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Empathy Amplified: Women Leaders Cultivating Psychological Safety

Empathy Amplified: Women Leaders Cultivating Psychological Safety

Published 6 months, 2 weeks ago
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This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.

Welcome to The Women’s Leadership Podcast. Today, we’re diving right into a defining topic for women at the forefront: leading with empathy and cultivating psychological safety in the workplace. Empathy isn’t just a buzzword. According to the Center for Creative Leadership, empathy in the workplace directly boosts job performance. When employees feel valued, when their emotions are seen and their contributions respected, they’re more engaged, more innovative, and more likely to achieve beyond expectations. But real empathy is more than understanding what others feel—it’s about sharing in those emotions, acknowledging them, and creating a space where honesty is safe, not risky.

Women leaders, like Angela Seymour-Jackson, Chair of PageGroup, highlight the transformative power of psychological safety for organizational resilience. She puts it bluntly: if an organization can’t foster a culture where diverse voices are truly heard, not just seen, it risks falling into groupthink. And diverse teams without actual inclusion? That leads to missed potential and worse outcomes for everyone involved. The reverse though, is powerful: when we create psychological safety, every team member—especially women, and more so those from historically marginalized groups—feels empowered to speak, question authority, and contribute their fullest. That’s the real bedrock for a resilient business.

So how do women leaders put empathy into daily action? One key is embracing emotional intelligence, or EI. Savitha Raghunathan, a senior engineer at Red Hat, explains that being attuned to our own and others’ emotions doesn’t just humanize the workplace—it leads to better communication, stronger teams, and a culture of respect. The leaders who invest in emotional intelligence set the tone for responsiveness, insight, and compassion. Next, open communication is critical. Nisha Kumari, a research consultant at WorldQuant, reminds us that regular one-on-ones, feedback sessions, and even informal chats all serve to signal, “Your voice matters here.” That’s especially crucial for women who, as research from KPMG shows, often feel extra pressure to prove themselves and experience microaggressions more frequently than men.

Psychological safety isn’t just about avoiding obvious harm. It’s about establishing routines where people can share ideas, mistakes, or personal struggles without fear of backlash. Pollack Peacebuilding Group shares a practical example: a manager supports an employee grieving a loss by adjusting their workload instead of demanding business as usual. That human-first approach is empathy in action—and it builds loyalty and trust, not just output.

The call to women in leadership is clear: model vulnerability, seek feedback with true openness, and actively call in quieter voices. Ask, “What do you think?’’ Be transparent about your own learning. Welcome disagreement and tough news without retrenchment. By leading this way, women set a powerful cultural tone—one where everyone’s differences are valued, and where the workplace becomes not only more resilient but truly human-centric.

Thanks for tuning in to The Women’s Leadership Podcast. If this conversation sparked ideas or inspiration for your own leadership journey, don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an episode. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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