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Empathy at Work: Why Psychological Safety Makes Bay Area Teams 20% More Productive
Published 5 days, 19 hours ago
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This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.
Welcome to The Women's Leadership Podcast, where we empower you to lead with heart and strength. Today, we're diving into leading with empathy and how you, as a woman leader, can foster psychological safety in the workplace—a game-changer for innovation and team success.
Imagine walking into a meeting at Google, where leaders like Laszlo Bock championed psychological safety, making it safe for employees to take risks without fear of embarrassment. Research from Amy Edmondson at Harvard shows teams with high psychological safety outperform others by 20 percent in productivity. As women, we have a natural edge in empathy; Brené Brown, in her book Dare to Lead, teaches us vulnerability isn't weakness—it's the birthplace of courage and connection. Natalie Dumond, a certified Dare to Lead facilitator featured on Voices of Leadership, shares how she quiets her inner critic to lead authentically, asking better questions and embracing silence as a powerful tool.
Listeners, start by modeling empathy daily. In your next team huddle, share a personal story—like how a failure taught you resilience, just as Caroline Bergeron did when she left corporate life for creativity, inspired by meetings with Oprah Winfrey and Michelle Obama. This invites your team to open up. According to McKinsey's 2025 report, women leaders often lack sponsorship—only 31 percent have it compared to 45 percent of men—but storytelling, rooted in neuroscience, activates brain patterns that make your impact memorable and promotable.
Foster safety through active listening: Pause before responding, validate feelings with phrases like, "I hear how challenging that was for you." Dana Shortt, who built and sold her catering empire, emphasized emotional awareness in transitions, turning vulnerability into trust. Create no-blame zones—celebrate experiments, even flops. Brigadier Melissa Emmett MBE, in Stories of Success podcast, highlights camaraderie and purpose as resilience builders, urging women to lead with generosity.
Practical steps: Hold empathy check-ins weekly, where everyone shares wins and worries anonymously. Train your team on inclusive feedback, drawing from Anna's Chief in Tech insights from interviewing 50 C-level leaders. Measure progress with pulse surveys—Google's Project Aristotle proved psychological safety is the top team dynamic.
Sisters in leadership, your empathy isn't soft—it's strategic power. By building safe spaces at places like your company or Metro Podcast Studio's creative hubs, you unleash potential, boost retention, and redefine success. Lead boldly, listen deeply, and watch your teams thrive.
Thank you for tuning in to The Women's Leadership Podcast. Subscribe now for more empowerment. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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 to The Women's Leadership Podcast, where we empower you to lead with heart and strength. Today, we're diving into leading with empathy and how you, as a woman leader, can foster psychological safety in the workplace—a game-changer for innovation and team success.
Imagine walking into a meeting at Google, where leaders like Laszlo Bock championed psychological safety, making it safe for employees to take risks without fear of embarrassment. Research from Amy Edmondson at Harvard shows teams with high psychological safety outperform others by 20 percent in productivity. As women, we have a natural edge in empathy; Brené Brown, in her book Dare to Lead, teaches us vulnerability isn't weakness—it's the birthplace of courage and connection. Natalie Dumond, a certified Dare to Lead facilitator featured on Voices of Leadership, shares how she quiets her inner critic to lead authentically, asking better questions and embracing silence as a powerful tool.
Listeners, start by modeling empathy daily. In your next team huddle, share a personal story—like how a failure taught you resilience, just as Caroline Bergeron did when she left corporate life for creativity, inspired by meetings with Oprah Winfrey and Michelle Obama. This invites your team to open up. According to McKinsey's 2025 report, women leaders often lack sponsorship—only 31 percent have it compared to 45 percent of men—but storytelling, rooted in neuroscience, activates brain patterns that make your impact memorable and promotable.
Foster safety through active listening: Pause before responding, validate feelings with phrases like, "I hear how challenging that was for you." Dana Shortt, who built and sold her catering empire, emphasized emotional awareness in transitions, turning vulnerability into trust. Create no-blame zones—celebrate experiments, even flops. Brigadier Melissa Emmett MBE, in Stories of Success podcast, highlights camaraderie and purpose as resilience builders, urging women to lead with generosity.
Practical steps: Hold empathy check-ins weekly, where everyone shares wins and worries anonymously. Train your team on inclusive feedback, drawing from Anna's Chief in Tech insights from interviewing 50 C-level leaders. Measure progress with pulse surveys—Google's Project Aristotle proved psychological safety is the top team dynamic.
Sisters in leadership, your empathy isn't soft—it's strategic power. By building safe spaces at places like your company or Metro Podcast Studio's creative hubs, you unleash potential, boost retention, and redefine success. Lead boldly, listen deeply, and watch your teams thrive.
Thank you for tuning in to The Women's Leadership Podcast. Subscribe now for more empowerment. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot 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.