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Leading with Heart: How Women Build Psychological Safety That Transforms Teams

Leading with Heart: How Women Build Psychological Safety That Transforms Teams

Published 1 month, 2 weeks ago
Description
This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.

Welcome to The Women's Leadership Podcast, where we empower women to lead with strength and heart. Today, we're diving into leading with empathy and how you, as a woman leader, can foster psychological safety in the workplace—a game-changer for innovation, retention, and team success.

Imagine walking into a meeting where every voice matters, mistakes spark growth instead of fear, and your team thrives because they feel truly safe. That's psychological safety, a term coined by Harvard Business School professor Amy Edmondson in 1999. It's the foundation where people express ideas, admit errors, and take risks without dread of humiliation or backlash. For women leaders, embracing this through empathy isn't just kind—it's strategic. Harvard Business Review studies show teams with empathetic leaders are more engaged, productive, and loyal, with lower turnover.

Take Mary Barra, CEO of General Motors. Her style blends empathy with assertiveness, rooted in inclusion, innovation, and continuous improvement. By valuing every employee's voice, she builds collaboration that drives success. Or consider Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett, the viral immunologist at the National Institutes of Health who led the Moderna vaccine team through a global crisis. She fostered trust by listening deeply, setting clear goals, and ensuring everyone felt heard—saving countless lives while balancing empathy and bold decisions.

Empathy supercharges psychological safety. Start with active listening: As Savitha Raghunathan, Senior Software Engineer at Red Hat, says, tuning into emotions creates trust and respect. Encourage open communication with regular check-ins and inclusive meetings. Address microaggressions head-on—train on bystander intervention and enforce protocols treating psychological harm as seriously as physical safety.

Lead by example: Co-create clear norms and expectations with your team for fairness and predictability. Promote inclusivity, challenge biases, and support work-life balance. Bain & Company research reveals empathetic cultures boost customer satisfaction by over 80%, while EY finds women with high emotional intelligence make superior decisions.

Listeners, picture your team innovating freely, women advancing without isolation or burnout. Mentor and sponsor each other, demonstrate genuine care through small gestures, and normalize feedback channels. This isn't soft—it's powerful. Organizations with psychological safety produce more female leaders and resilient outcomes, as experts like Alex Bishop and Debbie Robinson affirm.

By leading with empathy, you empower women to shine, fostering dignity, creativity, and equity.

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

For more http://www.quietplease.ai


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