Practical Techniques
Technique 1: Create Low-Stakes Teaching Opportunities
Start with smaller, less intimidating knowledge-sharing contexts:
- One-on-one mentoring instead of group presentations
- Written knowledge sharing (documents, guides) before verbal presentations
- Informal lunch-and-learn sessions rather than formal training
- Collaborative problem-solving where their input is essential but shared
This approach builds confidence through gradual exposure and positive experiences.
Technique 2: Provide Specific, Evidence-Based Affirmation
Rather than general praise, offer concrete feedback that’s difficult to dismiss:
- “Your solution to the database issue saved us approximately 20 hours of work this month.”
- “Three team members specifically mentioned how your guidance helped them complete their projects on time.”
- “The client referenced your technical explanation as the reason they understood our approach.”
This technique counters imposter syndrome with observable evidence of impact.
Technique 3: Create Authority-Affirming Structures
Design situations that naturally position them as the expert:
- Formally designate them as the point person for specific knowledge areas
- Direct questions their way in meetings: “Jim, with your background in this, what do you think?”
- Create documentation that clarifies their area of expertise
- Establish mentoring relationships where their guidance is officially sought
These structures externally validate their expertise, making it easier to step into.
Why These Approaches Work
These techniques work because they:
- Address the underlying anxiety without directly challenging it
- Build confidence through accumulated positive experiences
- Provide external validation that counters internal doubt
- Create gradual exposure rather than overwhelming expectations
Remember Boundaries
While encouraging knowledge sharing is beneficial, respect when someone has genuine limits around public speaking or formal teaching. The goal is finding effective ways for them to contribute their expertise, not forcing them into uncomfortable roles.
Additional Considerations
- Some people fear questions they can’t answer—reassure them that not knowing everything is normal and acceptable
- Technical experts may worry about explaining complex topics clearly—offer support with communication approaches
- Past negative experiences may create hesitation—create safe opportunities to build new, positive associations
Related Tips & Concepts
See also: Creating Comfortable Teaching Formats, Supporting the Reluctant Expert, Understanding Authority Anxiety