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Gina Battye: Stop telling people to ‘bring their whole self to work’

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We talk about inclusion, belonging and “speak up” cultures. Yet many employees feel they must hide parts of themselves to get through the day. The truth is – authenticity (not just safety) is the foundation of great work.

At the Psychological Safety Institute, we define psychological safety as an individual’s experience of safety, comfort and confidence within a specific context; whether it’s a physical space, an environment, a situation or when interacting with people.

Authenticity isn’t an optional extra. It’s a fundamental part of psychological safety. Without it, safety exists at the surface. It doesn’t reach the depth where trust, creativity and performance grow.

What do we mean by “authentic self”?

Being your Authentic Self isn’t about oversharing, dropping boundaries or saying whatever you feel in the moment. That’s not authenticity. That’s impulse.

Authenticity isn’t about being unfiltered. It’s about being aligned.

Your Authentic Self is your truest, most genuine nature; who you are beneath the layers of conditioning, expectations and self-protection that build up over time. It’s the version of you that shows up when you stop performing and start simply being.

Imagine you’ve been working flat out for months and finally take a long-awaited holiday. On day one, you’re still checking your phone, mind half at work. By day five, you feel different. Relaxed. Creative. Joyful.

That’s your Authentic Self. Not a mask or a role, but the energy you access when you feel safe and connected.

Authentic self, identity and the myth of the “whole self”

Think of it like this.

Your Authentic Self is your essence; who you are beneath the layers of expectation and conditioning.

Your Identity is the version you’ve constructed through experience and habit; how you present yourself to the world.

Your Whole Self is everything that makes you human. But not everything belongs in every setting.

When you start a new job, you naturally curate how you show up. You share what feels acceptable and adjust how you speak or behave. That’s your identity in action. It helps you navigate social norms and keep safe. But over time, it can become a barrier.

Think of yourself on day five of that holiday; relaxed, the masks have dropped. You’re simply being. That’s the difference between living from your identity and living from your Authentic Self.

The goal isn’t to bring your “whole self” (every emotion, opinion or detail of your life) into the workplace, or to hide your Authentic Self entirely. It’s to create environments where people feel safe to choose how much of their Authentic Self to share. That depends on personality, power and place.

Authenticity isn’t about unfiltered expression. It’s about conscious alignment, between who you are, what you value and how you engage. When people operate from that place, everything changes.

The business case for authenticity

In our global study, 75% of people said they hide or censor who they are at work. 80% said they wish their organization was a safer place to work.

That’s not just a personal challenge; it’s an organizational issue. The energy people spend managing impressions is energy not spent collaborating, problem-solving or innovating.

When people disconnect from their Authentic Self, confidence drops. Creativity fades. Conversations become cautious. Curiosity disappears.

The business costs are real: lower engagement, weaker collaboration, reduced innovation and constrained communication.

Conversely, when authenticity is part of the culture, the impact is profound. When people feel comfortable being themselves, even in challenging situations, trust deepens. Teams communicate more openly. Leaders make better, faster decisions. Employees feel valued and respected. People stop performing and start contributing.

Authenticity drives the outcomes HR cares about: engagement, wellbeing, inclusion and performance. It’s not soft. It’s structural.

When people feel they can be themselves, they’re not wasting energy on impression management. They’re using it to do exceptional work.

Creating the conditions for authenticity

You can’t demand authenticity. It’s a choice. But HR can create environments where that choice feels safe and natural.

Here’s where to start:

1. Lead with self-awareness. Authenticity begins with understanding your own thoughts, triggers and emotions. Encourage leaders to pause before reacting. When leaders operate from self-awareness, they model safety, showing that authenticity and accountability coexist.

2. Redefine professionalism. Challenge outdated ideas about what “professional” looks like. True professionalism isn’t about conformity; it’s integrity, respect and consistency. When people can be authentic within those boundaries, performance rises.

3. Respect personal choice. Not everyone will want to bring every part of themselves to work, and that’s okay. For some, privacy is a preference. For others, it’s protection. Authenticity isn’t about exposure; it’s about freedom of choice. Respect boundaries.

4. Build awareness of identity and power. Recognize how hierarchy, culture and lived experience affect how safe people feel. When HR and leaders understand these dynamics, they can create fairer systems and stronger relationships.

5. Invest in real connection. Prioritize communication, empathy and boundary-setting. These aren’t “soft skills.” They’re human skills that build trust and collaboration.

The human advantage

Authenticity at work isn’t about being unfiltered. It’s about being aligned. It’s not the opposite of professionalism; it’s what gives professionalism its humanity.

Authentic Organizations don’t happen by accident. They’re intentionally designed to create the conditions where people can do their best work.

When organizations design environments that support authenticity, psychological safety follows naturally. And when psychological safety exists, everything else –   innovation, inclusion, engagement, performance – falls into place. Teams thrive. Cultures transform. Work becomes more human.

When people feel safe, comfortable and confident to be their authentic selves, if they choose to, they don’t just show up for work. They show up for each other. And that’s what creates truly exceptional workplaces.

Gina is a psychological safety consultant and trainer for multinational corporations. Through her personal experience and work with diverse clients, she has enabled organisations, teams and individuals to challenge harmful attitudes and transform outdated cultures. Gina now shares her insights widely through the press, across social media platforms and in her book The Authentic Organization.

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