
Why Leadership Empathy Is Not Enough to Prevent Psychosocial Harm
In the last few years, we’ve seen a real shift in how mental health is spoken about in construction.
Leaders are being encouraged to be more empathetic.
To check in more often.
To genuinely care about their people.
That’s a step forward.
But here’s the gap...
Empathy on its own doesn’t prevent psychosocial harm.
I’ve worked with plenty of construction businesses where the directors genuinely cared about their teams. They were good people. They’d support someone going through a tough time, approve leave, or have a conversation in the site office.
Yet the same businesses still had issues with:
Chronic workload pressure
Poorly supported supervisors
Role confusion
Last-minute programme changes
Aggressive behaviours on-site
High staff turnover
Caring leaders.
Unhealthy systems.
And that’s where the problem sits.
Psychosocial Risks Aren’t Personality Problems
In construction, we’re wired to focus on physical risks such as, working at heights, mobile plant, silica dust, electrical exposure.
They’re visible. Measurable. Clear.
Psychosocial risks are different. They’re built into how the work is organised.
The way programmes are set.
How supervisors are trained (or not trained).
How deadlines are pushed.
How conflict is handled.
How subcontractors are treated.
You can’t “empathise away” a deadline that was unrealistic from the start.
You can’t check-in your way around a supervisor who was promoted without support.
And you can’t fix burnout by telling someone to “speak up” when the system makes it difficult to do so. This is something we've explored further in Burnout Isn’t Just Personal. It’s a Work Design Issue.
What Empathy Does Do Well
Let’s be clear, empathy matters.
Leaders who listen tend to:
Identify issues earlier
Retain staff longer
Build stronger site cultures
Reduce unresolved conflict
But empathy works best as a detection tool, NOT a control measure.
It helps you see problems.
It doesn’t replace fixing the reasons they exist.
Construction Makes This Harder

There are real pressures in construction:
Tight margins
Contract chain pressure
Labour shortages
Weather impacts
Constant programme changes
High client expectations
Under pressure, businesses default to output.
“Just get it done.”
That’s when psychosocial risk creeps in — excessive hours, unclear expectations, constant rework, unmanaged conflict.
And over time, it builds.
Not all at once.
Just steadily.
Until someone burns out.
Or resigns.
Or breaks down.
Often the business is surprised.
“We didn’t see it coming.”
But the signs were there.
They just weren’t treated as risks.
Psychosocial Risk Is a Systems Issue
If we treat psychosocial hazards the same way we treat physical risks, the conversation changes.
We wouldn’t say:
“We care about falls, so that should be enough.”
We put systems in place:
Planning
Supervision
Clear responsibilities
Reviews and adjustments
Psychosocial harm needs the same approach.
That means asking:
Are workloads realistic based on current staffing?
Do supervisors have the capability to manage people?
Is role clarity defined or assumed?
Can people raise concerns without consequence?
Do deadlines adjust when conditions change, or just get pushed harder?
This is leadership maturity.
Not soft skills.
Not slogans.
Structure.
System decisions, including how work is scheduled and resourced, play a major role in shaping risk, as discussed in Your Roster Software Could Be a WHS Hazard.
Why This Matters Right Now
April 28 is recognised globally as the World Day for Safety and Health at Work.
It’s a moment that highlights the importance of preventing workplace harm.
In construction, that conversation often focuses on physical risks.
But psychosocial harm is part of the same picture.
If we’re serious about safety, it can’t stop at what we can see.
It has to include how work is structured and how that structure affects people every day on site.
This applies whether work is carried out on-site or remotely, a growing consideration across the industry, as explored in Work From Home and WHS: Managing Safety Risks in Construction.
What This Means For You
If you run a construction business or supervise projects, this isn’t about becoming a counsellor.
It’s about taking responsibility for how work is structured.
You don’t prevent psychosocial harm by trying to be nicer.
You prevent it by reducing unnecessary stressors built into your operations.
That’s a different level of leadership.
It requires stepping back and reviewing:
Program logic
Resourcing
Role clarity
Supervisor capability
Cultural expectations on-site
It means treating psychosocial risk as a work health and safety issue, not a personal issue.
Practical Action Checklist
Start here:
Review workload expectations against actual staffing levels
Define clear role responsibilities for supervisors and project managers
Provide basic leadership and conflict management training
Establish a safe process for raising concerns
Review programming practices — especially last-minute compression
Address repeated aggressive or disrespectful behaviour
Include psychosocial risk in regular WHS reviews
These are structural controls.
That’s where prevention sits.
The Real Test of Leadership
The test isn’t whether your team feels you care.
It’s whether your systems prevent them from being pushed into harm in the first place.
Empathy supports safety.
It doesn’t replace leadership responsibility.
If you want to understand where psychosocial risks are sitting in your business and how your systems are contributing to them, get in touch with Synergy Safety Solutions for a practical review of your systems.






