About this episode
This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.Welcome back to The Women's Leadership Podcast, where we empower you to lead with strength, heart, and unapologetic confidence. 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, retention, and unbreakable teams.Imagine walking into a meeting where every voice matters, mistakes spark growth instead of fear, and your team thrives because they feel truly seen. That's psychological safety, a term coined by Harvard Business School professor Amy Edmondson in 1999. It's not about being nice; it's creating an environment where people speak up, take risks, and innovate without dread of judgment or reprisal. According to Christine Porath, Ph.D., from Georgetown University McDonough School of Business and author of Mastering Civility, teams with this safety boost performance and creativity, while unsafe ones stifle feedback and problem-solving.As women leaders, you hold the power to build this. Start by embracing active listening and cultivating emotional intelligence, as Savitha Raghunathan, Senior Software Engineer at Red Hat, shares: being attuned to emotions fosters trust and respect. Lead by example—admit your own mistakes, ask more questions than you give solutions, and show vulnerability. Mary Barra, CEO of General Motors, exemplifies this balance of empathy and assertiveness, driving collaboration and loyalty. A Catalyst study reveals employees under empathetic leaders are three times more likely to stay, while Harvard Business Review notes higher engagement and productivity.To foster psychological safety, encourage open communication with regular check-ins that show genuine care—small gestures like asking about well-being beyond tasks build value. Promote inclusivity, mentorship, and allyship, especially for women facing bias. Page Executive highlights how safe environments advance women's careers, reducing burnout and turnover. Co-create clear norms and expectations with your team for fairness, as recommended in Women Taking the Lead podcast insights. Address challenges head-on: challenge stereotypes, advocate for work-life balance, and model candor yourself.Picture Jane, Sasha, and Sally from Pollack Peacebuilding's example—coworkers who noticed Sally's stress from a crashed report and divided the work, turning overwhelm into teamwork. That's empathy in action, sparking collaboration. Bain & Company reports empathetic leadership lifts customer satisfaction by over 80%, and EY finds women with high emotional intelligence make superior decisions.Listeners, by weaving empathy into your leadership, you don't just build teams—you shatter ceilings, ignite potential, and create legacies of empowerment. Harvard Business Review emphasizes making psychological safety explicit: talk about it, connect it to innovation and inclusio