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Empowered Authenticity: Women Leading with Empathy
Published 4 months ago
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This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.
Welcome back to The Women’s Leadership Podcast. I want to get right to the heart of today’s conversation: leading with empathy, and how women leaders can foster psychological safety in the workplace.
Think about the impact of women like Mary Barra at General Motors or Ginni Rometty at IBM. Barra guided GM through challenging times by putting people first—offering flexible work arrangements and prioritizing well-being, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic. Rometty transformed IBM’s company culture, championing diversity and relationship building over autocratic decision-making. These women didn’t lead from a distance; they led by understanding the real concerns and experiences of the people in their organizations. They created spaces where employees felt valued, heard, and safe to speak up. That is the power of empathy at work.
Psychological safety is more than a buzzword—it’s a foundation for inclusion and innovation. Harvard’s Center for Creative Leadership found that teams led with empathy outperform others, because people are less afraid to share ideas, take risks, or admit mistakes. This matters enormously for women in the workplace, who often face not only performance pressures but also unconscious bias, isolation, and the delicate balancing act of work-life commitments. In organizations lacking psychological safety, these challenges multiply, and women’s voices can be drowned out. But in safe, inclusive spaces, women seize opportunities, articulate aspirations, and bring the full richness of their perspectives to the table. When women are empowered to be authentic, their impact ripples through the culture and the business.
So, what does it look like to truly lead with empathy? It’s more than just listening. It means cultivating emotional intelligence—reading the room, recognizing what people might be experiencing, and being tuned into things said and unsaid. It’s about validating feelings, encouraging candor, and modeling vulnerability by admitting when you don’t have all the answers. Sheryl Sandberg’s long emphasis on open communication and emotional honesty is a prime example.
To foster psychological safety, women leaders can do several concrete things. First, talk openly about the importance of safety and inclusion; make it a visible and shared value. Establish clear norms around respect so every voice finds space, and follow through—call out harmful bias or microaggressions immediately. Provide flexible work policies and support networks designed specifically for women’s needs, whether that’s mentoring programs, leadership workshops, or safe affinity groups. Another powerful strategy is to lead by example—when you admit a mistake or ask for help, you signal to your team that it’s okay for them to do the same.
Crucially, psychological safety is not about being “nice” or avoiding conflict. It’s about fostering trust so that all members, especially women and other underrepresented groups, can challenge, question, and contribute without fear. That’s how diverse teams truly flourish and why women’s leadership is so vital for shaping the workplaces of tomorrow.
Thank you for tuning in. Don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss our next episode. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.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 Intelligence AI
Welcome back to The Women’s Leadership Podcast. I want to get right to the heart of today’s conversation: leading with empathy, and how women leaders can foster psychological safety in the workplace.
Think about the impact of women like Mary Barra at General Motors or Ginni Rometty at IBM. Barra guided GM through challenging times by putting people first—offering flexible work arrangements and prioritizing well-being, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic. Rometty transformed IBM’s company culture, championing diversity and relationship building over autocratic decision-making. These women didn’t lead from a distance; they led by understanding the real concerns and experiences of the people in their organizations. They created spaces where employees felt valued, heard, and safe to speak up. That is the power of empathy at work.
Psychological safety is more than a buzzword—it’s a foundation for inclusion and innovation. Harvard’s Center for Creative Leadership found that teams led with empathy outperform others, because people are less afraid to share ideas, take risks, or admit mistakes. This matters enormously for women in the workplace, who often face not only performance pressures but also unconscious bias, isolation, and the delicate balancing act of work-life commitments. In organizations lacking psychological safety, these challenges multiply, and women’s voices can be drowned out. But in safe, inclusive spaces, women seize opportunities, articulate aspirations, and bring the full richness of their perspectives to the table. When women are empowered to be authentic, their impact ripples through the culture and the business.
So, what does it look like to truly lead with empathy? It’s more than just listening. It means cultivating emotional intelligence—reading the room, recognizing what people might be experiencing, and being tuned into things said and unsaid. It’s about validating feelings, encouraging candor, and modeling vulnerability by admitting when you don’t have all the answers. Sheryl Sandberg’s long emphasis on open communication and emotional honesty is a prime example.
To foster psychological safety, women leaders can do several concrete things. First, talk openly about the importance of safety and inclusion; make it a visible and shared value. Establish clear norms around respect so every voice finds space, and follow through—call out harmful bias or microaggressions immediately. Provide flexible work policies and support networks designed specifically for women’s needs, whether that’s mentoring programs, leadership workshops, or safe affinity groups. Another powerful strategy is to lead by example—when you admit a mistake or ask for help, you signal to your team that it’s okay for them to do the same.
Crucially, psychological safety is not about being “nice” or avoiding conflict. It’s about fostering trust so that all members, especially women and other underrepresented groups, can challenge, question, and contribute without fear. That’s how diverse teams truly flourish and why women’s leadership is so vital for shaping the workplaces of tomorrow.
Thank you for tuning in. Don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss our next episode. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.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 Intelligence AI