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 and heart. I'm your host, and today we're diving into leading with empathy—specifically how we as women leaders can foster psychological safety in the workplace, creating spaces where everyone thrives.Imagine this: You're Jane, Sasha, or Sally in a bustling office at Pollack Peacebuilding Systems. Sally's computer crashes, wiping out half her report due Friday. Instead of leaving her to sink, Jane and Sasha notice her stress, divide the work into three parts, and by end of day, the report's done. Weekend plans intact. That's empathy in action, as shared in Pollack Peacebuilding's examples of workplace empathy. It builds trust instantly.Psychological safety, a term coined by Harvard Business School's Amy Edmondson in 1999, means your team feels free to speak up, take risks, share ideas, or admit mistakes without fear of humiliation or reprisal. According to the Society of Women Engineers, it encourages candor, challenging the status quo, and knowing words matter. For us women leaders, this is superpower territory. Pew Research Center reports that 43% of Americans say female executives are better at creating safe, respectful workplaces—48% of women agree—because we intuitively prioritize empathy.Why does this matter? Page Executive's Alex Bishop explains that without it, women face bias, stereotyping, isolation, burnout, and stalled careers, especially women of color or in male-dominated fields. But flip it: Psychologically safe teams boost innovation, retention, collaboration, and productivity. Catalyst studies show employees under empathetic leaders are three times more likely to stay. Harvard Business Review echoes that they’re more engaged and motivated. Women leaders like Mary Barra, CEO of General Motors, exemplify this—balancing empathy with assertiveness for stellar results.So, how do we make it happen? Start with active listening and emotional intelligence, as outlined by WomenTech.net. Check in genuinely on well-being, not just tasks—small kindnesses make teams feel valued. Lead by example: Show patience in challenges. Encourage open communication and inclusivity. Page Executive urges mentorship, sponsorship, and allyship—men supporting women's voices. Women in Safety recommends listening to women's experiences through facilitated discussions, prioritizing intersectionality, and embedding safety in daily culture with regular check-ins and equitable practices.Co-create clear norms and expectations with your team, as Women Taking the Lead advises, starting from the top. Model humility, reward collaboration over competition, and address biases head-on. The Diversity Movement notes empathetic leaders cut burnout for underrepresented women from 67% to 54%.Listeners, you have the power to transform workplaces. Embrace emp