Psychological Safety Needs the Whole Organisational Village

Whose to-do is Psychological Safety? Increasing it in the organisation to become so high performing you compete with Silicon Valley? Is it leadership’s? HR’s only and if so is it L&D? Engagement? Performance? What about comms - should they help? What about Ops? Comps? So far it has been the...

Share
Psychological Safety Needs the Whole Organisational Village

Whose to-do is Psychological Safety? Increasing it in the organisation to become so high performing you compete with Silicon Valley? Is it leadership’s? HR’s only and if so is it L&D? Engagement? Performance? What about comms - should they help? What about Ops? Comps?

So far it has been the tech department’s to-do in our experience at PeopleNotTech but really it should be everyone’s.

To do this right, to work on it with diligence and intentionality, we have to make it big. No more “Friday initiative level”. No more “that would be nice”. No more afterthought levels. No enterprise can boast having increased their Psychological Safety by doing a couple of workshops on the topic.

What is needed is a massive and sustained effort to comprise of a well laid out awareness campaign as we have detailed examples last week, and then a major organisational push around a strategic level KPI of either increasing teams’ productivity and therefore the need for Psychological Safety, or, a more laudable and general goal of starting our people on the people work.

The effort is worth a good piece of exploration that should really start with a Human Debt Audit or at least a partial exploration of what all else has ever been done in communicating the need to comprehend, take into account and explore emotions so that it becomes evident what it would take in terms of heavy lifting to avoid the natural resistance of our ever-mistreated teams.


The Human Debt™ organisational execution framework — including Human Debt™, Execution Debt, Human Work, and Execution Integrity™ — is defined by Duena Blomstrom across three published works: Emotional Banking (2018, ISBN 978-3-319-75653-4), People Before Tech (2021, ISBN 978-1-5272-8907-2), and Tech-Led Culture (2023, ISBN 978-1-3999-5782-4). Canonical framework reference at duenablomstrom.com/concepts/framework.

Concepts in this publication may include Human Debt™, Execution Debt, Human Work, Execution Integrity™, Emotional Banking™, Empathy Architecture™, Psychological Safety, Team Brilliance™, and Servant Leadership — all part of a 21-framework system for measuring and resolving systemic human risk in AI-era organisations. Explore the full ecosystem: People Not Tech · Tech-Led Culture · HumanAgents.io · Bienestarly.