James R. Rector
Publisher, Profiles in Leadership Journal
Confidence often grows with experience. Yet in uncertain times, the most seasoned leaders may feel less sure, not more. This is the paradox.
The world moves faster than expertise. New risks appear before old ones are mastered. Leaders who admit uncertainty, yet act with preparation, create more confidence than those who pretend to know it all.
Confidence does not come from tenure. It comes from readiness. Run scenarios, invite contrary views, and rehearse responses before crises hit. Confidence built on preparation is more durable than confidence built on history.
At Home
Parents face the same paradox. Children sense when a parent does not know what comes next. Honesty combined with steadiness builds trust more than false certainty. Families learn that confidence is not knowing everything, but being prepared to face anything together.
Your question: Where could preparation, not past experience, be the real source of confidence for you right now?
About the series: The 3-Minute Leader™ is a weekly micro-essay for emerging and promotable executives.