Collaborythm

Psychological Safety: Layer 2 of PX

Psychological Safety makes a great team

What makes a great team? That’s what Google tried to discover through a 2-years long study called Project Aristotle. The result was surprising – the common denominator for the highest-performing teams is psychological safety. 

Layer 2 of PX calls for ‘Balanced’ Psychological Safety. In this post, I will introduce the concept of psychological safety. I will address the ‘balanced’ part in a later post.

Dr. Amy C. Edmondson, professor of Leadership at Harvard, first introduced the concept of team psychological safety. She defined it as “a shared belief held by team members that the team is safe for interpersonal risk-taking.”  

When an employee feels psychologically safe, she will be comfortable and secure in sharing ideas or concerns because she is not worried about being judged or receiving criticism. This emotional safety clears the way for quicker decisions, a creative approach to problem-solving, and calculated risks.  

What is Psychological Safety?

A work environment where people are:

  • Comfortable expressing themselves and asking questions without fear of being humiliated or ignored, 
  • Comfortable sharing concerns and reporting mistakes without fear of embarrassment or retribution. 
  • Confident, honest, and trustworthy 
  • Respectful of colleagues
  • Leaders gain strength through sharing vulnerability 

Psychological Safety is not:

  • About being nice or saying what you think the other person wants to hear 
  • Guaranteed applause for everything people have to say at work and praising without any reason or purpose.
  • A personality factor
  • Lack of accountability and tolerance to toxic behaviors
  • Just another word for trust (the key difference between trust and psychological safety, as Edmondson says, “trust is about giving others the benefit of the doubt, and psychological safety relates to whether others will give you the benefit of the doubt when, for instance, you have asked for help or admitted a mistake.”)
  • About lowering performance standards: psychological safety is not about being “comfortable” at work or about creating an “anything goes” environment
  • Becoming friends with your direct reports or colleagues

Benefits of Psychological Safety

  • Enhanced employee engagement
  • Improved employee well-being
  • Greater team cohesion and performance
  • Reduced employee turnover
  • A psychologically safe environment encourages creativity and new ideas
  • Employees become avid brand ambassadors
  • Rapid value creation
  • People express their opinions honestly on different sides of a conflict 

Symptoms of an environment without psychological safety:

  • Teammates are reluctant or slow to share ideas, opinions, or concerns
  • Leadership may listen to concerns, and requests for help or ideas but rarely take appropriate action.
  • Hesitate to take ownership of the assignment
  • People are rarely inspired. They are not motivated to be proactive or take the initiative
  • Team morale is persistently low
  • Turnover is persistently high
  • The team’s spirit is dictated by compliance over commitment. 
  • Unhealthy competition within the team trumps cooperation.
  • Team members rarely challenge the status quo.
  • Leaders or employees rarely admit weaknesses or mistakes.

References

The Fearless Organization: Creating Psychological Safety in the Workplace for Learning, Innovation, and Growth by Amy C. Edmondson

Why psychological safety at work matters and how to create it By Dr. Jacinta Jiménez, PsyD

Why psychological safety matters and what to do about it by AMY EDMONDSON AND JEFF POLZER, HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL SEPTEMBER 06, 2016

How to Create Psychological Safety at Work and Why It Makes a Difference

Psychological safety: The secret to Google’s top teams’ success – and 5 lessons for workplaces

GUIDE: Understand Team Effectiveness

Improving Psychological Safety at Work: A Five-Point Plan

Tool: Foster psychological safety

Credit: Photo by Alex Shutin on Unsplash

Latest Posts

The Science of Workspace Magic

Transform Your Office into a Haven of Inspiration and Teamwork John Thompson was holding a pencil. Margaret Keller asked John, “Would you like an open office or your own

Equation of Inspiration when neurotransmitters at play. What the heck is neurotransmitters anyway?

The Neurochemistry of Success

Hack Your Brain’s Equation for Workplace Inspiration “How could I miss it?” Hope asked herself. Her fingers trembled as she typed the email, the words blurring before her eyes.

Infinite mindset in finite projects

Enigma of an Infinite Mindset in Projects

A project is a set of tasks that must be completed within a defined (finite) timeline. So, how can the Infinite Mindset apply to projects? And why should we

Is our project-based lifestyle killing our spiritual life?

Project management framework vs. spirituality

Is our project-based lifestyle creating a barrier to our spiritual life? Do a mindfulness exercise during work and experience the pull in the opposite direction.  Projects and spirituality –

Five Lessons for Managing a Project in Crisis

Managing a project in crisis: five lessons in PX

Mike could have been a character from a mobster movie like “Godfather” or “Goodfellas.” Every line he delivered had that laid-back tone, laced with a hint of Okie drawl,

PX Signals make all the difference

PX Signals: why are they vital for PX?

Credit: Photo by Luuk Wouters on Unsplash Why is it hard to implement PX framework? Projects have two significant challenges that make properly implementing the PX framework difficult.   1.

Traditional project management framework does not incorporate human experience as an integral part.

Why Human-Centered Project Management?

I bet most people who have worked on projects have heard or thought of some versions of the following sentences: 

“I understand what we are doing, but no earthly idea

Setting up a project for the best experience: Four states of PX

Four layers of the PX framework

In the last blog, I showed Human Centered Project Management has two components. PX & PI. This post is on PX. PX stands for Project Experience. With PX, we

PX + PI = HCPM — Project Management Redefined.

Resources

Copyright © 2022 Collaborythm | Powered by Collaborythm