This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.
Today on The Women’s Leadership Podcast, we dive right into a topic at the core of empowered workplaces: leading with empathy, and specifically, the critical role women leaders play in fostering psychological safety. Imagine you’re walking into your office, asking yourself, “Can I speak up without fear? Will my ideas actually be heard?” For so many women, this isn’t just a hypothetical – it’s an everyday reality shaped by the atmosphere leaders create around them.
Empathy isn’t just understanding someone else’s emotions. It’s about truly sharing and validating those feelings – the kind of leadership approach that builds trust and opens space for everyone to thrive. The Center for Creative Leadership has shown that empathy in the workplace drives job performance, while companies led by empathetic women often see a boost in productivity, innovation, and a stronger bottom line. This is because when people feel safe expressing themselves, they take risks, voice ideas, and creativity flourishes.
Women are uniquely positioned at the frontlines of this leadership revolution. Our experiences mean we frequently prioritize belonging, diversity, and the power of many voices working together. Angela Seymour-Jackson, Chair of PageGroup, has highlighted how a lack of psychological safety leads to groupthink – even on superficially diverse teams – and that real inclusion means everyone feels able to contribute, question, and challenge. Without that, the full range of women’s talent is left untapped.
So how do women leaders create psychologically safe workplaces? Start with active listening and emotional intelligence. Savitha Raghunathan from Red Hat explains how tuning in to your own emotions, as well as those of your team, builds the awareness to respond with genuine compassion – especially during difficult times. Nisha Kumari, a consultant at WorldQuant, champions open communication, reminding us that fostering a culture where people can share feedback freely – whether it’s through regular one-on-ones, suggestion channels, or informal chats – makes every voice feel valued.
Practical strategies are key. Leading with empathy means inviting – not just accepting – diverse perspectives. It means establishing visible zero-tolerance policies against bias and microaggression. According to a KPMG study, nearly 70% of women feel they must prove themselves more than their male peers, and more than half have faced microaggressions at work. Addressing this starts with education and ensuring policies aren’t just formalities but are lived every day through leadership behaviors.
Examples make this real. Picture a manager noticing a team member struggling, not jumping to conclusions about performance but privately checking in, listening, and responding with flexibility – perhaps adjusting deadlines or offering time to heal after a personal loss. These small actions, reported by Pollack Peacebuilding Systems, demonstrate how empathy isn’t just soft leadership; it’s smart, strategic leadership that fuels resilience and performance.
As women leading at every level, we have the opportunity – and the responsibility – to create environments where psychological safety is non-negotiable. This isn’t just about women’s well-being. It’s about shaping compassionate, resilient, and high-performing organizations for everyone.
Thank you for tuning in to The Women’s Leadership Podcast. If you found this discussion valuable, subscribe and share it with other leaders ready to build a culture where everyone can thrive. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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Published on 2 days, 17 hours ago
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