Episode Details

Back to Episodes
Empowered and Heard: Women Leaders Fostering Psychological Safety

Empowered and Heard: Women Leaders Fostering Psychological Safety

Published 3 months, 3 weeks ago
Description
This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.

Welcome to The Women’s Leadership Podcast. Today, we're diving right into leading with empathy and exploring how women leaders can foster psychological safety in the workplace. If you’ve ever wondered why empathy is so often described as a woman’s leadership superpower, you’re not alone. At organizations around the world, women leaders are transforming work culture not just with strategy but with heart.

Let’s start with what empathy in leadership really means. Empathy is the ability to consciously be aware of others’ feelings, needs, and concerns. As explained by Stanford’s Jamil Zaki, when employees know their leaders and organizations are empathetic, they report better mental health, greater morale, and higher retention. This isn’t just about being nice—it’s about making sure your team feels truly heard and valued.

This leads directly to psychological safety. Harvard’s Amy Edmondson defines psychological safety as an environment where people feel comfortable taking risks, voicing ideas, and admitting mistakes—without fear of negative repercussions. Women, in particular, benefit when psychological safety is present, according to research highlighted by Maren Gube and Debra Sabatini Hennelly in Harvard Business Review. For women and especially women of color or those from other underrepresented groups, psychological safety means not having to fear being labeled “aggressive” or “difficult” for speaking up. It is fundamental to retention and advancement, as the Boston Consulting Group found: psychological safety is directly linked to a fourfold increase in retention for women, compared to twofold for men outside minority groups.

So, what can women leaders specifically do to foster this kind of safe, empathetic environment? First, model active listening by giving your full attention in conversations and truly considering different perspectives. Jacinda Ardern, former Prime Minister of New Zealand, is a great example—her compassionate responses during crises demonstrated empathy’s power to unify and reassure, turning words into action.

Create formal structures that support feedback, mentorship, and allyship. Women tend to receive less feedback than their male peers, and when feedback is given, it should focus on growth and development rather than judgment. Research shares that environments where women can connect with female mentors and allies enable psychological safety to flourish at every level.

Make emotional intelligence a core value. Women in leadership often excel at building trust and collaboration, using their attunement to both their own emotions and those of others to create teams that feel supported and motivated. Encouraging open communication and modeling humility—admitting mistakes and encouraging others to do the same—signals to everyone that it is not just safe but expected to be authentic.

Lastly, set clear expectations for respectful communication and inclusivity, ensuring that every voice is welcomed. When everyone, regardless of background or identity, feels like they belong, innovation thrives.

Listeners, I encourage you to reflect on your own leadership style and ask: are you leading with empathy? Are you building psychological safety on your team? Your commitment to these principles isn’t just shaping individual lives—it’s changing workplace culture for the better.

Thank you for tuning in to The Women’s Leadership Podcast. Be sure 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 Intelligen
Listen Now

Love PodBriefly?

If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Support Us