Building confident cultures: unlocking organisational success
What does it really take to build a workplace culture where people thrive, perform and stay? More often than not, the answer is a confident culture, one built on psychological safety, authentic leadership and genuine belonging.
In this episode of Decoding Confidence, I explore what it means to create a confident culture from the inside out. From the financial cost of disengaged workplaces, over £23 billion lost annually in the UK alone, to the everyday behaviours that quietly erode or build trust, I break down what leaders, HR professionals and communicators need to know.
Whether you’re navigating toxic leadership dynamics, trying to improve employee engagement, or looking to build a more inclusive culture, I share practical, research-backed steps you can act on at every level of your organisation.
I cover the warning signs of performative inclusion, the dangers of the hippo effect, and why confident cultures are built through small, deliberate acts rather than sweeping strategy. If you care about retention, psychological safety and creating workplaces where every person feels they belong, this one’s for you.
Table of contents
- What a confident culture actually looks like
- Key topics in this episode
- The research behind confident cultures
- Timestamps
- Frequently asked questions
- Resources and links
- Final thoughts
What a confident culture actually looks like
A confident culture isn’t loud or performative. It’s an environment where people feel safe enough to speak up, disagree, admit they don’t know something, and bring their authentic selves to work. It rests on three things working together: psychological safety, authenticity and vulnerability, modelled from the top and reinforced in the everyday.
When those conditions are present, the benefits are tangible. You see stronger retention, better decision-making, and a deeper sense of belonging. When they’re absent, the opposite quietly takes hold. The hippo effect lets the highest paid person’s opinion override better ideas, performative inclusion replaces real change, and silence becomes a weapon that signals it isn’t safe to challenge anything.
The encouraging part is that a confident culture is built through small, deliberate acts rather than a single grand strategy. The language you use, the ideas you credit, the way you respond when someone raises a concern, these are the moments that shape culture far more than any policy document.
Key topics in this episode
- The financial impact of poor company culture, with over £23 billion lost annually in the UK alone.
- What a confident culture looks like: psychological safety, authenticity and vulnerability.
- The benefits of confidence in organisations, including increased retention, better decision-making and higher belonging.
- Recognising toxic behaviours: the hippo effect, performative inclusion, and silence as a weapon.
- Practical actions for individuals and leaders to foster a confident culture.
- Why small, deliberate acts matter more than one-size-fits-all strategy.
The research behind confident cultures
- Boston Consulting Group: Employees who can be their authentic selves at work are nearly 2.4 times less likely to quit. BCG
- Boston Consulting Group – Psychological Safety Levels the Playing Field: When psychological safety is high, only 3% of employees are at risk of quitting, compared to 12% when it is low. BCG
- Google’s Project Aristotle: Psychological safety is the most important factor for high-performing teams, with teams outperforming peers on every key metric. Amazing Workplaces
- BetterUp: Employees who feel a strong sense of belonging experience a 56% increase in job performance, a 50% reduction in turnover risk, and a 75% decrease in sick days. Business Wire
Timestamps
00:00 – The economic cost of disengaged workplaces and culture’s business importance
00:27 – Introduction to confident organisational cultures and their impact
01:01 – Defining the core elements of a confident culture
02:10 – Key indicators of a confident environment: safety, inclusion, transparency
03:00 – How leadership modelling of vulnerability and authenticity influences culture
04:48 – Positive outcomes of confident cultures: retention, decision quality, belonging
05:45 – Research backing the importance of psychological safety and belonging
06:38 – The detrimental effects of toxic behaviours and leadership flaws
08:03 – Red flags that threaten organisational confidence: the hippo effect, performative diversity
09:24 – The dangers of one-way feedback and silence when issues arise
10:15 – Addressing toxic leadership and its impact on team confidence
11:12 – Recognising and challenging toxic patterns, normalising positive behaviour
12:08 – Practical ways for individuals at all levels to influence culture
12:58 – The power of language, crediting ideas, and documenting experiences
13:25 – Managing micro-cultures and modelling behaviours as a people leader
14:21 – HR and communications’ role in shaping authentic culture
15:07 – Culture building through everyday deliberate acts and habits
16:03 – Small acts that contribute to a confident culture, and the importance of integrity
16:28 – Reflecting on personal influence: green flags and red flags in your workplace
17:24 – Sharing this message and engaging with Advita on LinkedIn for ongoing change
17:41 – Decoding Confidence and inviting guest suggestions
18:27 – Closing remarks and encouragement to lead cultural change
Frequently asked questions
What is a confident culture?
A confident culture is a workplace environment where people feel safe enough to speak up, disagree, admit mistakes and be their authentic selves. It’s built on psychological safety, authenticity and vulnerability, and it leads to stronger retention, better decisions and a deeper sense of belonging.
Why does poor workplace culture cost businesses money?
Disengagement quietly drains performance, innovation and retention. In the UK alone, poor culture is linked to over £23 billion lost annually. When people don’t feel safe or valued, they contribute less, leave sooner and take more sick days, all of which carry a real financial cost.
How do leaders build a confident culture?
Through small, deliberate acts rather than sweeping strategy. Model vulnerability, credit ideas fairly, welcome challenge, act on feedback, and pay attention to the micro-cultures within your team. Consistency in these everyday behaviours is what builds the trust a confident culture depends on.
Resources and links
- Decoding Confidence – The 7 Habits of Confident Leaders
- BCG – Inclusion Isn’t Just Nice. It’s Necessary.
- BCG – Psychological Safety Levels the Playing Field for Employees
- Google re:Work – Understand Team Effectiveness (Project Aristotle)
- BetterUp – The Value of Belonging at Work
Final thoughts
A confident culture isn’t built by perks or policies. It’s built by people, through the small, deliberate acts that either grow trust or quietly chip away at it. When psychological safety, authenticity and belonging are present, you get workplaces where people genuinely thrive, perform and stay.
The good news is that everyone has a part to play, whatever their level. The language you choose, the ideas you credit, the way you respond when someone speaks up, these are the green flags that build a confident culture one moment at a time.
If you want support with confidence, culture or internal communications in your organisation, get in touch: hello@commsrebel.com.