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Women Trailblazers: Empowering Psychological Safety at Work

Women Trailblazers: Empowering Psychological Safety at Work



This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.

Welcome to The Women’s Leadership Podcast. Today, let’s get right into a topic that continues to define the future of effective leadership: leading with empathy, and specifically, how women leaders can build psychological safety in their organizations.

When we talk about empathy in leadership, we go beyond just understanding another’s experience. We’re talking about deeply connecting with our teams, making space for candid emotions, and demonstrating genuine care in every decision we make. According to the Center for Creative Leadership, empathy in the workplace actually correlates with higher job performance. When a leader shows that she hears and values her team’s concerns and perspectives, psychological safety grows—and that’s the foundation for both creativity and high-impact collaboration.

Women have been at the forefront of championing empathy and psychological safety. They bring their lived experiences, their perspectives as multitaskers and community builders, and, crucially, their emotional intelligence. Nafissa Egbuonye at Molina Healthcare described how women leaders excel because they’re able to “read the room,” balancing clarity and care even during tough conversations. This ability allows teams to trust their leader, share ideas, and—importantly—speak up, even when it’s hard.

But how do we actually create psychological safety? Experts like Angela Seymour-Jackson at PageGroup remind us that diversity alone isn’t the answer. If people in your organization don’t feel safe to contribute fully, you get groupthink, and crucial voices remain unheard. So, as women leaders, we need to actively seek out perspectives that challenge our own, and encourage the kind of honest feedback that leads to genuine innovation.

There are practical ways to start. Embrace active listening—lean in, reflect back what you hear, and ask follow-up questions. Savitha Raghunathan, a senior engineer at Red Hat, highlights how being truly attuned to our teams’ emotions leads to stronger connections and trust. Foster open communication by inviting all voices to the table, not just the loudest. And remember: mistakes are opportunities for learning, not reasons for punishment. When a team sees their leader model vulnerability and admit mistakes, that signals it’s safe to take risks and share bold ideas—a game changer for any organization.

Don’t forget to tailor your strategies too. Establish flexible work arrangements, create employee resource groups, and put policies in place that actively counter bias and discrimination. Organizations like KPMG have shown that when women feel supported—especially women of color or those from underrepresented groups—they’re not just more likely to contribute, but to lead. That’s how we build a pipeline of diverse women advancing to the very top.

As you lead, think about mentorship, sponsorship, and ongoing training. These reinforce a culture rooted in empathy and provide opportunities for others to grow and share their own perspectives.

To all our listeners—whether you’re running a team of two or two hundred—know that leading with empathy and creating psychological safety is not a soft skill, but a vital business strategy. It’s how women in leadership drive innovation, retention, and a culture of belonging.

Thanks for tuning in to The Women’s Leadership Podcast. Subscribe wherever you listen, and join us in empowering a new generation of women leaders. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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Published on 6 days, 17 hours ago






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