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Glossary›Psychological Safety

Glossary

Psychological Safety

A shared belief among group members that they can speak up, ask questions, admit mistakes, and take interpersonal risks without fear of punishment or humiliation.

What is Psychological Safety?

Psychological safety is a shared belief held by members of a team or group that the environment is safe for interpersonal risk-taking. It describes a climate where people feel able to express ideas, voice concerns, admit mistakes, and ask questions without fear of being punished, humiliated, or rejected. The concept operates at the group level rather than as an individual trait—it is a collective perception shaped by norms, behaviors, and patterns of interaction within a team.

Unlike trust, which concerns interpersonal relationships between two people, psychological safety describes a group phenomenon. As organizational scholar Amy Edmondson notes, trust involves giving another person the benefit of the doubt, while psychological safety is about receiving that benefit of the doubt from others in a group setting. This distinction matters: a team can have psychological safety even when members don’t deeply trust one another individually, and conversely, strong dyadic trust doesn’t guarantee group-level safety.

Origins & Lineage

The term “psychological safety” first appeared in organizational literature in 1965, when MIT professor Edgar H. Schein and social psychologist Warren G. Bennis published Personal and Organizational Change Through Group Methods: The Laboratory Approach. They defined it as a climate “which encourages provisional tries and which tolerates failure without retaliation, renunciation, or guilt”—language that emphasized its role in facilitating change and learning. Schein and Bennis positioned psychological safety as essential for the “unfreezing” process in organizational change, arguing it reduced anxiety about being fundamentally accepted.

The concept largely disappeared from academic discourse for 25 years. In 1990, William A. Kahn, professor of organizational behavior at Boston University, revived interest through his paper “Psychological Conditions of Personal Engagement and Disengagement at Work,” published in Academy of Management Journal. Kahn defined psychological safety as “being able to show and employ one’s self without fear of negative consequences to self-image, status or career.” He identified it as one of three psychological conditions—alongside meaningfulness and availability—necessary for employee engagement.

The modern understanding emerged in 1999 when Harvard Business School professor Amy C. Edmondson published “Psychological Safety and Learning Behavior in Work Teams” in Administrative Science Quarterly. Edmondson shifted the definition to explicitly emphasize the team level: “a shared belief that the team is safe for interpersonal risk-taking.” Her empirical study of hospital nursing teams demonstrated that psychologically safe teams reported more errors—not because they made more mistakes, but because they felt comfortable reporting them. This paradoxical finding revealed how psychological safety enables learning behaviors that ultimately improve performance.

In 2015, Google released findings from Project Aristotle, an internal study of 180 teams that identified psychological safety as the most important factor distinguishing high-performing teams from others. This research, led by analyst Julia Rozovsky, catalyzed worldwide interest beyond academia. Edmondson’s 2018 book The Fearless Organization further cemented the concept as a management imperative.

How It’s Practiced

Psychological safety manifests through specific, observable behaviors and practices. In psychologically safe environments, team members ask questions without defensiveness, admit mistakes openly rather than concealing them, challenge ideas without attacking people, and request help without fear of appearing incompetent. Conversations include dissent and disagreement, yet remain respectful. People speak up about problems before they escalate.

Leaders play a disproportionate role in creating these conditions. Practices that build psychological safety include: modeling vulnerability by acknowledging one’s own mistakes and uncertainties; asking genuine questions and listening actively to responses; responding to bad news without shooting the messenger; framing work as learning problems rather than execution problems; and explicitly inviting input, particularly from quieter members.

Structural practices matter as well. Teams that establish clear norms—through team charters or social contracts—create predictability about how people will respond. Leveling power gradients helps: using first names regardless of hierarchy, rotating meeting facilitation, and pushing decision-making authority to those closest to the work. Regular retrospectives or debrief sessions where teams examine what’s working and what isn’t normalize reflection and adjustment.

Crucially, psychological safety does not mean comfort, consensus, or lowering standards. It coexists with—and enables—high accountability. Teams can maintain rigorous expectations while creating space for the vulnerability necessary to meet them.

Psychological Safety Today

Contemporary seekers encounter psychological safety primarily through organizational and team development contexts. Leadership development programs increasingly include modules on creating psychologically safe environments. Executive coaches work with leaders to identify defensive patterns and practice vulnerability. Team facilitation trainings teach methods for establishing group norms and conducting generative conflict.

Workshops and retreats focused on collective resilience, authentic relating, or regenerative culture often incorporate psychological safety practices, even when not using the term explicitly. The concept appears in diversity, equity, and inclusion work, as organizations recognize that psychological safety enables marginalized voices to be heard. It surfaces in trauma-informed approaches that acknowledge how power dynamics and historical patterns shape who feels safe to speak.

Edmondson’s work remains the primary academic reference, with her books The Fearless Organization (2018) and Right Kind of Wrong (2023) serving as practical guides. Online communities of practice, particularly in agile software development, human-centered design, and healthcare improvement, actively discuss implementation challenges. Assessment tools—including Edmondson’s seven-item team psychological safety survey—offer measurement frameworks.

Common Misconceptions

Psychological safety is frequently conflated with comfort, permissiveness, or “niceness.” It is none of these. A psychologically safe environment can be intensely challenging, with fierce debates and high standards. What distinguishes it is that challenges focus on ideas and performance, not on diminishing people.

It does not mean consensus decision-making or that all opinions carry equal weight. Leaders still make decisions; hierarchies still exist. Psychological safety means people can voice dissent and be heard, not that every suggestion will be adopted.

Some mistake psychological safety for a fixed state rather than a dynamic condition requiring ongoing attention. It fluctuates based on circumstances, composition, and leadership behavior. A team can lose psychological safety quickly through a single dismissive response to vulnerability.

The concept also cannot compensate for structural injustice or systemic oppression. While helpful, psychological safety practices implemented without addressing material conditions, power imbalances, or discriminatory systems may become performative—creating the appearance of safety without substance.

Finally, psychological safety is not identical to trust, though they’re related. Trust develops between individuals over time through repeated positive interactions. Psychological safety can exist in newly formed teams and describes group climate rather than interpersonal bonds.

How to Begin

For individual practitioners, start by examining your own responses to vulnerability. Notice your reactions when someone admits uncertainty or mistakes. Practice asking questions from genuine curiosity rather than judgment. Begin team meetings by sharing something you’re struggling with or uncertain about, modeling the behavior you hope to see.

For teams, take Edmondson’s team psychological safety assessment (available in The Fearless Organization) to establish a baseline. Hold a structured conversation about team norms: What do we want more of in how we work together? What should we stop doing? What helps people feel they can speak up? Codify agreements and revisit them regularly.

Read Edmondson’s The Fearless Organization for comprehensive guidance grounded in research. For a broader organizational perspective, explore Edgar Schein’s Humble Inquiry and Humble Leadership, which address the interpersonal foundations. Organizations seeking structured implementation might engage consultants specializing in team effectiveness, learning organizations, or developmental approaches.

Begin small: choose one team or one meeting practice to experiment with. Notice what happens when you genuinely invite dissent, acknowledge your own uncertainty, or respond to bad news with curiosity rather than blame. Psychological safety grows through consistent, repeated experiences that demonstrate speaking up is truly safe.

Related terms

collective traumaauthentic relatingconscious communicationgroup fieldrestorative justiceregenerative culture
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