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The Confidence Myth That Keeps High Performers Stuck

What three years of podcasting taught me about leadership, visibility, and starting before you feel ready

Dr. Christiane Schroeter
Dr. Christiane Schroeter
Keynote Speaker | Professor | Author
Doctor Christiane
The Confidence Myth That Keeps High Performers Stuck

The Confidence Myth That Keeps High Performers Stuck

Three years ago, I started my podcast, Happy Healthy Hustle.

Many high-performing professionals know the feeling of waiting until they feel completely ready before sharing an idea, starting a project, or stepping into a new opportunity.

I know that feeling well.

At the time, I thought the hardest part of starting a podcast would be talking into a microphone. Speaking later became a larger part of my work and eventually led to my TEDx talk. But when the podcast began, I was still figuring things out.

Recording a podcast felt like it should be easy.

It was not. The hardest part was something much simpler.

Pressing record.

Starting when I was not fully confident. Starting when I was unsure whether the episode was good enough. Starting before I felt ready.

Today, the podcast ranks in the top 1 percent globally. But the lessons that helped it grow were not what I expected. In fact, they had very little to do with microphones or technical skills.

They had everything to do with confidence.

And the truth is, those lessons apply far beyond podcasting.

They apply to leadership.

They apply to visibility.

They apply to every moment when we hesitate to share an idea because we want to say it perfectly.

Many high performers believe confidence must come first.

What I learned is the opposite.

Confidence is built in motion.

Lesson One: In the Beginning, Almost No One Is Listening

When people imagine starting something new, they often imagine immediate scrutiny. They assume everyone will notice the first attempt. But when I launched my podcast, the beginning was quiet.

Almost no one was listening. At first, that can feel discouraging.

But over time, I realized it is actually a gift. When the audience is small, the pressure is small. You have room to experiment. You can try new ideas, explore different formats, and make mistakes without feeling like every word is being judged.

That early stage is where growth happens.

The problem is that many people never reach that stage because they delay starting.

They wait until everything feels polished.

They wait until they feel more confident.

They wait until they believe the idea is perfect.

But the quiet beginning is exactly what allows you to build the confidence you are waiting for.

Lesson Two: The Episodes I Almost Did Not Publish

There was another pattern I did not expect. The episodes I almost decided not to publish were often the ones that resonated most with listeners. These were the episodes where I felt unsure, the ones where I worried the message might not be polished enough.

And yet, those were the episodes where listeners reached out. They would send messages saying the conversation felt real.

That experience taught me something important: people do not connect with perfection.

They connect with honesty.

When something is too polished, it can feel distant. But when someone shares a genuine insight or a lesson they are still learning, people recognize themselves in the story. Authenticity builds connection.

And connection is what makes a message meaningful.

Lesson Three: Confidence Comes Because You Start

After three years of podcasting, one lesson stands above all the others: confidence does not come before you start. Confidence comes because you start.

Every episode made the next one easier.

Every conversation helped me find my voice more clearly.

Every time I pressed record, I gained the kind of confidence that preparation alone cannot provide.

This is something I see repeatedly in leadership conversations as well. Many professionals are waiting for confidence before they take the next step.

Before they share their idea.

Before they speak up in a meeting.

Before they start a project.

Before they pursue an opportunity.

But confidence rarely appears first.

Action does.

Momentum creates clarity.

Experience builds trust in your own voice.

The Leadership Lesson

What podcasting taught me, I now see in leadership rooms everywhere.

Whether I am working with leaders navigating change, professionals stepping into greater visibility, or speaking to audiences at conferences and leadership events, the pattern is remarkably similar.

Talented and thoughtful people often hesitate not because they lack ideas, but because they want those ideas to be perfect before they share them.

They want to feel completely ready. But leadership often requires the opposite.

It requires us to speak before the message feels flawless.

To move before certainty arrives.

To trust our voice even when we are still growing into it.

Confidence grows through use. The more we show up, the stronger our voice becomes.

A Simple Reminder

Today, my podcast ranks in the top 1 percent globally. But it did not begin that way.

It began with uncertainty, a microphone, and the decision to start anyway. Looking back, the most important step was also the simplest.

Press record.

So if there is something you have been waiting to begin, consider this your reminder:

You do not need perfect confidence.

You do not need a flawless plan.

You do not need everything fully figured out.

Sometimes the most important step is simply to begin.

Press record.

Because confidence does not appear before the work.

It appears because you start.

Author Bio

Dr. Christiane Schroeter is a TEDx speaker, leadership strategist, professor of innovation and entrepreneurship, and host of the Happy Healthy Hustle podcast, ranked in the top 1 percent globally. Through her speaking, research, and podcast, she helps leaders and professionals move from overthinking to momentum, communicate with confidence, and lead with authenticity during times of change.

She delivers keynote talks and leadership programs on confidence, communication, and authentic leadership.

Watch her podcast reflection here: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/AsmqtmwSnrQ

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