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The Empathy Edge: How Women Leaders Build Psychological Safety That Drives Real Results

The Empathy Edge: How Women Leaders Build Psychological Safety That Drives Real Results

Published 4 days, 2 hours ago
Description
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. I'm your host, and today we're diving deep 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 deliver results.

Picture this: You're in the boardroom at Google, where Project Aristotle revealed that psychological safety—the belief that you won't be punished for speaking up with ideas, questions, or mistakes—is the number one factor in high-performing teams. Amy Edmondson, the Harvard researcher who coined the term, showed in her studies that teams with this safety net outperform others by embracing vulnerability over perfection. As women leaders, we naturally excel here because empathy is wired into our leadership DNA. But how do you make it happen?

Start by modeling it yourself. Remember Brené Brown's TED Talk that went viral, with over 60 million views? She teaches that true empathy means saying, "I see you, and that sounds really tough," instead of "At least..." This builds trust instantly. In your next team meeting, pause when someone shares a setback. Respond with genuine curiosity: "Tell me more about what you're feeling." According to Gallup's workplace research, leaders who do this see engagement rise by 21 percent, turning hesitant voices into bold contributors.

Next, create rituals for safety. At Etsy, CEO Chad Dickerson implemented "health metrics" meetings where the focus is solely on team well-being, no agendas tied to performance reviews. You can adapt this: Kick off your weekly huddles with a two-minute round of "wins and worries." Celebrate the small victories and normalize worries without judgment. Research from Google's re:Work project confirms this simple practice boosts idea-sharing by 30 percent.

Address biases head-on, especially for women. McKinsey's 2025 Women in the Workplace report notes women leaders receive only 31 percent sponsorship compared to 45 percent for men, often because fear stifles promotion conversations. Counter it by sponsoring openly—pair junior women with mentors and publicly credit their ideas. As Anne Doyle, host of Power Up Women!, emphasizes in her cross-generational talks, this ripple effect empowers everyone.

Finally, enforce boundaries with grace. When conflict arises, use Kim Scott's "radical candor" from her book—care personally but challenge directly. Say, "I believe in you, and here's how we can improve." This keeps empathy fierce, not fluffy.

Listeners, leading with empathy isn't soft; it's your superpower for unbreakable teams. Implement one tip today: that health check-in or empathetic pause. Watch your workplace transform.

Thank you for tuning in to The Women's Leadership Podcast. Subscribe now for more episodes that fuel your rise. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai


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