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Empathy Isn't Soft: How Women Leaders Build Psychological Safety That Drives Results
Published 2 weeks, 3 days ago
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This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.
Welcome back to The Women's Leadership Podcast. I'm your host, and today we're diving into one of the most transformative skills in modern leadership: leading with empathy and how it creates psychological safety in the workplace.
Let's start with something powerful. Research from the American Psychological Association shows that women leaders help increase productivity, enhance collaboration, inspire organizational dedication, and improve fairness across their organizations. But here's the real secret behind that success: empathy paired with intentional psychological safety practices.
Psychological safety is about creating a workplace where your team members feel they have the freedom to speak up, take risks, and express their opinions without fear of negative repercussions. When women leaders prioritize this, something remarkable happens. According to research from the Boston Consulting Group, when leaders successfully create psychological safety at work, retention increases by more than four times for women and for employees who identify as Black, Indigenous, or people of color. That's not just good leadership—that's transformational leadership.
So how do women leaders foster this environment? It starts with active listening. When you listen to your employees' concerns and perspectives with genuine attention, you foster a culture of collaboration. This empathetic approach enhances team morale, boosts engagement, and ultimately drives organizational success. As one Senior Software Engineer at Red Hat emphasizes, being attuned to our and our team members' emotions creates a more empathetic and responsive working environment.
But empathy alone isn't enough. You have to model vulnerability. Leaders set the tone by demonstrating openness, humility, and a willingness to learn while admitting mistakes. When you say things like, "I'm not sure exactly what the right thing to do is here, but I'd love to get your input as we figure it out together," you normalize uncertainty and foster collaboration.
Women leaders also excel at social intelligence. They're skilled at managing diverse personalities, mediating disagreements, and creating cohesive teams. By fostering positive workplace relationships, they enhance team productivity and drive business success. This matters especially for women of color, disabled women, and women from other underrepresented groups who often face distinct workplace challenges and bias.
Here's another critical piece: provide regular feedback. Women on average receive less feedback than their male counterparts, something which can damage career progression and confidence. When you deliver feedback that's supportive, non-judgmental, and focused on development and growth, you create safety for your team to take risks and innovate.
Compassion activates the brain's reward centers, releasing oxytocin—a hormone associated with trust and connection. Women often demonstrate higher levels of oxytocin in social interactions, and when you lead with this natural strength, prioritizing the well-being of your teams, you create work environments that encourage growth and innovation.
The bottom line is this: empathetic leadership isn't a soft skill. It's a strategic advantage that strengthens workplace culture and contributes to long-term organizational success. Your role as a woman leader is to create spaces where your team feels valued, respected, and safe to be their authentic selves.
Thank you so much for tuning in to The Women's Leadership Podcast. Make sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode, and join us next time as we continue exploring what it takes to lead with intention and impact. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
For more http://www.quietpl
Welcome back to The Women's Leadership Podcast. I'm your host, and today we're diving into one of the most transformative skills in modern leadership: leading with empathy and how it creates psychological safety in the workplace.
Let's start with something powerful. Research from the American Psychological Association shows that women leaders help increase productivity, enhance collaboration, inspire organizational dedication, and improve fairness across their organizations. But here's the real secret behind that success: empathy paired with intentional psychological safety practices.
Psychological safety is about creating a workplace where your team members feel they have the freedom to speak up, take risks, and express their opinions without fear of negative repercussions. When women leaders prioritize this, something remarkable happens. According to research from the Boston Consulting Group, when leaders successfully create psychological safety at work, retention increases by more than four times for women and for employees who identify as Black, Indigenous, or people of color. That's not just good leadership—that's transformational leadership.
So how do women leaders foster this environment? It starts with active listening. When you listen to your employees' concerns and perspectives with genuine attention, you foster a culture of collaboration. This empathetic approach enhances team morale, boosts engagement, and ultimately drives organizational success. As one Senior Software Engineer at Red Hat emphasizes, being attuned to our and our team members' emotions creates a more empathetic and responsive working environment.
But empathy alone isn't enough. You have to model vulnerability. Leaders set the tone by demonstrating openness, humility, and a willingness to learn while admitting mistakes. When you say things like, "I'm not sure exactly what the right thing to do is here, but I'd love to get your input as we figure it out together," you normalize uncertainty and foster collaboration.
Women leaders also excel at social intelligence. They're skilled at managing diverse personalities, mediating disagreements, and creating cohesive teams. By fostering positive workplace relationships, they enhance team productivity and drive business success. This matters especially for women of color, disabled women, and women from other underrepresented groups who often face distinct workplace challenges and bias.
Here's another critical piece: provide regular feedback. Women on average receive less feedback than their male counterparts, something which can damage career progression and confidence. When you deliver feedback that's supportive, non-judgmental, and focused on development and growth, you create safety for your team to take risks and innovate.
Compassion activates the brain's reward centers, releasing oxytocin—a hormone associated with trust and connection. Women often demonstrate higher levels of oxytocin in social interactions, and when you lead with this natural strength, prioritizing the well-being of your teams, you create work environments that encourage growth and innovation.
The bottom line is this: empathetic leadership isn't a soft skill. It's a strategic advantage that strengthens workplace culture and contributes to long-term organizational success. Your role as a woman leader is to create spaces where your team feels valued, respected, and safe to be their authentic selves.
Thank you so much for tuning in to The Women's Leadership Podcast. Make sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode, and join us next time as we continue exploring what it takes to lead with intention and impact. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
For more http://www.quietpl