Psychological safety in the workplace is becoming ever more a concern, as our understanding of mental health evolves. But as an employer, how can you be sure you are fostering a psychologically safe environment?
Psychological safety means employees feel safe to take risks, share ideas, and be themselves without fear of negative consequences. Use these questions to reflect on your team’s environment.
Read our article Psychological Health and Safety in the Workplace for a more in-depth look at what psychological safety is.
There are 7 questions you can ask your employees, either through an anonymous survey or in one-on-one meetings, that will allow you to see where concerns lie and provide guidance on what needs to be done to make any necessary improvements.
This tool supports ongoing conversations, not just a one-time survey to help your team thrive.
Step 1: Communicate the “why.”
Share with your team the process:
“We’re using a short check-in to help us improve how we work - speaking up, learning from errors, and using everyone’s strengths. We want to make sure everyone feels safe to speak up, share ideas, and grow together.”
Step 2: Choose the format that fits your team size and style
Confidentiality: If you survey employees, make it anonymous and share themes, not individual responses. In one-on- ones ask permission before taking notes and confirm how they’ll be used. Google Forms and Survey Monkey are two examples of free survey sites that you could use.
Step 3: Share the themes of the results – not the specifics
Keep your team informed:
Step 4: Follow through
The 7 Question Check-In (with rating scale)
Suggestion: Do this survey anonymously through Google Forms or Survey Monkey.
Instructions: Circle one response for each statement.
Scale: 1 = Strongly Disagree · 2 = Disagree · 3 = Neutral · 4 = Agree · 5 = Strongly Agree
1. If you make a mistake on this team, it is NOT held against you.
1 ☐ 2 ☐ 3 ☐ 4 ☐ 5 ☐
2. Members of this team can bring up problems and tough issues.
1 ☐ 2 ☐ 3 ☐ 4 ☐ 5 ☐
3. People on this team accept others for being different.
1 ☐ 2 ☐ 3 ☐ 4 ☐ 5 ☐
4. It is safe to take a risk on this team.
1 ☐ 2 ☐ 3 ☐ 4 ☐ 5 ☐
5. It is easy to ask other members of this team for help.
1 ☐ 2 ☐ 3 ☐ 4 ☐ 5 ☐
6. No one on this team would deliberately act in a way that undermines my efforts.
1 ☐ 2 ☐ 3 ☐ 4 ☐ 5 ☐
7. My unique skills and talents are valued and used when working with this team.
1 ☐ 2 ☐ 3 ☐ 4 ☐ 5 ☐
Psychological Safety Score: Add all 7 ratings (range 7–35).
Item analysis: Look for any items ≤ 3. These pinpoint your most actionable opportunities (e.g., if Q5 is low, focus on normalizing help seeking ).
Trends over time: Repeat the survey quarterly and track averages. The goal is steady improvement, not perfection.
Use these prompts to explore each area without defensiveness. Pick 2–3 items that scored lowest or feel most relevant. Use open-ended questions and listen more than you talk.
Q1. Mistakes – “When errors happen, how do we typically respond? What would ‘learn fast, fix fast’ look like here?”
Q2. Raising issues – “What topics feel hard to bring up? What would make it easier?”
Q3. Acceptance – “Where might people feel they need to ‘fit in’ versus be themselves? Any norms we should rethink?”
Q4. Risk taking – “What small experiments could we try where it’s okay if they don’t work?”
Q5. Asking for help – “When was it hard to ask for help? How can we make seeking normal?”
Q6. No undermining – “Have you seen behaviours that chip away at trust (e.g., eyerolling, side comments)? How should we address them together?”
Q7. Using strengths – “Which of your strengths are underused? What project or task could tap into them?”
Manager micro scripts (psychologically safe responses):
Do:
Don’t:
Below are quick wins and sustainable habits for each question. Choose 1–2 per quarter.
Q1. Mistakes not held against you
Q2. Raising problems & tough issues
Q3. Acceptance of differences
Q4. Safety to take risks
Q5. Ease of asking for help
Q6. No undermining behaviour
Q7. Using unique skills & talents
CFIB members can access multiple templates, posters and checklists in the Member Portal to help build psychological safety in the workplace:
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