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Do you have this leadership blindspot?

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Most leaders are familiar with imposter syndrome. You know that nagging feeling that you don’t belong in the room despite clear evidence that you do. But there is another phenomenon quietly affecting high performers, and it’s rarely named. I call it “identity dysmorphia.”

It happens when your internal perception of yourself lags behind who you have actually become. You may feel uncertain, underqualified, or invisible. Meanwhile, colleagues, peers, and teams experience you as capable, influential, and even transformative. The disconnect is subtle but powerful. You are operating at a higher level than your internal identity recognizes, which creates tension between how you see yourself and how the world experiences you. In leadership transitions, this gap appears more often than we realize. And when it does, it quietly limits the impact you’re capable of making.

The Hidden Gap Between Identity and Impact

Psychologists have long studied identity misalignment in different contexts. Korn Ferry’s Workforce Global Insights Report found that 47% of all employees feel they have imposter syndrome and are stretched beyond their abilities. The same research found that 71% of US CEOs experience symptoms of imposter syndrome. But imposter syndrome assumes something different is happening. Imposter syndrome says: You believe you are a fraud despite evidence of competence. What we’re seeing more often is something else. Identity dysmorphia says: You haven’t fully integrated the version of yourself that already exists. In other words, your capabilities have evolved, but your internal sense of who you are hasn’t caught up.

The difference is subtle but important. Imposter syndrome is rooted in fear of exposure. A belief that you have somehow fooled your way into the room. Identity dysmorphia is different. It’s not about believing you don’t belong; it’s about not yet recognizing who you have become. 

In my work with leaders stepping into expanded roles, whether they are founders, executives, or individual innovators, I see this pattern repeatedly. Someone grows into a larger role, and their scope expands, their thinking deepens, and their impact increases. Externally, the system has already updated around them, but internally, it hasn’t. They continue to reference an outdated version of themselves, one that no longer reflects the level at which they are actually operating. The result isn’t just hesitation. It shows up as over-reliance on past patterns that no longer fit, under-leveraging their capabilities, and leading from a previous identity in the current reality.

When Growth Outpaces Identity

This phenomenon tends to appear when people move into a more multidimensional version of themselves. When a scientist embraces being the storyteller, an operator becomes a visionary, or a technical expert becomes a cultural leader, yet their internal narrative hasn’t caught up. They still see themselves as the analyst or the person behind the scenes, even as others increasingly look to them for direction and inspiration. This is not a psychological flaw; it is just what happens when growth outpaces reflection.

Harvard developmental psychologist Robert Kegan argues that the most significant leadership transformations occur when people expand their “meaning-making system,” their ability to understand themselves and the world in more complex ways. But meaning-making requires time, and without reflection, identity lags behind capability.

History offers a striking example of this phenomenon. Charles Darwin spent years hesitating to publish his theory of evolution. Despite overwhelming evidence and encouragement from peers, he privately worried his ideas were incomplete and feared how they would be received. For more than two decades, Darwin continued to refine his work, gather more data, and question whether he was ready. Yet to the scientific community around him, he was already one of the most capable naturalists of his time.

Darwin’s internal identity hadn’t yet caught up with the magnitude of the contribution he was about to make. It wasn’t until fellow naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace independently arrived at a similar theory that Darwin finally stepped forward and published On the Origin of Species. Sometimes the world sees our impact before we do.

Why This Moment Makes the Problem Worse

Today’s professional landscape accelerates this gap. Careers evolve faster than identities can stabilize, and roles expand overnight. Leaders are asked to integrate strategy, culture, technology, and innovation simultaneously. Add AI, rapid organizational change, and constant visibility, and many people find themselves performing at levels they have not fully processed internally.

Social media only intensifies the illusion that everyone else has a coherent narrative about who they are. When someone experiences identity dysmorphia, they assume something is wrong with them. In reality, they may simply be in the middle of a transformation.

Left unaddressed, identity dysmorphia creates three predictable patterns. First, leaders overcompensate with effort. They push harder, trying to “prove” themselves to an identity they have already surpassed. Second, they hesitate to fully occupy their influence. They downplay ideas, delay decisions, or defer to others even when their perspective is needed. Third, they fragment their leadership style, presenting one version of themselves externally while privately feeling misaligned. Over time, this fragmentation leads to exhaustion. Not because the work is too difficult, but because the identity carrying the work is outdated.

The Identity Reality Check Framework

Closing the gap between identity and impact requires intentional reflection. I often encourage leaders to think of it as a process of getting an identity reality check, aligning their self-perception with the leader they have already become.

The process unfolds in three stages.

1. Recognize the outdated identity. Ask yourself: Which version of myself am I still operating from? Often, it’s the earlier version of you, like the specialist, the individual contributor, the person before the promotion or breakthrough moment.

2. Gather evidence of the new reality. Look beyond your internal narrative and examine the external signals. What responsibilities have expanded? What impact do others consistently attribute to you? What decisions now sit with you that didn’t before? Identity dysmorphia fades when evidence becomes visible.

3. Practice the identity you have grown into. Identity stabilizes through repetition. When you show up consistently as the leader you have become—speaking with authority, trusting your judgment, occupying your influence—your internal narrative eventually catches up. You don’t become someone new, you grow into the version of yourself that already exists.

One of the most powerful exercises I offer leaders is simple: ask three trusted colleagues to answer one question. What impact do you experience when I’m at my best? Most people are surprised by what they hear. Not because the feedback is flattering, but because it reveals a version of themselves that they haven’t fully recognized. Identity dysmorphia dissolves when reflection catches up with reality.

Leadership isn’t just about expanding capability; it’s about expanding your identity. And sometimes the hardest part of growth isn’t becoming someone new, it’s recognizing who you have already become. The leaders who have the greatest impact are rarely those who push themselves the hardest. They are the ones who fully inhabit the person they have grown into.

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