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Most organizations think they’re promoting competence. What they’re actually promoting, with alarming regularity, is the ability to perform certainty under pressure. These are different skills. One builds things. The other protects a person from ever being seen not knowing how to build things. And the gap between them explains a remarkable amount of what goes wrong in workplaces, marriages, friendships, and anywhere else humans try to coordinate under conditions of uncertainty.

The Performance of Knowing
There’s a specific posture that gets rewarded in professional life. Shoulders back. Answer ready. No visible hesitation. It looks like leadership, and in many rooms, it passes for it.
But if you watch carefully, you’ll notice something. The people who perform certainty most fluently are often the ones who’ve learned, somewhere along the way, that being caught not knowing something is genuinely dangerous. Not intellectually dangerous. Emotionally dangerous. The speed of their answer isn’t confidence. It’s a flinch dressed up as decisiveness.
I spent most of my life confusing the two in myself. On a job site, I could bark out an answer to any question a customer or apprentice threw at me, and it took me an embarrassingly long time to realize that reflex wasn’t always competence. Sometimes it was fear of what would happen if I said the three most useful words in the English language: I don’t know.
I ran my own electrical contracting business for over two decades. In that world, hesitation costs you jobs. A homeowner doesn’t want to hear “let me think about that”—they want to hear you’ve seen this a hundred times. So you learn to project certainty even when the wiring behind the wall is something you haven’t encountered before. And after enough years, you stop noticing the difference between knowing and performing knowing.
Why Fear Looks So Much Like Competence
The reason this confusion persists is that fearful competence genuinely works, at least for a while. The person who never says “I’m not sure” rarely gets challenged in meetings. The person who delivers every update with polished certainty rarely gets asked follow-up questions. The system rewards the surface and ignores the substrate.
This connects to something I’ve seen play out over and over, on job sites and in life. The guys who talked the biggest game were often the ones who’d examined the problem least carefully. Meanwhile, the apprentice who paused and said “I want to double-check the specs” was the one you actually wanted wiring your panel. People with limited understanding in a domain often overestimate their abilities, while those with genuine expertise tend to hedge, qualify, and express doubt. The implications run deep in any place that decides who moves up: the people who sound most certain are often the people who’ve looked at the problem least carefully.
The result is a kind of inversion. The person who pauses, who says “let me think about that,” who admits the situation is ambiguous, reads as less capable than the person who fires back a clean, confident answer that may be entirely wrong.
What Promotion Actually Selects For
If you’ve spent time in any organization—or worked under enough general contractors, as I have—you’ve watched this pattern play out. The person who gets promoted isn’t always the one who does the best work. It’s the one whose presentation of the work creates the least anxiety in the people above them.
This is a meaningful distinction. A boss dealing with their own uncertainty wants someone underneath them who makes that uncertainty go away, at least temporarily. Someone who says “Here’s exactly what’s happening and here’s exactly what we should do” is soothing, even when they’re wrong. Someone who says “The situation is more complicated than we initially thought” is accurate but unsettling.
I’ve seen this cost people—good tradesmen, honest workers—real opportunities, because their honesty about what they didn’t know read as hesitance to the people writing the checks.
The cost is real. You end up with leadership layers optimized for anxiety management rather than problem-solving. And the people doing the most careful, honest, accurate work often stall out because their honesty reads as hesitance.
The Gendered Dimension Nobody Wants to Audit
This dynamic doesn’t land equally. Studies have found that the performance-of-certainty tax falls disproportionately on women, who face a narrower band of acceptable behavior in professional settings. A man who speaks with forceful certainty is “decisive.” A woman who does the same is frequently labeled “aggressive” or “difficult.” A woman who hedges honestly is “not leadership material.”
The result, as Forbes reporting on gender bias and burnout has documented, is that women face forms of workplace bias that directly contribute to higher burnout rates. Women’s overtime is rewarded less than men’s. Women’s efficiency is undervalued. The system doesn’t just fail to distinguish between confidence and fear; it applies that failure unevenly.
This isn’t a small thing. When we mistake the performance of knowing for actual knowledge, and then layer gender bias on top of that confusion, we create organizations that systematically filter out exactly the kind of thoughtful, honest assessment they claim to want.

What Genuine Competence Actually Looks Like
I’ve been thinking about this more since writing about what surprised retired men most about aging. Several of those men described spending entire careers performing a version of themselves that looked competent but felt hollow. One of them used a phrase that stuck with me: “I was so busy looking like I had it together that I never actually had to figure out if I did.”
Genuine competence has a different texture than its anxious imitation. It includes the ability to say “I was wrong about that” without the room collapsing. It includes comfort with partial knowledge, with the honest statement that you understand 70% of a problem and need help with the remaining 30%. It includes, perhaps most critically, the willingness to let other people see you in the process of figuring something out rather than only presenting finished conclusions.
I’ve mentored over a dozen apprentices in my career, and the ones who turned into the best electricians were never the ones who bluffed their way through. They were the ones who could stand in front of a panel and say, “I’m not sure what’s going on here yet.” That honesty is where real learning starts. The distinction matters because one pathway produces people who can actually navigate novel problems, and the other produces people who can only navigate problems that resemble the ones they’ve rehearsed answers for.
The Quiet Signals
If you want to identify genuine competence in a room, watch for the person who asks clarifying questions instead of immediately proposing solutions. Watch for the person who credits their team’s contributions specifically rather than absorbing credit into a vague “we.” Watch for the person who, when they realize they’re wrong mid-sentence, actually changes direction rather than committing harder to the original point.
These behaviors are the opposite of what anxiety-driven certainty produces. And they’re almost always the behaviors that lead to better outcomes over time, even if they don’t lead to faster promotions in the short term.
The Personal Cost of the Performance
Here’s what rarely gets discussed: the person performing certainty is often suffering inside that performance. They know they’re bluffing. They know the gap between what they projected in that meeting and what they actually understand. And that gap creates a specific kind of loneliness that’s hard to explain to anyone who hasn’t lived inside it.
I wrote recently about the hardest conversations in close friendships, and one of the things I kept returning to was how the habit of performing certainty at work bleeds into every other relationship. You start managing your friendships the same way you manage your crew. You start presenting to your wife the way you present to a client. The performance becomes the personality, and somewhere underneath it, the actual person gets quieter and quieter.
My own father was like that. Not in a loud way—he wasn’t a man who made speeches about how things ought to be. He was a union pipefitter who came home tired every night, fixed everything in the house himself because calling someone cost money we didn’t have, and still found the energy to coach CYO basketball on weekends. He showed you what a man was supposed to be by doing, not by telling. But he never once said “I don’t know how to handle this” in my hearing. Never complained, never cried, never talked about what he was feeling. I admired that silence for decades before I understood what it actually was. Not certainty—just silence dressed up as strength. And I don’t think it served him or anyone around him.
Unlearning that pattern has been, without exaggeration, the hardest project of my life. Harder than any job I ever wired. Harder than keeping a business alive through two recessions. Because admitting uncertainty when you’ve built an identity around projecting certainty feels, at a nervous-system level, like dying. It feels like the thing that keeps you safe is being taken away.
What Organizations Could Do Differently
The fix isn’t complicated to describe. It’s just hard to implement because it requires the people at the top, the ones who were selected by the old system, to recognize that the old system selected for the wrong thing.
Organizations that want to promote genuine competence over performed certainty can start by changing what they reward. Reward the person who identifies a risk nobody else noticed, even if they can’t solve it yet. Reward the person who says “I need to think about this more before I have a recommendation.” Reward the person who brings in someone with more expertise rather than faking their way through.
More fundamentally, leaders can model the behavior themselves. When a senior leader says “I was wrong about that” in front of their team and the world doesn’t end, it recalibrates what everyone else believes is safe. One honest admission of uncertainty from the top is worth a hundred training programs about psychological safety.
I’m not naive about how hard this is. Most organizations have years of selection pressure baked into their culture. The people making promotion decisions were themselves promoted for performing certainty, and asking them to suddenly value something different is asking them to question the basis of their own success.
But the cost of not doing it is a workplace full of people who are very good at looking like they know what they’re doing and increasingly poor at actually doing it. And eventually, that gap becomes visible to everyone except the people inside the performance.
The expensive suit still looks expensive. It just doesn’t keep anyone warm.
Feature image by Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels
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