Have you ever felt this way? When your success feels undeserved, or maybe you always have a thought of being caught despite doing everything right. This is called imposter syndrome. There is a constant lingering thought that we are undeserving. This tells us a story that confidence does not come naturally and effortlessly as it seems to be. It takes time to cultivate. However, in corporate America, confidence is no longer considered a good-to-have skill; it has become an expectation stitched into the everyday rhythm of work.A new survey by MyPerfectResume, conducted via Pollfish among 1,000 full-time US workers, finds that 43% of employees experience impostor syndrome at work, a persistent feeling that their success is undeserved or that they may eventually be “found out,” despite evidence of competence.The finding opens a deeper question about modern workplaces: what happens when confidence is required, but not always felt?A workplace built on performance of certaintyThe data suggests that impostor feelings are not isolated experiences but part of a broader cultural pressure.66% of workers say they feel pressure to appear more confident or knowledgeable than they actually are65% report that leaders rarely or never speak openly about their own doubts or mistakes74% cite comparison, expectations, or perfectionism as key drivers of self-doubtIn such an environment, employees often learn to manage impressions as much as they manage tasks. Confidence becomes something to display rather than something to build.This creates what can be described as a “confidence gap,” the distance between internal uncertainty and external performance.Self-doubt is less about ability, more about environmentContrary to the idea that impostor syndrome stems from individual insecurity, the survey points strongly toward workplace structure and culture.Workers identify multiple external triggers:Comparing themselves to high-achieving peersPressure from management expectationsPersonal perfectionism shaped by workplace standardsLack of feedback or recognitionOnly a small share of employees say they do not experience self-doubt at all, suggesting that this is not a marginal issue but a widespread condition of modern work life.How impostor feelings shape daily work behaviorThe effects of self-doubt may not always be clear, but they consistently influence employee behavior.As per the survey:56% work hard or understate their accomplishments45% constantly compare themselves with others and have inner doubts33% stay away from attention or avoid taking up new challenges19% often ask for reassurance from coworkers and supervisorsThese behaviors, while seemingly diligent or careful at first glance, eventually end up constraining visibility, hindering career growth, and limiting one’s ability to take risks.The career cost of feeling “not enough”The consequences extend beyond emotional discomfort.58% of workers say impostor syndrome has negatively affected their career growth7% have turned down major opportunities because of itThis suggests a significant career filter: not every missed promotion or leadership role is due to lack of skill, some are due to lack of perceived readiness.In workplaces where confidence is equated with competence, hesitation can become a hidden barrier.How leaders pretend to be perfectOne of the strongest signals in the data is the absence of vulnerability from leadership.65% of employees say leaders rarely or never talk openly about their own mistakes or uncertaintiesOnly 35% say such conversations happen even occasionallyThis silence has a cascading effect. When leaders appear consistently certain, employees often assume that doubt is abnormal rather than universal.As a result, impostor feelings are not challenged; they are effortlessly normalised.Why confidence has become a workplace currencyModern workplaces increasingly reward visible certainty, clear answers, quick decisions, and polished communication. On the other hand, slower processes of growth like doubting, experimenting, and uncertainty may not be visible in measures of performance.The difference here causes an environment where people experience an urge to perform with confidence despite lacking it.With time, this difference in performance will cause burnout, lack of psychological safety, and reluctance to take up challenging positions, particularly by young people entering their careers and individuals changing careers.The bigger question behind the numbersThe finding that 43% of workers experience impostor syndrome is not just a statistic about insecurity. It reflects a deeper tension in how work is structured and rewarded. In a system that prizes certainty, what space is left for learning in public?And in a culture where confidence is expected on display, how many capable professionals are holding themselves back, not because they lack ability, but because they do not yet feel they are allowed to grow visibly?That gap may be the real story behind America’s confidence-driven workplaces.Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!