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Empathy at Work: How Women Leaders Turn Trust Into Your Team's Secret Weapon
Published 1 month 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. Imagine walking into a meeting where every voice matters, ideas flow freely without fear, and your team thrives because they feel truly seen. That's the magic women leaders create when we harness empathy to build psychological safety, a foundation where trust replaces fear, and innovation soars.
Picture this: you're leading a diverse team at a bustling tech firm like Meta, navigating deadlines and high stakes. Drawing from Sheryl Sandberg's playbook as COO, you lean into empathy by sharing your own story of grief and resilience in her book Lean In. Suddenly, your team opens up, vulnerabilities surface, and collaboration deepens. Culture Proof research shows women leaders naturally excel here, using empathy to improve communication, boost engagement, and spark innovation. Employees who feel heard stay longer, innovate more, and report better mental health, as psychologist Jamil Zaki affirms.
But how do we make this real? Start with active listening—Jacinda Ardern modeled this masterfully during New Zealand's Christchurch mosque attacks and COVID-19 crisis, responding with compassion that unified her nation. In your workplace, pause during one-on-ones to truly hear concerns, reflecting back what you hear: "It sounds like the workload is overwhelming—let's adjust." This builds trust, the bedrock of psychological safety, as outlined by Amy Edmondson in her Harvard research. Women in higher education, per Gavin Publishers studies, advance faster in such environments, shifting from silent observers to bold initiators who challenge norms and drive change.
Next, cultivate emotional intelligence. Women Leaders Australia recommends showing vulnerability—admit a mistake in a team huddle, like "I misread that data; what do you all think?" This invites candor, reduces resentment, and fosters belonging. Implement inclusive policies: equitable workloads, transparent feedback channels, and well-being programs. At your next stand-up, encourage open communication: "What's one risk you're hesitant to take, and how can we support it?" CCL's eight steps echo this—lead by example, promote inclusivity, and reward voice. The result? Teams with psychological safety see higher retention, less burnout, and bolder ideas, turning undesired emotions like fear into motivation and belonging.
Sisters, empathy isn't soft—it's strategic. Christine Lagarde and Janet Yellen wield it to drive business wins through EQ and inclusion. In tough times, as Edmondson notes, it's an asset that retains talent and fuels excellence. Embrace these tools: listen actively, show vulnerability, build networks of sponsorship, and normalize experimentation. Your empathetic leadership doesn't just transform teams—it reshapes workplaces for every woman rising behind you.
Thank you for tuning in, listeners. 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. Imagine walking into a meeting where every voice matters, ideas flow freely without fear, and your team thrives because they feel truly seen. That's the magic women leaders create when we harness empathy to build psychological safety, a foundation where trust replaces fear, and innovation soars.
Picture this: you're leading a diverse team at a bustling tech firm like Meta, navigating deadlines and high stakes. Drawing from Sheryl Sandberg's playbook as COO, you lean into empathy by sharing your own story of grief and resilience in her book Lean In. Suddenly, your team opens up, vulnerabilities surface, and collaboration deepens. Culture Proof research shows women leaders naturally excel here, using empathy to improve communication, boost engagement, and spark innovation. Employees who feel heard stay longer, innovate more, and report better mental health, as psychologist Jamil Zaki affirms.
But how do we make this real? Start with active listening—Jacinda Ardern modeled this masterfully during New Zealand's Christchurch mosque attacks and COVID-19 crisis, responding with compassion that unified her nation. In your workplace, pause during one-on-ones to truly hear concerns, reflecting back what you hear: "It sounds like the workload is overwhelming—let's adjust." This builds trust, the bedrock of psychological safety, as outlined by Amy Edmondson in her Harvard research. Women in higher education, per Gavin Publishers studies, advance faster in such environments, shifting from silent observers to bold initiators who challenge norms and drive change.
Next, cultivate emotional intelligence. Women Leaders Australia recommends showing vulnerability—admit a mistake in a team huddle, like "I misread that data; what do you all think?" This invites candor, reduces resentment, and fosters belonging. Implement inclusive policies: equitable workloads, transparent feedback channels, and well-being programs. At your next stand-up, encourage open communication: "What's one risk you're hesitant to take, and how can we support it?" CCL's eight steps echo this—lead by example, promote inclusivity, and reward voice. The result? Teams with psychological safety see higher retention, less burnout, and bolder ideas, turning undesired emotions like fear into motivation and belonging.
Sisters, empathy isn't soft—it's strategic. Christine Lagarde and Janet Yellen wield it to drive business wins through EQ and inclusion. In tough times, as Edmondson notes, it's an asset that retains talent and fuels excellence. Embrace these tools: listen actively, show vulnerability, build networks of sponsorship, and normalize experimentation. Your empathetic leadership doesn't just transform teams—it reshapes workplaces for every woman rising behind you.
Thank you for tuning in, listeners. 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