This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.
Welcome back to The Women's Leadership Podcast, where we empower you, our incredible listeners, to step into your power and lead with heart. I'm your host, and today we're diving deep into leading with empathy—specifically, how you as women leaders can create psychological safety in the workplace. This isn't just a buzzword; it's the foundation for teams that innovate, thrive, and bring their whole selves to work.
Picture this: You're in a high-stakes boardroom at Google, much like the environment described by Amy Edmondson in her groundbreaking research on psychological safety. Edmondson, a Harvard professor, defines it as a belief that you won't be punished or humiliated for speaking up with ideas, questions, or mistakes. Women leaders like you are uniquely positioned to foster this because empathy is woven into our DNA—it's how we build trust and unlock potential.
Let me share a story from my own journey. Early in my career at a fast-paced tech startup in Silicon Valley, I noticed my team tiptoeing around ideas during meetings. Turnover was high, creativity low. One day, inspired by Kim Scott's Radical Candor framework, I shifted gears. Instead of pushing for perfection, I started meetings with a simple ritual: "What's one vulnerability you're carrying today?" I went first, admitting my fear of failing a big client pitch. The room transformed. Sarah, our quiet designer, opened up about a bold redesign she'd shelved out of fear. We iterated on it together, and it became our flagship product feature. That vulnerability sparked psychological safety, boosting engagement by 40% in just months, as echoed in Gallup's workplace studies.
Listeners, here's how you can make this your superpower. First, model empathy through active listening. As Deanna from the Inspiring Women Leaders podcast shared in her episode with host Leigh, human connection trumps hierarchy. When a team member shares a struggle, respond with, "That sounds tough—tell me more," instead of jumping to solutions. This validates emotions and invites collaboration.
Second, encourage mistake-sharing. Draw from Captain Kim's aviation insights on the Inspiring Women Leaders show—she flew high-stress missions where trust was life-or-death. In your workplace, celebrate "failure forwards." At Pixar, as detailed in Ed Catmull's creativity research, post-mortems focus on learning, not blame. Implement weekly "What didn't work?" huddles to normalize risks.
Third, build inclusive rituals. Louisa O'Connor, Managing Director of Scene Presents, grew her agency from scratch by breaking gender barriers through team-building empathy circles. Start with anonymous feedback tools like Google's Project Aristotle surveys, then discuss as a group. This fosters belonging, especially for underrepresented voices.
Finally, weave in storytelling, as Katie Anderson teaches in her leadership podcast with Carol Cox. Use the IDEAL framework: Imagery to set the scene, Dialogue for authenticity, Emotion to connect, Action for momentum, and Lesson for growth. Share your empathetic leadership wins to inspire your team.
Sisters, leading with empathy isn't soft—it's strategic. It drives retention, innovation, and loyalty, turning workplaces into launchpads for women's success. As Anne Doyle champions in Power Up Women!, it's about claiming your power cross-generationally.
Thank you for tuning in to The Women's Leadership Podcast. If this fired you up, subscribe now for more empowerment. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
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