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Empowered and Heard: Women Leaders Fostering Psychological Safety
Published 4 months, 1 week ago
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This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.
Welcome to The Women’s Leadership Podcast. I’m so glad you’ve joined me today for a discussion about what it really means to lead with empathy and, perhaps even more importantly, how women leaders can foster psychological safety in the workplace.
Let’s dive right in, because this isn’t just a catchphrase—the need for empathetic leadership is transforming how the world does business. Think of trailblazers like Mary Barra at General Motors. During the chaos of the pandemic, Barra prioritized the safety and well-being of her teams, instituting flexible work policies and mental health resources. Her approach sent a powerful message: your work matters, but so do you as a person. Then there’s Ginni Rometty, who steered IBM toward greater diversity and inclusion by championing initiatives that tackled unconscious bias head-on, creating a culture where relationships and understanding employee needs were paramount.
But what does it really mean to lead with empathy? Empathetic leadership is the willingness to genuinely engage with team members’ feelings, needs, and aspirations. It’s about listening—not just hearing—what people have to say. Women leaders often model this through openness and emotional intelligence, creating environments where people feel respected and safe to speak up.
This brings us to psychological safety. Edmonson at Harvard Business School talks about psychological safety as the ability for people to take risks and voice opinions without fear. Why does this matter for women? Because when an environment isn’t psychologically safe, women—especially those from underrepresented groups—hold back. They worry about being judged, penalized, or misunderstood. But in safe workplaces, women feel encouraged to contribute, challenge ideas, and bring their authentic selves to work.
How do we get there? Let’s talk practical strategies. First, mentoring and sponsorship really matter. Giving women access to mentors provides that crucial safe space to voice concerns and seek advice. Next, companies need to champion allyship—where colleagues, regardless of gender, proactively support one another. Women leaders also benefit from flexible work arrangements and organizations that normalize open conversations about work-life integration. Establishing employee resource groups or affinity spaces means women can connect, share, and build resilience together.
I want to address something research by the Center for Creative Leadership supports: empathy isn’t just “nice”—it’s smart leadership. Teams with empathetic leaders show greater engagement, innovation, and loyalty. Women leaders often drive this by seeking out diverse perspectives, encouraging input from all voices, and not shying away from the tough conversations.
And it’s important to note, psychological safety isn’t about avoiding conflict or being agreeable all the time. It’s about trust—trust that disagreement won’t end in retribution, trust that vulnerability won’t be seen as weakness, and trust that a leader truly cares about growth, well-being, and inclusion.
So as you reflect on today’s discussion, I encourage you to ask: How are you modeling empathy? What have you done this week to make someone feel heard, valued, or safe? When women lead with empathy, we don’t just change organizations. We redefine what success looks like for everyone.
Thank you for tuning into The Women’s Leadership Podcast. 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.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligenc
Welcome to The Women’s Leadership Podcast. I’m so glad you’ve joined me today for a discussion about what it really means to lead with empathy and, perhaps even more importantly, how women leaders can foster psychological safety in the workplace.
Let’s dive right in, because this isn’t just a catchphrase—the need for empathetic leadership is transforming how the world does business. Think of trailblazers like Mary Barra at General Motors. During the chaos of the pandemic, Barra prioritized the safety and well-being of her teams, instituting flexible work policies and mental health resources. Her approach sent a powerful message: your work matters, but so do you as a person. Then there’s Ginni Rometty, who steered IBM toward greater diversity and inclusion by championing initiatives that tackled unconscious bias head-on, creating a culture where relationships and understanding employee needs were paramount.
But what does it really mean to lead with empathy? Empathetic leadership is the willingness to genuinely engage with team members’ feelings, needs, and aspirations. It’s about listening—not just hearing—what people have to say. Women leaders often model this through openness and emotional intelligence, creating environments where people feel respected and safe to speak up.
This brings us to psychological safety. Edmonson at Harvard Business School talks about psychological safety as the ability for people to take risks and voice opinions without fear. Why does this matter for women? Because when an environment isn’t psychologically safe, women—especially those from underrepresented groups—hold back. They worry about being judged, penalized, or misunderstood. But in safe workplaces, women feel encouraged to contribute, challenge ideas, and bring their authentic selves to work.
How do we get there? Let’s talk practical strategies. First, mentoring and sponsorship really matter. Giving women access to mentors provides that crucial safe space to voice concerns and seek advice. Next, companies need to champion allyship—where colleagues, regardless of gender, proactively support one another. Women leaders also benefit from flexible work arrangements and organizations that normalize open conversations about work-life integration. Establishing employee resource groups or affinity spaces means women can connect, share, and build resilience together.
I want to address something research by the Center for Creative Leadership supports: empathy isn’t just “nice”—it’s smart leadership. Teams with empathetic leaders show greater engagement, innovation, and loyalty. Women leaders often drive this by seeking out diverse perspectives, encouraging input from all voices, and not shying away from the tough conversations.
And it’s important to note, psychological safety isn’t about avoiding conflict or being agreeable all the time. It’s about trust—trust that disagreement won’t end in retribution, trust that vulnerability won’t be seen as weakness, and trust that a leader truly cares about growth, well-being, and inclusion.
So as you reflect on today’s discussion, I encourage you to ask: How are you modeling empathy? What have you done this week to make someone feel heard, valued, or safe? When women lead with empathy, we don’t just change organizations. We redefine what success looks like for everyone.
Thank you for tuning into The Women’s Leadership Podcast. 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.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligenc