What Is Psychological Safety?
Coined by Harvard professor Amy Edmondson, psychological safety is “a shared belief that the team is safe for interpersonal risk-taking.” In such environments, people feel:
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	Comfortable asking questions 
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	Safe admitting mistakes 
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	Encouraged to offer new ideas 
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	Trusted to be honest without repercussions 
Why It Matters More Than Ever
In times of uncertainty and rapid change, organizations need ideas, agility, and initiative from everyone — not just leadership. Teams that lack psychological safety:
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	Withhold feedback 
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	Avoid risk 
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	Hide problems 
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	Miss opportunities to learn 

How Leaders Can Foster Psychological Safety
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	Model vulnerability 
 Admit when you don’t know or when you make a mistake.
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	Respond positively to input 
 Reward speaking up — even when you disagree.
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	Eliminate blame language 
 Focus on what can be improved, not who’s at fault.
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	Ask for feedback from your team 
 Show that everyone’s voice matters — including about your leadership.
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	Create inclusive environments 
 Make sure every voice, regardless of title or personality, is welcomed.

Conclusion
Psychological safety isn’t a soft skill — it’s a performance multiplier. Leaders who build it unlock deeper collaboration, creativity, and commitment. In the long run, it’s the foundation of sustainable success.
 
         
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
    			 
    				    			 
        					 
        					
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