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Leading with Empathy: How Women Build Psychological Safety That Drives Real Performance
Published 2 months, 1 week ago
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This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.
You’re listening to The Women’s Leadership Podcast, and today we’re diving straight into what it really means to lead with empathy and create psychological safety at work.
Psychological safety, a term made famous by Harvard Business School professor Amy Edmondson, is the shared belief that a team is safe for interpersonal risk-taking. It means your people feel they can speak up, ask questions, admit mistakes, and challenge the status quo without fear of punishment or humiliation. When women lead with empathy, we are uniquely positioned to build that kind of environment.
According to research highlighted by the Society of Women Engineers and Boston Consulting Group, teams with strong psychological safety see higher innovation, better problem-solving, and dramatically better retention for women and other underrepresented groups. Amy Edmondson’s work at Harvard shows that when people feel safe, they are more likely to report issues early, share ideas, and learn from failure instead of hiding it.
So how do we, as women leaders, turn empathy into daily practice? One starting point is active listening. Women Tech Network emphasizes that empathetic leadership begins with truly hearing your team: asking curious, open questions, reflecting back what you’ve heard, and resisting the urge to fix or judge too quickly. In your next one‑on‑one, try saying, “Tell me what this really feels like for you,” and then let silence do some work.
Another cornerstone is vulnerability from the top. Women & Leadership Australia points out that when leaders openly admit mistakes, share what they’re learning, and say “I don’t know, but I’ll find out,” they set a powerful norm: it is safe here to be human. As a woman leader, naming your own missteps without defensiveness can be a radical invitation for your team to do the same.
Empathy also means naming the realities women and marginalized groups face. Page Executive reports that a lack of psychological safety hits women’s careers especially hard, fueling burnout, self‑silencing, and stalled progression, particularly for women of color and other underrepresented women. As a leader, you foster safety when you explicitly call out bias, intervene when microaggressions happen, and make it clear that respect is non‑negotiable.
Day to day, think about three simple moves. First, normalize questions and dissent in meetings by asking, “Whose perspective haven’t we heard yet?” Second, respond constructively when someone brings bad news or a mistake: “Thank you for flagging this early—let’s solve it together.” Third, regularly ask your team, “What would make it feel safer to speak up here?” and act on what you hear.
Examples are all around us. Former New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has been widely cited for combining firmness with deep empathy, showing how compassionate communication can unify people during crises. Leaders like Sheryl Sandberg have modeled openness about grief and failure, demonstrating that acknowledging emotion can strengthen, not weaken, performance and culture.
According to Risky Women, empathy is not a soft extra; it is a performance driver. Employees who experience their managers as empathetic report better mental health, stronger morale, and a greater intent to stay. When you lead with empathy, you are not lowering the bar. You are building the trust that allows your team to reach it.
So as you reflect after this episode, ask yourself: Where in your workplace do people still feel like they have to armor up? And what is one empathetic action you can take this week to make it safer for them to show up fully as themselves?
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.
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You’re listening to The Women’s Leadership Podcast, and today we’re diving straight into what it really means to lead with empathy and create psychological safety at work.
Psychological safety, a term made famous by Harvard Business School professor Amy Edmondson, is the shared belief that a team is safe for interpersonal risk-taking. It means your people feel they can speak up, ask questions, admit mistakes, and challenge the status quo without fear of punishment or humiliation. When women lead with empathy, we are uniquely positioned to build that kind of environment.
According to research highlighted by the Society of Women Engineers and Boston Consulting Group, teams with strong psychological safety see higher innovation, better problem-solving, and dramatically better retention for women and other underrepresented groups. Amy Edmondson’s work at Harvard shows that when people feel safe, they are more likely to report issues early, share ideas, and learn from failure instead of hiding it.
So how do we, as women leaders, turn empathy into daily practice? One starting point is active listening. Women Tech Network emphasizes that empathetic leadership begins with truly hearing your team: asking curious, open questions, reflecting back what you’ve heard, and resisting the urge to fix or judge too quickly. In your next one‑on‑one, try saying, “Tell me what this really feels like for you,” and then let silence do some work.
Another cornerstone is vulnerability from the top. Women & Leadership Australia points out that when leaders openly admit mistakes, share what they’re learning, and say “I don’t know, but I’ll find out,” they set a powerful norm: it is safe here to be human. As a woman leader, naming your own missteps without defensiveness can be a radical invitation for your team to do the same.
Empathy also means naming the realities women and marginalized groups face. Page Executive reports that a lack of psychological safety hits women’s careers especially hard, fueling burnout, self‑silencing, and stalled progression, particularly for women of color and other underrepresented women. As a leader, you foster safety when you explicitly call out bias, intervene when microaggressions happen, and make it clear that respect is non‑negotiable.
Day to day, think about three simple moves. First, normalize questions and dissent in meetings by asking, “Whose perspective haven’t we heard yet?” Second, respond constructively when someone brings bad news or a mistake: “Thank you for flagging this early—let’s solve it together.” Third, regularly ask your team, “What would make it feel safer to speak up here?” and act on what you hear.
Examples are all around us. Former New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has been widely cited for combining firmness with deep empathy, showing how compassionate communication can unify people during crises. Leaders like Sheryl Sandberg have modeled openness about grief and failure, demonstrating that acknowledging emotion can strengthen, not weaken, performance and culture.
According to Risky Women, empathy is not a soft extra; it is a performance driver. Employees who experience their managers as empathetic report better mental health, stronger morale, and a greater intent to stay. When you lead with empathy, you are not lowering the bar. You are building the trust that allows your team to reach it.
So as you reflect after this episode, ask yourself: Where in your workplace do people still feel like they have to armor up? And what is one empathetic action you can take this week to make it safer for them to show up fully as themselves?
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.
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