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Empathy Isn't Soft Skills, It's Your Strategic Superpower for Building Brave Teams

Empathy Isn't Soft Skills, It's Your Strategic Superpower for Building Brave Teams

Published 3 days, 8 hours 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 unshakeable confidence. I'm your host, Elena Rivera, and today we're diving straight into leading with empathy—specifically, how you, as a woman leader, can foster psychological safety in the workplace. This isn't just a buzzword; it's the foundation for teams that innovate, thrive, and lift everyone up.

Picture this: You're in a high-stakes meeting at your company, say, Google, where leaders like Sundar Pichai have long championed psychological safety. Coined by Harvard's Amy Edmondson in her groundbreaking 1999 research, psychological safety means team members feel safe to take risks, voice ideas, and admit mistakes without fear of embarrassment or punishment. Edmondson found that teams with high psychological safety outperform others by up to 20% in innovation metrics. As women leaders, we have a unique superpower here—our natural empathy allows us to build these environments authentically.

Start by modeling vulnerability yourself. Think of Pat Wadors, former CHRO at LinkedIn, who shared in her TEDx talk how she openly admitted a hiring mistake early in her career. It humanized her and invited her team to do the same. Listeners, try this: In your next team huddle, share a professional "oops" moment—like when I once botched a client pitch at my first marketing firm, Rivera Strategies—and what you learned. This sets the tone: "Here, it's safe to fail forward."

Next, listen actively and respond with curiosity, not judgment. Research from Google's Project Aristotle, led by Julia Rozovsky, revealed that psychological safety was the top predictor of team success among 180 teams studied. Women like you can excel here by asking open questions: "What excites you about this idea?" or "What challenges do you foresee?" At Salesforce, CEO Marc Benioff credits his diverse leadership team, including women like Cindy Robbins, for creating "Ohana" cultures where empathy drives inclusion.

Foster inclusivity through small rituals. Implement "empathy check-ins" at meeting starts, inspired by Brené Brown's work in "Dare to Lead." Brown, a research professor at the University of Houston, teaches that empathy isn't sympathy—it's climbing into someone's story. Encourage shares like "What's one win and one worry this week?" This builds trust organically.

Address biases head-on. Women leaders often navigate imposter syndrome themselves—Gallup reports 75% of female executives feel it—so normalize it. Create anonymous feedback channels, like Slack bots or tools from Culture Amp, to surface unspoken fears.

Finally, measure and iterate. Use Edmondson's seven-question survey to gauge safety levels quarterly. Celebrate progress publicly, reinforcing that empathy isn't soft—it's strategic.

Sisters in leadership, when you lead with empathy, you don't just build safe spaces; you unleash potential that changes companies and lives. Start small today—your team will thank you.

Thank you for tuning in to The Women's Leadership Podcast. If this resonated, subscribe now for more empowerment on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai


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