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Empathy at Work: How Women Leaders Build Psychological Safety That Transforms Teams
Published 14 hours 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 boldest idea isn't met with eye rolls or silence, but with genuine curiosity. That's the power of leading with empathy, listeners, and today on The Women's Leadership Podcast, we're diving deep into how you, as a woman leader, can foster psychological safety in the workplace. Psychological safety, a term coined by Harvard Business School professor Amy Edmondson in 1999, means creating an environment where team members feel safe to express ideas, admit mistakes, take risks, and speak up without fear of judgment or reprisal.
Picture Mary Barra, CEO of General Motors, embodying this perfectly. Her leadership, rooted in inclusion, innovation, and continuous improvement, has built a culture where employees feel valued and motivated. According to a Catalyst study, employees under empathetic leaders like her are three times more likely to stay with their companies. That's not just retention; it's empowerment, turning workplaces into launchpads for women's success.
But how do you make this real in your teams? Start by embracing active listening and cultivating emotional intelligence, as Savitha Raghunathan, Senior Software Engineer at Red Hat, advises. She says being attuned to emotions fosters trust and mutual respect. Encourage open communication with regular check-ins—ask about well-being beyond tasks, like the manager who supported John after losing his sister by adjusting deadlines, giving him space to grieve.
To build psychological safety, listen to women's voices through facilitated discussions, addressing intersectionality for race, age, or LGBTQIA+ experiences. Tackle microaggressions head-on with bystander intervention training, and embed safety into daily culture with inclusive meetings and clear feedback channels. Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett, viral immunologist at the National Institutes of Health, led her team through the COVID crisis by balancing assertiveness with empathy, building trust and clear goals that saved lives.
Lead by example: set clear norms and expectations with your team, co-creating success metrics to ensure fairness. Promote inclusivity, challenge biases, and advocate for work-life balance. A Harvard Business Review study shows empathetic leaders boost engagement, motivation, productivity, and satisfaction while cutting turnover. Bain & Company reports companies prioritizing empathy outperform competitors by over 80% in customer satisfaction.
Mentorship and allyship amplify this—connect women with sponsors for safe feedback spaces, and encourage men to act as allies. In psychologically safe environments, innovation soars, diversity thrives, and you retain top talent. Women leaders like you make work better, as decades of APA studies confirm, enhancing collaboration and fairness.
Listeners, step into your power: frame psychological safety as your explicit priority, model vulnerability, and watch your teams transform. You've got this—empathy isn't weakness; it's your superpower.
Thank you for tuning in to The Women's Leadership Podcast. Subscribe now for more episodes empowering your 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
Imagine stepping into a boardroom where every voice matters, where your boldest idea isn't met with eye rolls or silence, but with genuine curiosity. That's the power of leading with empathy, listeners, and today on The Women's Leadership Podcast, we're diving deep into how you, as a woman leader, can foster psychological safety in the workplace. Psychological safety, a term coined by Harvard Business School professor Amy Edmondson in 1999, means creating an environment where team members feel safe to express ideas, admit mistakes, take risks, and speak up without fear of judgment or reprisal.
Picture Mary Barra, CEO of General Motors, embodying this perfectly. Her leadership, rooted in inclusion, innovation, and continuous improvement, has built a culture where employees feel valued and motivated. According to a Catalyst study, employees under empathetic leaders like her are three times more likely to stay with their companies. That's not just retention; it's empowerment, turning workplaces into launchpads for women's success.
But how do you make this real in your teams? Start by embracing active listening and cultivating emotional intelligence, as Savitha Raghunathan, Senior Software Engineer at Red Hat, advises. She says being attuned to emotions fosters trust and mutual respect. Encourage open communication with regular check-ins—ask about well-being beyond tasks, like the manager who supported John after losing his sister by adjusting deadlines, giving him space to grieve.
To build psychological safety, listen to women's voices through facilitated discussions, addressing intersectionality for race, age, or LGBTQIA+ experiences. Tackle microaggressions head-on with bystander intervention training, and embed safety into daily culture with inclusive meetings and clear feedback channels. Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett, viral immunologist at the National Institutes of Health, led her team through the COVID crisis by balancing assertiveness with empathy, building trust and clear goals that saved lives.
Lead by example: set clear norms and expectations with your team, co-creating success metrics to ensure fairness. Promote inclusivity, challenge biases, and advocate for work-life balance. A Harvard Business Review study shows empathetic leaders boost engagement, motivation, productivity, and satisfaction while cutting turnover. Bain & Company reports companies prioritizing empathy outperform competitors by over 80% in customer satisfaction.
Mentorship and allyship amplify this—connect women with sponsors for safe feedback spaces, and encourage men to act as allies. In psychologically safe environments, innovation soars, diversity thrives, and you retain top talent. Women leaders like you make work better, as decades of APA studies confirm, enhancing collaboration and fairness.
Listeners, step into your power: frame psychological safety as your explicit priority, model vulnerability, and watch your teams transform. You've got this—empathy isn't weakness; it's your superpower.
Thank you for tuning in to The Women's Leadership Podcast. Subscribe now for more episodes empowering your 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