Overcoming imposter syndrome
8 tips to help you break free, boost your confidence and do your best work to create a more sustainable future.
I was beach-combing with my dogs on Quadra Island when I got the weirdest phone call. It was a guy from Lowe's Companies, Inc. headquarters in North Carolina, wanting to know if I was interested in applying for a new job they had. It turned out that someone I'd met briefly at a conference a few years earlier was developing an Assistant Vice-President position in Narrative Architecture and Experience Design. She remembered me and thought I might be a fit.
I was simultaneously shocked, flattered and terrified at the prospect of becoming an exec for a Fortune 50 company. Too curious to say no, I suddenly found myself flying back and forth for interviews, touring the area with a real estate agent and scrambling to learn everything I could about running one of the largest home improvement retail businesses in the world.
Amid all of that, I was hit with a massive case of imposter syndrome. I was just a tiny little consultant from a suburb in Canada. They could hire anyone they wanted from any agency in New York or LA. What the heck did they see in me?
Fortunately, things were happening so fast that I couldn't dwell on it too much. Eventually, I summoned the courage to ask the question, first to the HR person touring me around. It turned out they'd recognized that they needed to diversify their workforce and wanted to bring in creatives who could help shift their culture and strengthen innovation. "Okay", I thought. "I can do that". Then I found the nerve to ask the VP (my conference contact) to whom I'd report. "Why me?" "Simple," she said. "You know more about the semantics [meaning, power] of storytelling and narrative for business than anyone I've met."
I was blown away. I'd never seen myself that way and immediately felt about two feet taller. Unfortunately, the whole thing fell through shortly afterwards when she was transferred. But it was a profound learning experience about the power of our inner stories to hold us back and limit our impact.
Many of my coaching clients these days struggle with imposter syndrome and all the self-doubt and struggles it brings.
According to Psychology Today, "around 25 to 30 percent of high achievers may suffer from?imposter syndrome.?And around?70 percent?of adults may experience impostorism at least once in their lifetime, research suggests."
The online coaching platform Betterup says that "imposter syndrome is a?cognitive distortion. It causes people to doubt their skills and accomplishments. They doubt others’ high regard for them. They doubt their own history and track record."
This in turn can be debilitating, stopping us from pursuing opportunities and creating huge anxiety and mental health issues, often resulting in a self-fulfilling prophecy of burnout, breakdown or failure.
However, in its article Stop Telling Women They Have Imposter Syndrome the Harvard Business Review also warns that there's a big difference between imposter syndrome and real discrimination. "For many women, feeling like an outsider isn’t an illusion — it’s the result of systemic bias and exclusion."
?? Though there's no quick fix for what is often a lifelong affliction with the feelings of inadequacy caused by imposter syndrome, there are things we can all do to break its hold on us and step into our power.
You have the potential to do great work to create a better future. You have everything you need right now to get started. You won't be perfect. And that's okay. No one is. The secret is to trust yourself and take the first step. It only gets easier after that.