrupt the stress response and move the body out of flight-or-fight mode, governed by amygdala, and back toward clearer thinking.

Breathing patterns are another tell. Shallow, chest-level breathing elevates the shoulders and signals tension, activating mirror neurons in clients. Deeper, diaphragmatic breathing lowers the shoulders and communicates calm authority — a state clients are inclined to mirror.

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