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Leading with Heart: How Women Build Psychological Safety Through Empathy at Work
Published 2 months ago
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This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.
Welcome back to The Women's Leadership Podcast, where we empower women to lead with strength, heart, and unapologetic authenticity. I'm your host, and today we're diving into leading with empathy—your secret superpower for fostering psychological safety in the workplace. Listeners, imagine walking into a meeting where every voice matters, mistakes spark growth instead of shame, and your team thrives because they feel truly seen. That's the magic women leaders create when we harness empathy.
Picture Jacinda Ardern, New Zealand's trailblazing Prime Minister, responding to the Christchurch mosque attacks and COVID-19 with raw compassion. She unified a nation by sharing feelings, listening deeply, and building trust—proving empathy isn't soft; it's transformative. Or think of Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook's former COO, who opened up about grief in her book Lean In, sparking conversations that made tech workplaces more human and resilient. These women show us empathy drives innovation, boosts retention, and levels the playing field, especially for underrepresented voices.
Psychological safety, as Harvard Business Review experts Maren Gube and Debra Sabatini Hennelly explain, is that environment where you can speak up, take risks, and admit errors without fear of backlash. For women leaders, it's essential—research from BCG reveals it increases retention four times over for women and underrepresented employees. Without it, bias and microaggressions silence us, stalling careers and breeding burnout. But with it? We unleash creativity, collaboration, and equity.
So, how do you, as a woman leader, make this real? Start with active listening—Women & Leadership Australia emphasizes leaders modeling vulnerability by admitting mistakes and showing humility. Check in genuinely on your team's well-being, not just tasks, as strategies from Women in Tech highlight. Address biases head-on: Women in Safety urges protocols for microaggressions, bystander training, and inclusive meetings where every perspective counts.
Embed empathy daily—promote mentorship and allyship, as Page Executive's Alex Bishop and Debbie Robinson advocate, giving women safe spaces to voice concerns and receive supportive feedback. Normalize open channels for anonymous input and well-being programs from Culture Proof. Lead by example: Cultivate emotional intelligence to read the room, resolve conflicts with kindness, and foster belonging. Jamil Zaki's research backs this—teams with empathic managers report better mental health, morale, and innovation.
Listeners, when you lead this way, you don't just build teams; you build movements. You create workplaces where women of color, disabled women, and all voices challenge norms without being labeled aggressive. Empathy dismantles fear, resentment, and disengagement, replacing them with trust, motivation, and unstoppable momentum.
Thank you for tuning in to The Women's Leadership Podcast. Subscribe now for more episodes empowering your leadership journey. 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, where we empower women to lead with strength, heart, and unapologetic authenticity. I'm your host, and today we're diving into leading with empathy—your secret superpower for fostering psychological safety in the workplace. Listeners, imagine walking into a meeting where every voice matters, mistakes spark growth instead of shame, and your team thrives because they feel truly seen. That's the magic women leaders create when we harness empathy.
Picture Jacinda Ardern, New Zealand's trailblazing Prime Minister, responding to the Christchurch mosque attacks and COVID-19 with raw compassion. She unified a nation by sharing feelings, listening deeply, and building trust—proving empathy isn't soft; it's transformative. Or think of Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook's former COO, who opened up about grief in her book Lean In, sparking conversations that made tech workplaces more human and resilient. These women show us empathy drives innovation, boosts retention, and levels the playing field, especially for underrepresented voices.
Psychological safety, as Harvard Business Review experts Maren Gube and Debra Sabatini Hennelly explain, is that environment where you can speak up, take risks, and admit errors without fear of backlash. For women leaders, it's essential—research from BCG reveals it increases retention four times over for women and underrepresented employees. Without it, bias and microaggressions silence us, stalling careers and breeding burnout. But with it? We unleash creativity, collaboration, and equity.
So, how do you, as a woman leader, make this real? Start with active listening—Women & Leadership Australia emphasizes leaders modeling vulnerability by admitting mistakes and showing humility. Check in genuinely on your team's well-being, not just tasks, as strategies from Women in Tech highlight. Address biases head-on: Women in Safety urges protocols for microaggressions, bystander training, and inclusive meetings where every perspective counts.
Embed empathy daily—promote mentorship and allyship, as Page Executive's Alex Bishop and Debbie Robinson advocate, giving women safe spaces to voice concerns and receive supportive feedback. Normalize open channels for anonymous input and well-being programs from Culture Proof. Lead by example: Cultivate emotional intelligence to read the room, resolve conflicts with kindness, and foster belonging. Jamil Zaki's research backs this—teams with empathic managers report better mental health, morale, and innovation.
Listeners, when you lead this way, you don't just build teams; you build movements. You create workplaces where women of color, disabled women, and all voices challenge norms without being labeled aggressive. Empathy dismantles fear, resentment, and disengagement, replacing them with trust, motivation, and unstoppable momentum.
Thank you for tuning in to The Women's Leadership Podcast. Subscribe now for more episodes empowering your leadership journey. 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