Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Review of The Fearless Organization: Creating Psychological Safety in the Workplace for Learning, Innovation, and Growth by Amy C. Edmondson

This book review was written by Eugene Kernes   

Book can be found in: 
Book Club Event = Book List (02/14/2026)
Intriguing Connections = 1) Why Conflict Occurs And How To Resolve Them?


Watch Short Review

Excerpts

“For an organization to truly thrive in a world where innovation can make the difference between success and failure, it is not enough to hire smart, motivated people.  Knowledgeable, skilled, well-meaning people cannot always contribute what they know at the critical moment on the job when it is needed.  Sometimes this is because they’re reluctant to stand out, be wrong, or offend the boss.  For knowledge work to flourish, the workplace must be one where people feel able to share their knowledge!” – Amy C. Edmondson, Introduction, Page 12-13

 

“Psychological safety is not immunity from consequence, nor is it a state of high self-regard.  In psychologically safe workplaces, people know they might fail, they might receive performance feedback that says they’re not meeting expectations, and they might lose their jobs due to changes in the industry environment or even to a lack of competence in their role.  These attributes of the modern workplace are unlikely to disappear anytime soon.  But in a psychologically safe workplace, people are not hindered by interpersonal fear.  They feel willing and able to take the inherent interpersonal risks of candor.  They fear holding back their full participation more than they fear sharing a potentially sensitive, threatening, or wrong idea.  The fearless organization is one in which interpersonal fear is minimized so that team and organizational performance can be maximized in a knowledge intensive world.  It is not one devoid of anxiety about the future!” – Amy C. Edmondson, Introduction, Page 14

 

“Although perhaps an extreme case, the fact is that many managers are sympathetic to the use of power to insist that people achieve certain goals – offering clear metrics and deadlines.  The belief that people may not push themselves hard enough without a clear understanding of the negative consequences of failing to do so is widespread and even taken for granted by many in management roles, along with just as many casual onlookers contemplating human motivation at work.  What many people do not realize is that motivation by fear is indeed highly effective – effective at creating the illusion that goals are being achieved.  It is not effective in ensuring that people bring the creativity, good process, and passion needed to accomplish challenging goals in knowledge-intensive workplaces.” – Amy C. Edmondson, Chapter 3: Avoidable Failure, Page 71


Review

Is This An Overview?

Organizations that depend on intellectual and collaborative tasks need people who are willing to share their knowledge and different views.  But individuals can withhold information when there are costs attached to sharing the information, when the person who shares the information is punished. 

 

There are managers who think that fear can make people work harder.  A culture of fear is effective at creating the illusion that goals are achieved, not to actually achieve goals.  Fear can create silence in people as people do not want to get punished.  Silence is costly to organizations, as individuals can withhold information about mistakes they have made or others are making, and do not share ideas to improve the work process.

 

Within psychologically safe organizations, people are not hindered by interpersonal fear.  Psychologically safe organizations are fearless organizations, as they create conditions that enable individuals to take the risk in sharing sensitive or wrong ideas.  Individuals want to speak up, offer ideas, and ask questions when there is psychological safety. 

 

Psychological safety does not make people immune from consequences, nor enable an avoidance of conflict.  Psychological safety is being able speak about the conflict to find a resolution.  In organizations that use fear to motivate, less mistakes are reported but more mistakes are made.  In organizations that enable psychologically safe conditions, more mistakes are reported but less mistakes are made.  When the mistakes are reported, the mistakes can be corrected. 

 

Caveats?

A complex understanding of what is and is not psychological safety is shared.  The difficulty in developing a fearless organization comes from individuals having different values and culture.  What someone finds to be psychologically safe or unsafe, another person can have a different reaction.  As cultures change, what was considered safe or unsafe changes as well.  Fearless organizations need to find what enables people to share their different views.  


Questions to Consider while Reading the Book

•What is the raison d’etre of the book?  For what purpose did the author write the book?  Why do people read this book?
•What are some limitations of the book?
•To whom would you suggest this book?
•Why would someone not share important information? 
•What is psychological safety?
•How does psychological safety affect meeting times?
•What is a fearless organization?
•What is a culture of fear? 
•What are costs and benefits of staying silent?
•Why do counterproductive workarounds occur?
•How does fear effect the medical community?
•What happened to car emission tests? 
•What were Wells Fargo Motivator reports? 
•What happened to the Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant? 
•What is Pixar’s Braintrust? 

Book Details
Publisher:               John Wiley & Sons
Edition ISBN:         9781119477266
Pages to read:          208
Publication:             2018
1st Edition:              2018
Format:                    eBook 

Ratings out of 5:
Readability    5
Content          5
Overall          5