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Leading with Empathy: How Women Build Psychological Safety That Drives Real Results
Published 3 weeks, 5 days 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 you to step into your power and lead with unapologetic strength. 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 feel-good talk; it's a game-changer for innovation, retention, and real results.
Imagine walking into a team meeting where everyone speaks up freely, shares bold ideas without fear of judgment, and admits mistakes as opportunities to grow. That's psychological safety, a concept popularized by Amy Edmondson in her Harvard research, where teams thrive because vulnerability is valued over perfection. As women leaders, we have a unique edge here—our natural empathy allows us to build these spaces intuitively.
Start by modeling it yourself. Ginni Saraswati-Cook, featured on Voices of Leadership, shares how she leads with stories that inspire trust. In high-stakes moments, she asks, "What is keeping them up at night? What would make their life easier right now?" This shifts you from directing to truly understanding, creating instant connection. Listeners, try this in your next one-on-one: fully step into their shoes, then offer your unique value. Suddenly, your presence commands respect, not approval-seeking.
Next, adapt your communication style to each person. Fearless Female Leadership Podcast host Sheryl Kline emphasizes matching their vibe—are they analytical, needing bullet points first, or relationship-driven, craving context? Monisha Abraham, Shay Mustafa, and Ambereen Sheikh from BAT's Let's Talk series on women in leadership nailed this by openly sharing lived experiences of bias. They challenged norms calmly, fostering curiosity over defensiveness. You can too: in feedback sessions, stay supportive and direct, asking open questions like, "What do you need from me to feel supported?"
Real-world wins? Rebecca Henry, Lesedi Ntaje, and Rorisang Mawela on PwC Africa's International Women's Month podcast discussed leading through change with inclusive daily practices. They built credibility by listening actively, turning diverse teams into innovation powerhouses. Data backs it: Catalyst reports that empathetic leadership boosts performance, with women-led teams 21% more profitable when safety reigns.
Actionable steps for you: Hold "vulnerability shares" in meetings, where everyone admits one challenge weekly. Celebrate failures publicly, like Chelsea Clinton does by using her platform to remove biases for others, as shared on Inspiring Women. Train your team on empathy tools—walk in their perspective, own your narrative like Sonali Fiske teaches in her storytelling for women leaders.
Sisters, leading with empathy isn't soft; it's strategic power. It unlocks your team's potential, elevates your influence, and proves women redefine leadership. Foster that safety, watch your workplace transform.
Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Subscribe now for more empowerment on The Women's Leadership Podcast. 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
This episode includes AI-generated content.
Welcome back to The Women's Leadership Podcast, where we empower you to step into your power and lead with unapologetic strength. 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 feel-good talk; it's a game-changer for innovation, retention, and real results.
Imagine walking into a team meeting where everyone speaks up freely, shares bold ideas without fear of judgment, and admits mistakes as opportunities to grow. That's psychological safety, a concept popularized by Amy Edmondson in her Harvard research, where teams thrive because vulnerability is valued over perfection. As women leaders, we have a unique edge here—our natural empathy allows us to build these spaces intuitively.
Start by modeling it yourself. Ginni Saraswati-Cook, featured on Voices of Leadership, shares how she leads with stories that inspire trust. In high-stakes moments, she asks, "What is keeping them up at night? What would make their life easier right now?" This shifts you from directing to truly understanding, creating instant connection. Listeners, try this in your next one-on-one: fully step into their shoes, then offer your unique value. Suddenly, your presence commands respect, not approval-seeking.
Next, adapt your communication style to each person. Fearless Female Leadership Podcast host Sheryl Kline emphasizes matching their vibe—are they analytical, needing bullet points first, or relationship-driven, craving context? Monisha Abraham, Shay Mustafa, and Ambereen Sheikh from BAT's Let's Talk series on women in leadership nailed this by openly sharing lived experiences of bias. They challenged norms calmly, fostering curiosity over defensiveness. You can too: in feedback sessions, stay supportive and direct, asking open questions like, "What do you need from me to feel supported?"
Real-world wins? Rebecca Henry, Lesedi Ntaje, and Rorisang Mawela on PwC Africa's International Women's Month podcast discussed leading through change with inclusive daily practices. They built credibility by listening actively, turning diverse teams into innovation powerhouses. Data backs it: Catalyst reports that empathetic leadership boosts performance, with women-led teams 21% more profitable when safety reigns.
Actionable steps for you: Hold "vulnerability shares" in meetings, where everyone admits one challenge weekly. Celebrate failures publicly, like Chelsea Clinton does by using her platform to remove biases for others, as shared on Inspiring Women. Train your team on empathy tools—walk in their perspective, own your narrative like Sonali Fiske teaches in her storytelling for women leaders.
Sisters, leading with empathy isn't soft; it's strategic power. It unlocks your team's potential, elevates your influence, and proves women redefine leadership. Foster that safety, watch your workplace transform.
Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Subscribe now for more empowerment on The Women's Leadership Podcast. 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
This episode includes AI-generated content.