Psychological Safety Training: A Guide for Australian Organisations
A comprehensive guide to psychological safety training in Australia. Learn what effective training includes, when you need it, and how to evaluate your options.
Psychological safety training helps leaders and teams develop the skills and practices needed to create environments where people feel safe speaking up, taking risks, and being vulnerable. This guide covers what effective training includes, when you need it, and how to evaluate options in Australia.
Training alone won't create psychological safety. But when combined with commitment from leadership and sustained practice, it accelerates the shift significantly. Building psychological safety also requires resilience—leaders who can stay regulated under pressure create safer environments for everyone.
What Psychological Safety Training Covers
Effective psychological safety training addresses both understanding (what it is and why it matters) and capability (how to build it in practice). These skills build on emotional intelligence—particularly self-awareness and emotional regulation. Leaders can't create safety for others if they can't manage their own reactions.
Understanding the concept
- What psychological safety is and isn't
- The research evidence (Edmondson, Google Project Aristotle)
- The neuroscience of threat and safety responses
- The business case and impact on performance
Recognising current state
- Assessing psychological safety in your team
- Recognising warning signs and defence mechanisms
- Understanding the gap between stated and actual culture
- Self-awareness of leader impact
Building skills
- Modelling vulnerability as a leader
- Responding productively to mistakes and bad news
- Inviting and receiving feedback
- Facilitating inclusive meetings
Having difficult conversations safely—developed alongside our difficult conversations training that gives leaders the skills to have direct conversations without damaging relationships
Read: Difficult Conversations Training →
Read: Emotional Intelligence Training →
Sustaining change
- Team practices and rituals that reinforce safety
- Measuring progress over time
- Handling setbacks and violations
- Embedding psychological safety in team culture
Signs Your Team Needs Psychological Safety Training
Consider psychological safety training if you recognise these patterns:
Silence patterns
- Meetings are dominated by the same few voices
- Questions are only asked privately, never in groups
- Bad news is delayed, softened, or buried
- People agree in the room but disagree in the corridor
Performance patterns
- Innovation has stalled
- Problems recur because they're not discussed openly
- Talented people are leaving
- Teams avoid risks even when risks are appropriate
Culture patterns
- Blame culture rather than learning culture
- Gap between stated values and experienced reality
- Hierarchical dynamics suppress junior voices
- Cynicism about cultural initiatives
Training Format Options
Psychological safety training is delivered in various formats, each with trade-offs.
One-day workshops
Intensive sessions that cover concepts and initial skill-building.
- Pros: Time-efficient, good for awareness and initial commitment
- Cons: Limited practice time, high forgetting rate without follow-up
- Best for: Creating initial awareness and commitment
Multi-session programs
Spread learning over weeks or months with practice between sessions.
- Pros: Allows practice and reflection, addresses forgetting curve
- Cons: Requires sustained time commitment
- Best for: Genuine capability development
Online/self-paced learning
Flexible learning that can be completed individually.
- Pros: Scalable, flexible timing, cost-effective
- Cons: Limited interaction, requires self-discipline
- Best for: Reaching large numbers or remote teams
Blended programs
Combines self-paced learning with live sessions and coaching.
- Pros: Flexibility plus interaction, sustained practice
- Cons: More complex to coordinate
- Best for: Balancing depth with practical constraints
Psychological Safety Training in Australia
Australian organisations face specific considerations when implementing psychological safety training.
Regulatory context
Australian work health and safety legislation increasingly recognises psychosocial hazards as workplace risks. The model Code of Practice on Managing Psychosocial Hazards published by Safe Work Australia identifies factors like poor organisational change management, inadequate reward and recognition, and poor workplace relationships as hazards requiring management.
Psychological safety directly addresses many of these hazards, making training relevant for both performance and compliance.
Cultural considerations
Australian workplace culture has characteristics that affect psychological safety training:
- Informality and directness can support safety but also mask issues
- Tall poppy syndrome may discourage speaking up about success
- "She'll be right" attitude can dismiss legitimate concerns
- Multicultural workplaces require awareness of different communication styles
Industry variation
Psychological safety training needs vary by industry:
- Healthcare: Focus on error reporting and patient safety
- Mining/resources: Safety reporting and speaking up about hazards
- Financial services: Risk disclosure and ethical concerns
- Technology: Innovation, experimentation, and failure tolerance
- Professional services: Client concerns and honest feedback
Evaluating Psychological Safety Training Options
When assessing training programs, consider these factors:
Evidence base
- Is the program based on established research (Edmondson, Google)?
- Can the provider explain the theoretical framework?
- Are there outcome studies or case studies available?
Practical focus
- Does the program include skill practice, not just information?
- Are there tools and frameworks participants can apply immediately?
- Is there opportunity for feedback on actual behaviour?
Sustained support
- What happens after the initial training?
- Is there follow-up coaching or reinforcement?
- Are there resources for ongoing development?
Customisation
- Can the program be tailored to your industry and culture?
- Does it address your specific challenges?
- Is there flexibility in format and timing?
Making Training Stick: Beyond the Workshop
The biggest risk with psychological safety training is that nothing changes after the workshop. Here's how to increase the odds of lasting impact:
Before training
- Secure visible commitment from senior leadership
- Communicate why this matters to the organisation
- Set expectations that this is a sustained effort, not a one-off
During training
- Include leaders at all levels, not just frontline managers
- Create specific action commitments, not just general intentions
- Address real team situations, not just hypotheticals
After training
- Schedule follow-up sessions to share progress and challenges
- Measure psychological safety at regular intervals
- Celebrate examples of safety-building behaviour
- Address violations quickly and visibly
Getting Started
Building psychological safety is a journey that requires both knowledge and sustained practice. Training can accelerate that journey when combined with genuine commitment from leadership.
Learn what psychological safety is and why it matters →
Explore the research behind psychological safety →
See practical examples of psychological safety in action →
Learn how to build psychological safety step by step →
How resilience supports psychological safety under pressure →
About the author
Ashley Leach is Founder of Leda. Leda's leadership development methodology was co-developed with Professor Anne Lytle (Monash Business School, Kellogg PhD) and has been recognised by AACSB's Innovations That Inspire. The platform has supported thousands of emerging leaders across Australia and New Zealand, with completion rates of 88-98% compared to 3-15% for typical digital learning.
Frequently Asked Questions
Costs vary widely depending on format, duration, and customisation. One-day workshops typically range from $200-500 per person. Multi-session programs with coaching can range from $1,000-5,000+ per person. Online/self-paced options are generally more cost-effective for large groups.
Both. Leaders have the biggest impact on psychological safety, so they should go first. But whole-team training creates shared language and expectations. The most effective approach trains leaders first, then the full team, with leaders reinforcing learning.
Yes, though it requires thoughtful design. Interactive elements, breakout discussions, and practice exercises are essential. Purely passive online learning is less effective. The best online programs combine self-paced content with live virtual sessions.
Measure psychological safety before and after using validated surveys (like Edmondson's 7-item scale). Also track behavioural indicators: participation in meetings, speed of bad news delivery, willingness to take risks. Meaningful improvement typically takes 3-6 months to manifest.