Human Side of Construction
In this solo episode, Angelo Suntres tackles psychological safety — not as a soft HR concept, but as the operating condition that determines whether problems on a project get surfaced early or buried until they blow up. He breaks down the real cost of silence on a job site, why the old fear-based model has a shelf life, and what psychological safety actually looks like in practice. The throughline: it starts with the leader being willing to be wrong out loud. Key topics covered • Why most construction leaders can't remember the last time they admitted a real mistake — and what that signals to the crew • How silence carries a dollar value: rework, delays, safety incidents, and change orders that started as unspoken concerns • Why fear-based culture only looked efficient — and why it's aging out with the workforce • Psychological safety vs. accountability: holding a high standard without shutting people down • Concrete examples of psychological safety on site — toolbox talks, coordination meetings, apprentice questions • Why recognition matters and how flipping the feedback ratio changes the dynamic • How psychological safety directly improves physical safety • The challenge: be wrong out loud in front of your team Connections • Episode 10 — mental wellness and protecting the individual (“the me”). This episode is its counterpart: protecting the team (“the we”). Contact: angelo@hsoc.one [angelo@hsoc.one] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit humansideofconstruction.substack.com [https://humansideofconstruction.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
13 episoder
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