A View From the Exchange: a footballing lesson in psycho-safety
05 July 2024
05 July 2024
Like many, I have been disappointed by England's performances in the Men's Euros. More so, however, by the media and public reaction to those performances and the fickle nature of support for the team (**I am not exempt (sorry, Jude)**).
We are witnessing a blueprint for how to crush the confidence, culture and spirit of a young and talented group. Players such as Foden and Kane, who play off instinct for their clubs, are now hesitating and making careless mistakes (all signs of low confidence).
The intrinsic relationship between psychological safety and high performance transcends sport. Take financial services as an example –
Psycho-safety has its critics. Like professional footballers, workers in financial services are generally well-paid and (arguably) enter their respective industries fully aware of the inevitable stress and personal sacrifice involved. The argument seems to follow that these individuals should therefore 'lump it or leave'. Others argue that the stress and intensity of such work environments are important for personal development (the 'diamonds are formed under high pressure' argument).
A potential flaw to such arguments is that they seem to conflate psychological safety with 'comfort zone' (an inhibitor to development and performance). According to Harvard academic, Amy Edmondson, psychological safety in a professional context is ‘the willingness to express an opinion in the workplace.’ On this view, psycho-safety is crucial to encouraging individuals to depart from their comfort zone and therefore a foundational pillar to high performance. In the footballing context, it is having confidence to shoot from outside of the box without fear of blasting it into tier 3 (the alternative being to pass the ball about aimlessly (**pointing no fingers**)).
I end with one overriding observation from England's woes – we all need to feel like we have the crowd behind us (whether a single sponsor or an entire country). It's coming home.
Author: Paul Ryan-Brown, Senior Associate
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