The Confidence Gap We Don’t Talk About
Perhaps the problem isn’t that women lack confidence. Perhaps we’ve spent too long expecting confidence to come before opportunity, instead of recognising that it often grows because of it.
There is a familiar scene that plays out in workplaces, businesses, and homes every day.
A woman opens a job description and quietly begins comparing herself against every requirement. She has the experience, the qualifications, and the ability to do the work. Yet one or two unfamiliar requirements are enough to make her pause.
Maybe I’m not ready.
Meanwhile, someone else applies anyway.
This isn’t a story about a lack of ambition. Nor is it a suggestion that women are inherently less confident than men. It is about something more subtle: the belief that confidence must come before we put ourselves forward.
What if we’ve had it backwards all along?
We’ve Turned Confidence Into a Prerequisite
Confidence is often spoken about as though it is a personality trait, something people either have or don’t.
We celebrate the confident speaker, the confident entrepreneur, the confident executive. We encourage women to “be more confident” as if it were a switch they simply need to turn on.
But confidence rarely arrives before the first step.
It is built through experience, through repetition, and through surviving moments that once felt intimidating.
No one begins as an expert. Confidence grows because we act, not the other way around.
Capability Often Looks Quieter Than Confidence
One of the greatest misconceptions in professional life is that confidence and competence always appear together.
They don’t.
Some of the most capable people in any organisation are rarely the loudest voice in the room. They prepare thoroughly, ask thoughtful questions, and let the quality of their work speak for itself.
Yet workplaces often reward visibility as much as ability.
The person who speaks first may be perceived as the leader. The person who confidently presents an idea may be remembered more easily than the one who quietly refined it.
This creates a difficult balance for many women, who are often navigating expectations around confidence while also being judged differently when they display it.
The Weight of Feeling ‘Not Quite Ready’
Many women are taught, directly or indirectly, that preparation is proof of professionalism.
Preparation is valuable.
Perfection is not.
Waiting until every answer is known, every skill mastered, or every doubt resolved can become a habit that delays growth.
Careers rarely unfold because someone felt completely ready.
They unfold because someone accepted that learning often happens after the opportunity arrives.
Every promotion brings unfamiliar responsibilities.
Every business owner encounters challenges they couldn’t have predicted.
Every leader grows into the role.
Readiness is rarely complete.
Redefining Confidence
Perhaps confidence is not about certainty at all.
Perhaps it is the willingness to move forward despite uncertainty.
To ask for the promotion.
To negotiate the salary.
To submit the application.
To pitch the idea.
To say yes before every fear has disappeared.
That kind of confidence looks less like fearlessness and more like trust, trust that you have the ability to learn, adapt, and rise to the occasion.
A Different Way to Measure Growth
Instead of asking, “Do I feel confident enough?” perhaps the better question is:
“Am I capable of learning what I don’t yet know?”
The answer, for most accomplished women, is yes.
Confidence is not built in isolation. It is built in meetings where your ideas are heard, in interviews where you take a chance, in projects that stretch your abilities, and in moments where you discover you were more capable than you believed.
The Confidence Gap We Should Be Talking About
Perhaps the real confidence gap isn’t a gap in confidence at all.
Perhaps it is the gap between what women are capable of and what they believe they need to prove before allowing themselves to take the next step.
Closing that gap isn’t about becoming louder or more fearless.
It is about recognising that expertise doesn’t always announce itself, that growth rarely waits for certainty, and that confidence is often the reward for action, not the requirement for it.
Because the next opportunity may not be waiting for someone who feels completely ready.
It may simply be waiting for someone willing to begin.
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