Tag: Psychological Safety

Psychological Safety, Leadership, and Continuous Improvement

TL;DR: Psychological safety isn’t about comfort—it’s about creating the conditions where people can speak up, solve problems, and improve systems.

Psychological safety is the foundation of learning, quality, and continuous improvement. When people fear blame, embarrassment, or punishment, problems stay hidden and improvement stalls. When people feel safe to speak up, organizations learn faster and perform better.

These posts explore psychological safety through a Lean leadership lens—connecting daily behaviors, system design, mistake response, and respect for people. Drawing from healthcare, manufacturing, aviation, and executive leadership, this archive focuses on how leaders create (or destroy) the conditions for honest dialogue, problem solving, and sustainable improvement.

Psychological Safety is the Foundation for Continuous Improvement [Video]

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TL;DR: Psychological safety is the foundation of continuous improvement. Without it, Lean tools fail, Kaizen stalls, and people stay silent. Leaders must model and...

View Our “Ask Us Anything” Event on Psychological Safety and Lean

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Psychological safety is often described as "feeling safe to speak up." In Lean organizations, that idea matters -- but only if leaders understand what makes...

The 5 Most Controversial Ideas in The Mistakes That Make Us

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In writing The Mistakes That Make Us: Cultivating a Culture of Learning and Innovation, I wanted to challenge the way we think about mistakes,...

Flow Engineering in Action: Insights from Authors Steve Pereira and Andrew...

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Scroll down for how to subscribe, transcript, and more My guests for Episode #512 of the Lean Blog Interviews Podcast are Steve Pereira and Andrew...

Executive Summary on Cultivating Psychological Safety and Continuous Improvement

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TL;DR: Psychological safety is a leadership imperative for continuous improvement. When leaders create environments where people feel safe to speak up, learn from mistakes,...

Psychological Safety: Getting Your Say (Not Always Your Way)

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TL;DR: Psychological safety doesn't mean everyone agrees or gets their way. It means people can speak candidly, be challenged, and still feel respected--when leaders...

I’ll Be Speaking, Learning, and Facilitating at the Global Lean Summit

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I'm very happy to be participating in Jared Thatcher's "Global Lean Summit" event this September in Indiana. I'll be there to network and learn, which...

Psychological Safety in Lean Leadership: Insights from Mike Hoseus and Toyota’s...

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This episode of the Lean Blog Interviews Podcast explores psychological safety in Lean leadership through the lens of Toyota's culture, with insights from Mike...

Join Me at the Michigan Lean Consortium Annual Conference in August!

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I'm excited to share my breakout session at the Michigan Lean Consortium Annual Conference! In this session, I dive into the critical role of...

Learning From Mistakes: Psychological Safety and Continuous Improvement

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TL;DR: Organizations that learn from mistakes outperform those that hide them. Psychological safety enables people to speak up, strengthen problem solving, and sustain continuous...

Mistake vs Error: Is There Really a Difference? (And Why Leaders...

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What's the difference between a mistake and an error? When people search "mistake vs error," they're usually asking whether the two words mean different things...

Preventing Surgical Errors: Effective Strategies Over Warning Signs in Operating Rooms

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This is a Chat GPT / Dall-E generated image: It's silly, right? I've never seen a sign like this in an operating room. And I'm...
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