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Empathy at Work: Building Psychological Safety One Conversation at a Time
Published 1 month, 1 week 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 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. Psychological safety means creating a space where team members feel free to express concerns, share ideas, admit mistakes, and speak up without fear of humiliation or retaliation, as highlighted by experts at Page Executive.
Empathy is your superpower here. It's more than understanding—it's active listening and responding to your team's needs, building deep connections that promote support and open communication, according to EduTech Consultancy. Think of leaders like Christine Lagarde and Janet Yellen, who champion emotional intelligence to drive better business outcomes, as noted by Risky Women. Women naturally excel at this, with studies showing we lead with compassion, fostering inclusive, people-first workplaces where employees feel valued and motivated, per Core Values Institute.
To build this, start by listening to women's voices. Engage in open, facilitated discussions, capturing experiences with an intersectional lens—considering race, age, disability, or LGBTQIA+ status—to address amplified barriers, as advised by Women in Safety. Savitha Raghunathan, Senior Software Engineer at Red Hat, emphasizes cultivating emotional intelligence: being attuned to emotions creates trust and mutual respect.
Next, tackle micro-aggressions and bias head-on. Enforce protocols for inappropriate behavior, train in bystander intervention, and treat psychological harm as a safety issue. Embed safety into daily culture with regular check-ins, inclusive meetings, and clear feedback channels—HR, safety teams, and leaders sharing responsibility.
Promote mentorship and allyship, too. Connect women with sponsors for safe spaces to voice concerns, and encourage men as allies. Provide supportive, non-judgmental feedback, which women often receive less of, boosting confidence and progression, insights from Page Executive's panel with Alex Bishop and Debbie Robinson.
Lead by example: demonstrate vulnerability by admitting mistakes, showing humility, and modeling inclusivity. Normalize check-ins and celebrate diverse perspectives, as Women & Leadership Australia recommends. Picture Lisa from Core Values, who mentored individually, fostered collaboration, and aligned her team to purpose—resulting in soaring satisfaction, lower turnover, and skyrocketing productivity.
In psychologically safe environments, innovation thrives, retention surges—especially for women, up over four times per BCG—and organizations build resilience, as Harvard Business Review notes via Maren Gube and Debra Sabatini Hennelly. You hold the key to dignity, equity, and excellence.
Listeners, embrace empathy to transform teams. 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
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 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. Psychological safety means creating a space where team members feel free to express concerns, share ideas, admit mistakes, and speak up without fear of humiliation or retaliation, as highlighted by experts at Page Executive.
Empathy is your superpower here. It's more than understanding—it's active listening and responding to your team's needs, building deep connections that promote support and open communication, according to EduTech Consultancy. Think of leaders like Christine Lagarde and Janet Yellen, who champion emotional intelligence to drive better business outcomes, as noted by Risky Women. Women naturally excel at this, with studies showing we lead with compassion, fostering inclusive, people-first workplaces where employees feel valued and motivated, per Core Values Institute.
To build this, start by listening to women's voices. Engage in open, facilitated discussions, capturing experiences with an intersectional lens—considering race, age, disability, or LGBTQIA+ status—to address amplified barriers, as advised by Women in Safety. Savitha Raghunathan, Senior Software Engineer at Red Hat, emphasizes cultivating emotional intelligence: being attuned to emotions creates trust and mutual respect.
Next, tackle micro-aggressions and bias head-on. Enforce protocols for inappropriate behavior, train in bystander intervention, and treat psychological harm as a safety issue. Embed safety into daily culture with regular check-ins, inclusive meetings, and clear feedback channels—HR, safety teams, and leaders sharing responsibility.
Promote mentorship and allyship, too. Connect women with sponsors for safe spaces to voice concerns, and encourage men as allies. Provide supportive, non-judgmental feedback, which women often receive less of, boosting confidence and progression, insights from Page Executive's panel with Alex Bishop and Debbie Robinson.
Lead by example: demonstrate vulnerability by admitting mistakes, showing humility, and modeling inclusivity. Normalize check-ins and celebrate diverse perspectives, as Women & Leadership Australia recommends. Picture Lisa from Core Values, who mentored individually, fostered collaboration, and aligned her team to purpose—resulting in soaring satisfaction, lower turnover, and skyrocketing productivity.
In psychologically safe environments, innovation thrives, retention surges—especially for women, up over four times per BCG—and organizations build resilience, as Harvard Business Review notes via Maren Gube and Debra Sabatini Hennelly. You hold the key to dignity, equity, and excellence.
Listeners, embrace empathy to transform teams. 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
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI