24/01/2024
Are you responsible for leading teams or projects but inside you don't feel like a leader?
You don't have to question if you have what it takes when you reframe how you think about leadership, and stop comparing yourself to out-dated stereotypes.
For years I doubted my ability, despite evidence I could lead:
At university, I co-led the student wing of a political party.
At work, I was rapidly promoted to management.
At 31, I joined the senior leadership team of a breast cancer charity.
But I didn’t feel like a leader 🤔
It took years to recognise my leadership qualities. I couldn’t see my quiet, unassuming style reflected around me.
Comparing myself to bold, outgoing, 'charismatic' people, I believed I had to be more like them.
Then I stopped thinking I had to match the traditional idea of a leader and everything changed.
Instead, I paid attention to the excellent results of my team, and started thinking differently about what makes a good leader.
Self-doubt evaporated. I was free to focus on what mattered, which was improving services for people with breast cancer.
Do you doubt yourself because you don’t fit the traditional mould?
If that's you, there's three things you need to do:
1. Focus on your strengths more than your weaknesses. (If you don't know what your strengths are, find out!)
2. Collect evidence that you're good at your job. (For example, you could stick every scrap of positive feedback you receive in a file and scroll through it when you need a confidence boost.)
3. Challenge and change any unhelpful beliefs you might have about leadership.