Imposter Syndrome vs Being Out Of Your Depth

imposter syndrome

This is one of those topics that gets muddied because it feels uncomfortable. Self-doubt, anxiety, nerves, pressure – our brains bundle them together and slap on the label “imposter syndrome.” But here’s the blunt truth I’ve learned the hard way: imposter syndrome and being out of your depth are not the same thing, and confusing them can quietly sabotage your confidence, your growth, and sometimes your career.

I’m not a doctor or a clinician. What follows is based on lived experience – leading teams, hiring people, watching people burn out, watching others grow, and occasionally realising I was the one who didn’t know enough yet. Psychology research helps explain the patterns, but the day-to-day reality matters just as much.

Let’s untangle the two properly.

Why This Distinction Matters More Than People Admit

If you tell someone they have imposter syndrome when they’re genuinely under-skilled, you rob them of a learning plan. If you tell someone they’re under-qualified when they’re actually competent, you rob them of confidence. Both mistakes are costly.

One leads to stagnation.

The other leads to unnecessary self-doubt.

And neither gets fixed by motivational quotes on LinkedIn.

What Imposter Syndrome Actually Is

Imposter syndrome is a miscalibration of self-assessment. You are capable, often demonstrably so, but your internal narrative refuses to update. You discount evidence, over-attribute success to luck, and assume exposure is imminent.

Key thing: the data says you’re competent; your feelings say you’re not.

Psychologist Pauline Clance, who first described the phenomenon, observed it most often in high-achievers who set impossibly high internal standards. Wikipedia has a solid overview of the construct and its history if you want the academic grounding:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impostor_syndrome

From personal experience, imposter syndrome shows up most strongly when:

  • You’ve just levelled up
  • You’re surrounded by people who sound confident
  • Your competence is real but still consolidating
  • Feedback is ambiguous or inconsistent

What Being Out Of Your Depth Actually Is

Being out of your depth is not a psychological flaw. It’s a situational mismatch.

You are missing:

  • Knowledge
  • Context
  • Pattern recognition
  • Or hands-on experience

And that’s it.

No pathology required.

The problem is that modern work cultures – especially knowledge work – treat skill gaps like personal failings. They aren’t. They’re just gaps.

Out of your depth feels uncomfortable for a good reason: your brain is signalling “I don’t have a reliable model for this yet.” That’s not weakness. That’s cognition doing its job.

Why People Confuse The Two

Because they feel identical in the body.

  • Racing thoughts
  • Hesitation before speaking
  • Fear of being “found out”
  • Over-preparing or freezing
  • The emotional signature overlaps almost perfectly.

The difference is in the evidence, not the sensation.

A Simple Diagnostic Question

Here’s the most useful question I’ve found – both for myself and others:

“If I removed emotion entirely, what would the evidence say?”

If the evidence shows:

  • Repeated successful outcomes
  • Positive peer or manager feedback
  • Comparable performance to others at your level

→ you’re probably dealing with imposter syndrome.

If the evidence shows:

  • Frequent errors in core tasks
  • Reliance on others to fill basics
  • Gaps in foundational knowledge

→ you’re probably out of your depth (for now).

That “for now” matters.

A Side-by-Side Comparison

DimensionImposter SyndromeBeing Out Of Your Depth
Actual skill levelAdequate to highCurrently insufficient
Feedback from othersGenerally positive or neutralOften corrective or instructional
Root issueSelf-perceptionExperience or knowledge gap
Best fixRecalibrating self-trustStructured learning & support
Risk if mislabelledBurnout, anxietyStagnation, overconfidence

Why High Performers Get Hit With Imposter Syndrome

Competence expands your awareness. As you learn more, you become more aware of what you don’t know. That widening horizon creates a feeling of inadequacy even as capability increases.

This overlaps with the well-documented Dunning–Kruger effect (where novices overestimate competence and experts underestimate it), which you can explore further on Wikipedia:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect

In other words: feeling like an imposter is often a sign you’re growing.

Why Being Out Of Your Depth Is Not a Failure

Every meaningful role transition puts you out of your depth temporarily. If it didn’t, the role would be a lateral move, not growth.

Problems only arise when:

  • Expectations are unclear
  • Support is missing
  • Ego prevents asking questions
  • Organisations pretend onboarding isn’t necessary

I’ve seen brilliant people fail not because they lacked ability, but because nobody acknowledged they were in a learning phase.

The Dangerous Middle Ground: When Both Are True

This is the nuance people avoid.

Sometimes you are out of your depth and you’re catastrophising it.

That’s normal too.

In these cases:

  • Your discomfort is justified
  • Your conclusions are not

The fix isn’t self-talk alone. It’s pairing reassurance with a plan.

How To Respond If It’s Imposter Syndrome

Name it explicitly

Labelling the pattern reduces its power.

Collect objective evidence

Keep a record of wins, feedback, and outcomes. Memory lies under stress.

Stop over-preparing

Over-preparation reinforces the belief that you’re barely coping.

Borrow confidence temporarily

Trust the judgement of those who hired or promoted you – until your own catches up.

How To Respond If You’re Out Of Your Depth

This is where honesty beats bravado.

Shrink the problem

Define exactly what you don’t know. Vagueness breeds anxiety.

Ask specific questions

People are far more willing to help with clarity than with general distress.

Create a learning sprint

Time-box the gap. “In 30 days I’ll understand X, Y, and Z.”

Normalise the curve

Every expert you admire once Googled the basics.

This is especially relevant in fast-moving fields like tech, product, and leadership – where roles evolve faster than formal training can keep up. I’ve seen this repeatedly when mentoring freelancers and founders via Fiverr projects: the best outcomes happen when skill gaps are acknowledged early, not hidden.

Why Leaders Often Get This Wrong

Many managers default to encouragement when instruction is needed – or instruction when reassurance is needed.

Good leadership distinguishes between:

  • Confidence problems
  • Capability problems

Bad leadership treats them as the same.

If You’re Managing Someone, Ask Yourself

  • Do they make good decisions once informed?
  • Do they improve quickly with feedback?
  • Are mistakes conceptual or procedural?

Conceptual gaps need teaching.

Procedural gaps need practice.

Confidence gaps need safety.

The Cost of Getting It Wrong

Misdiagnosing imposter syndrome leads to:

  • Chronic stress
  • Under-promotion
  • Quiet quitting

Misdiagnosing depth gaps leads to:

  • Overconfidence
  • Blame shifting
  • Career derailment

Both cost time. One costs trust.

A Final Reframe That Actually Helps

Instead of asking, “Am I an imposter?” try this:

“What evidence would tell me I’m doing fine – and what evidence would tell me I need to learn something?”

That question keeps ego out of it.

Growth doesn’t require certainty.

Confidence doesn’t require perfection.

And being out of your depth is often just the price of admission to the next level.

If this topic resonates, it’s probably because you care about doing good work. That’s not a flaw. It’s a signal.

Just make sure you’re responding to the right signal.

author avatar
Simon CEO/CTO, Author and Blogger
Simon is a creative and passionate business leader dedicated to having fun in the pursuit of high performance and personal development. He is co-founder of Truthsayers Neurotech, the world's first Neurotech platform servicing the enterprise. Simon graduated from the University of Liverpool Business School with a MBA, and the University of Teesside with BSc Computer Science. Simon is an Associate Member of the Chartered Institute of Professional Development and Associate Member of the Agile Business Consortium. He ia also the President of his regional BNI group.

Leave a Comment

Note: Please do not use this comment form if you are making an inquiry into advertising/collaboration. Use this form instead.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Scroll to Top