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Empathy in the Boardroom: How Women Leaders Build Psychological Safety at Work
Published 2 months ago
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This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.
Imagine stepping into a boardroom where every voice matters, where your ideas spark innovation instead of fear. That's the power of leading with empathy, listeners, and today on The Women's Leadership Podcast, we're diving deep into how we as women leaders can foster psychological safety in the workplace. Psychological safety means creating a space where team members feel free to speak up, take risks, admit mistakes, and share bold ideas without fear of humiliation or retaliation. It's not just nice—it's essential for innovation, retention, and our collective success.
Think of Jacinda Ardern, New Zealand's former Prime Minister, who embodied this during the Christchurch mosque attacks and COVID-19 crisis. Her compassionate responses unified a nation, showing empathy builds trust and belonging. Or Sheryl Sandberg, COO of Meta, who through her book Lean In and open talks on grief, championed supportive cultures in tech, proving women leaders excel at this. Research from Harvard Business Review echoes this: empathetic environments boost agility and resilience, especially for women facing bias.
As women, we often naturally harness higher empathy levels, according to neuroscience insights from the Workforce Institute. We regulate emotions under stress, listen actively, and read the room, fostering collaboration. But to build psychological safety, start with active listening—pause in meetings at companies like Google, where leaders prioritize hearing every perspective, reducing misunderstandings and sparking creativity. Culture Proof reports this enhances engagement and cuts turnover.
Next, address micro-aggressions head-on, as Women in Safety urges. In male-dominated fields, subtle biases silence us; train teams in bystander intervention and enforce protocols treating psychological harm as seriously as physical safety. Page Executive highlights how this levels the playing field for women of color, letting us challenge ideas without being labeled aggressive.
Embed it daily: normalize check-ins, mentorship, and allyship. Women & Leadership Australia stresses leaders modeling vulnerability—admit mistakes to show humility. Provide regular, supportive feedback; women get less than men, stunting growth. Launch well-being programs and inclusive policies, like those at BCG, where psychological safety quadruples retention for women.
Lead by example, as WomenTech advises—cultivate emotional intelligence, encourage open communication, and resolve conflicts with kindness. Jamil Zaki's research shows empathic managers yield better mental health, morale, and innovation. Risky Women calls empathy our superpower, uniting diverse teams through social awareness and relationship management.
Listeners, when we prioritize empathy, we transform workplaces into havens of trust, motivation, and belonging, banishing fear and disengagement. We don't just lead; we empower everyone to thrive.
Thank you for tuning in to The Women's Leadership Podcast. Subscribe now for more empowering stories. 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
Imagine stepping into a boardroom where every voice matters, where your ideas spark innovation instead of fear. That's the power of leading with empathy, listeners, and today on The Women's Leadership Podcast, we're diving deep into how we as women leaders can foster psychological safety in the workplace. Psychological safety means creating a space where team members feel free to speak up, take risks, admit mistakes, and share bold ideas without fear of humiliation or retaliation. It's not just nice—it's essential for innovation, retention, and our collective success.
Think of Jacinda Ardern, New Zealand's former Prime Minister, who embodied this during the Christchurch mosque attacks and COVID-19 crisis. Her compassionate responses unified a nation, showing empathy builds trust and belonging. Or Sheryl Sandberg, COO of Meta, who through her book Lean In and open talks on grief, championed supportive cultures in tech, proving women leaders excel at this. Research from Harvard Business Review echoes this: empathetic environments boost agility and resilience, especially for women facing bias.
As women, we often naturally harness higher empathy levels, according to neuroscience insights from the Workforce Institute. We regulate emotions under stress, listen actively, and read the room, fostering collaboration. But to build psychological safety, start with active listening—pause in meetings at companies like Google, where leaders prioritize hearing every perspective, reducing misunderstandings and sparking creativity. Culture Proof reports this enhances engagement and cuts turnover.
Next, address micro-aggressions head-on, as Women in Safety urges. In male-dominated fields, subtle biases silence us; train teams in bystander intervention and enforce protocols treating psychological harm as seriously as physical safety. Page Executive highlights how this levels the playing field for women of color, letting us challenge ideas without being labeled aggressive.
Embed it daily: normalize check-ins, mentorship, and allyship. Women & Leadership Australia stresses leaders modeling vulnerability—admit mistakes to show humility. Provide regular, supportive feedback; women get less than men, stunting growth. Launch well-being programs and inclusive policies, like those at BCG, where psychological safety quadruples retention for women.
Lead by example, as WomenTech advises—cultivate emotional intelligence, encourage open communication, and resolve conflicts with kindness. Jamil Zaki's research shows empathic managers yield better mental health, morale, and innovation. Risky Women calls empathy our superpower, uniting diverse teams through social awareness and relationship management.
Listeners, when we prioritize empathy, we transform workplaces into havens of trust, motivation, and belonging, banishing fear and disengagement. We don't just lead; we empower everyone to thrive.
Thank you for tuning in to The Women's Leadership Podcast. Subscribe now for more empowering stories. 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