The quiet fear of being “found out” doesn’t disappear as you advance – it often gets louder.
We sit down with Amanda Witcher, UK and Ireland Director of Technology at Hays, to unpack imposter syndrome with data, candour, and tools you can use today. Amanda shares how her 17-year journey mirrors the tech industry’s shift from generalists to deep specialists, and why that change can fuel the myth that leaders must know everything. The truth is more human: credibility comes from clarity, emotional intelligence, and helping teams find answers together.
We dig into Hays’ latest research showing that imposter syndrome affects both women and men at high rates, and tends to increase with seniority. That matters in a field where AI headlines and jargon outpace real adoption, making even seasoned pros question their footing. Together, we separate hype from reality, explore how to turn self-doubt into curiosity, and offer concrete strategies – like externalizing fears with trusted peers, logging wins to counter negativity bias, and setting targeted upskilling goals that fit your actual role.
Culture becomes the throughline: inclusion isn’t a Slack channel or a single celebration – it’s a daily practice. Amanda outlines what supportive environments look like in real life: leaders who model vulnerability, teams that normalize “I don’t know – let’s find out,” and organizations that back flexibility, caregiving, and neurodiversity without guilt. We also highlight the power of mentorship, reverse mentoring, and active allyship to keep talented people in tech and moving forward.
If you’ve ever thought, “I’m not technical enough,” or felt pressure to perform omniscience, this conversation offers a reset. You don’t need every answer to lead; you need a mindset that welcomes learning and a culture that rewards it. Listen, share it with a colleague who could use a lift, and if it resonates, subscribe and leave a review so more people can find their way from perfectionism to progress.