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Boardroom to Breakthrough: Building Trust Through Empathetic Leadership

Boardroom to Breakthrough: Building Trust Through Empathetic Leadership

Published 1 month, 3 weeks ago
Description
This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.

Imagine stepping into a boardroom where every voice matters, where your ideas spark innovation without the shadow of fear. That's the power of leading with empathy, listeners, and today on The Women's Leadership Podcast, we're diving into how you, as women leaders, can foster psychological safety in the workplace—a game-changer for empowerment and success.

Picture this: You're Sarah, a rising executive at a tech firm like Red Hat, much like Savitha Raghunathan, a Senior Software Engineer there who champions emotional intelligence. You've just noticed your team member's shoulders tense during a meeting. Instead of pushing forward, you pause, lean in, and say, "Tell me what's on your mind—your perspective could unlock something brilliant here." That's active listening in action, the first step to building psychological safety, as outlined by Women in Safety experts. It creates space for women to voice concerns without retaliation, especially in male-dominated fields where microaggressions like undermining comments erode confidence.

Psychological safety, that environment where everyone feels free to admit mistakes, share ideas, and take risks, isn't a luxury—it's foundational, according to Harvard Business Review insights shared by leaders like Maren Gube and Debra Sabatini Hennelly. For women, it levels the playing field, boosting retention by over four times, as BCG reports, and fueling career advancement by eroding biases and stereotypes.

How do you make it happen? Start by cultivating emotional intelligence—understanding your emotions and your team's. Neuroscience from the Workforce Institute shows women naturally excel here, releasing oxytocin through compassion, which builds trust and motivates like nothing else. Model vulnerability, as Women & Leadership Australia advises: Admit, "I'm not sure on this, let's figure it out together." This sets the tone, normalizing uncertainty and inviting collaboration.

Next, address biases head-on. Implement bystander intervention training and clear protocols for microaggressions, prioritizing intersectionality—race, age, disability, as Women in Safety urges. Encourage open communication with regular check-ins and inclusive meetings. Draw from Humana's playbook: They overhauled policies for flexible work, equipping call center teams with at-home tech during challenges, ensuring everyone felt supported.

Lead by example with genuine care. Like Indra Nooyi at PepsiCo, who balanced profits with societal impact, check in on well-being beyond tasks. Create safe spaces—mentorship programs, affinity groups—and flexible policies for work-life harmony, as Silatha recommends. Dell did this too, prioritizing collaboration tools for remote productivity.

The result? Teams thrive: Innovation surges, morale soars, and women advance confidently, voicing insights that drive merit-based success. Psychological safety affirms your dignity and equal opportunity, turning workplaces into launchpads for your leadership.

Listeners, embrace this empathetic power—it's your superpower for lasting impact.

Thank you for tuning in to The Women's Leadership Podcast. Subscribe now for more empowering episodes. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai


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