Overcoming Imposter Syndrome Imran Afzal UX Manager FGH / Otto UK @avimran

A pattern of disconnect between perceived performance and accomplishment @avimran

Attribution Theory Attribution Theory states that humans attribute success/failure to both internal and external factors, which then informs future responses We often attribute our success to external factors such as hard work - and not our own intrinsic ability @avimran

Occam’s Razor Our minds have evolved to trust the simpler explanation @avimran

Imposter Syndrome Imposter syndrome is a psychological pattern in which individuals have difficulties accepting their achievements, with a persistent fear of being exposed as a fraud The impostor syndrome first described by American clinical psychologists Pauline Clance and Suzanne Imes in 1978 @avimran

Triggers @avimran

Identifiers @avimran

Can Imposter Syndrome affect anyone? @avimran

7 out of 10 people experience Imposter syndrome at some point in their lives @avimran

Natalie Portman - Actress Actress (and Harvard alum) Natalie Portman described the self-doubt she experienced as a Harvard student. “I felt like there had been some mistake…” @avimran

John Steinbeck - Author “I am not a writer. I’ve been fooling myself and other people.” He admired his characters for being “so much stronger and purer and braver” than he was. @avimran

Doug Collins - UX Practitioner @avimran

Finding Balance @avimran

How can you overcome Imposter Syndrome? @avimran

  1. Find a Mentor Find a mentor that you can talk to and share fears with @avimran

  1. Focus on Learning Focus more on what you’re learning, than on how you’re performing @avimran

  1. Accomplishment Journal Write down what you’ve accomplished - and keep referring back to it regularly @avimran

  1. Don’t Compare Don’t compare yourself to others - your journey, perspective and destination is unique @avimran

  1. Pause & Reflect Reflection will help you make meaning of experiences and process your feelings/thoughts @avimran

Can you really overcome Imposter Syndrome? @avimran

A Constant Battle @avimran

We’re all Imposters No one knows how to be a proper adult, worker, parent, designer or anything else @avimran

“Sometimes the bravest and most important thing you can do is just show up.” Brené Brown Professor/Author/Researcher @avimran