Leading Beyond Authority: How Women Build Trust Through Empathy and Psychological Safety

Leading Beyond Authority: How Women Build Trust Through Empathy and Psychological Safety

3:47 Mar 27, 2026
About this episode
This is your The Women's Leadership Podcast podcast.Welcome back to The Women's Leadership Podcast. I'm your host, and today we're diving into one of the most transformative skills you can develop as a leader: leading with empathy and fostering psychological safety in your workplace.Let's start with why this matters so much right now. According to research from Harvard Business Review, employees who work for empathetic leaders are more engaged, motivated, and productive. Companies with empathetic leaders also experience higher employee satisfaction and lower turnover rates. But here's what really stands out: Catalyst research shows that employees working for empathetic leaders are three times more likely to stay with their companies compared to those working for leaders lacking empathy.So what exactly is psychological safety? It's an environment where your team members feel comfortable being themselves, expressing their thoughts and ideas, taking calculated risks, and even making mistakes without fear of judgment or retaliation. The term was coined by Harvard Business School professor Amy Edmondson in 1999, and it's become increasingly critical, especially for women navigating male-dominated industries.Here's the challenge many women leaders face. A recent Catalyst survey found that nearly half of female business leaders struggle to speak up in virtual meetings, and one in five reported feeling overlooked or ignored during video calls. Women often face distinct workplace challenges like bias and stereotyping, which creates feelings of isolation and makes it difficult to speak up and take risks. Organizations lacking psychologically safe environments produce fewer female leaders and develop their female workers less effectively.But the good news? The reverse is also true. When you create psychological safety, outcomes improve dramatically. Women leaders who balance assertiveness with empathy create environments of collaboration where team members feel valued and heard. According to consulting firm Bain and Company, companies that prioritize customer experience and empathy outperform their competitors by more than eighty percent in customer satisfaction and loyalty.So how do you actually build this as a leader? First, make psychological safety an explicit priority. Talk openly with your team about its importance and connect it to organizational innovation and inclusion. Second, demonstrate genuine care for your team members' wellbeing beyond just their work tasks. Small gestures of kindness make significant differences.Third, embrace collaborative leadership by actively involving your team in decision-making. Show vulnerability by acknowledging your own challenges and uncertainties. This models openness and connects to others' common humanity. Fourth, lead by example. Your actions set the tone for how your entire team interacts with each other.Finally, c
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