Psychological Safety
Dialog between Two Frogs, Baltimore Aquarium, (c) Xinjin Zhao, 2021

Psychological Safety

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I came across this mini-script by Prof Amy Edmondson from Harvard Business School about Psychological Safety and thought it had some beautiful advices for all but especially those who are in leadership positions. Psychological safety is the belief that you won't be embarrassed, punished or humiliated for speaking up with ideas, questions, concerns, or mistakes.

It is not surprising that a well publicized study done at Google on team performance revealed that the highest-performing teams have one thing in common: psychological safety. However, all of us have seen or experienced examples that leaders do not always behave in a way to facilitate the development of trust within the team. In most cases, those behavior are not necessarily intentional but company culture or norm tend to create an environment which is not conducive to foster psychological safety. Here are a few thoughts based on my observations.

  • If you are in a position of power, how you ask questions is just as important as what questions you ask. A well intentioned question or simple curiosity on a topic could be interpreted very differently by the audience, especially in companies with hierarchical structure and authoritative cultures. I have seen teams went on wild goose chase for some absurd pursuits simply because they thought senior executive asked for it.
  • If you have a team of people with diverse background, be sensitive with the fact that people from different cultures tend to have different behavior norm. Even in the same culture, people with different work or educational backgrounds might have different comfort levels in raising issues or opinions.
  • With increasing numbers of employees work remotely, leaders should be cognizant of the fact that the remote workers do not have chance to join the hallway or lunch table informal conversations. As a result, many might not have the context of things happening at the office. Allow them to ask questions or raise issues which are seemingly obvious to the rest of the team.
  • Upon hearing opinions that you do not agree, demonstrate curiosity and explore underlining assumptions, rather than focus on defending your position or the official company position. Very often, we come to different conclusions because we mentally make different assumptions. Until you spend time to figure out the assumptions and debate on the merits of the assumptions, auguring about the conclusions rarely come to a satisfactory answer.

In summery, we are living in a fast changing complex world. If you want ensure your organization or team to make the right decisions, you need to first make sure you have a way to hear all the different voices. The way it worked before might not work today. Demonstrating some humility, curiosity and empathy would go a long way to provide the psychological safety for your organization to thrive.

Related Articles

Knowing Yourself is the Beginning of All Wisdom (3/15/2019)

Courage of Conviction (12/18/2018)

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Elizabeth Ross

Hospitality Fortune 500 District Operations Manager | Food Amenities Work Place | Long Lasting Client Relation Expert | Visionary Leader | Revenue Strategy Driver | Creating Enthusiastic Customer Centric Teams

1y

This is spot on, great share!

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Li Na

Business Planner - Upstream Oil & Gas

3y

Totally agree. Love this definition “Psychological safety is the belief that you won't be embarrassed, punished or humiliated for speaking up with ideas, questions, concerns, or mistakes.” - it takes time to gain trust for people to open up. Many tend to be cautious, especially the ones who experienced suppression.

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Reply

Thanks for posting this.

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Jacob Sauntinez

National Account Manager at ClarkDietrich Building Systems

3y

Thanks for posting this thought provoking piece

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