The real reason why you're holding back sharing your expertise


Over the years in HR, I’ve noticed something.

It’s often the smartest, most capable women in the room who stay the quietest. They have the ideas, see the problems before anyone else and know how to make things better.

But when it’s time to speak up in a meeting, ask for what they want, or show up on LinkedIn, they stay silent. Not because they’re weak, don’t care or that they’re not good enough.

They stay silent because being seen doesn’t feel safe.


Why smart women stay silent

In this week’s podcast episode, I talk about three big reasons this happens:

1. Conditioning

From young, many of us were taught to be 'good girls':

  • Don’t be too loud.
  • Don’t be too opinionated.
  • Don’t make people uncomfortable.

Later, corporate culture adds: be polished, be perfect, don’t be 'too much.' As mothers, we’re often expected to be agreeable, not cause trouble, and keep everyone happy.

2. Safety

For women, speaking up can be misread as:

  • aggressive
  • difficult
  • 'trying too hard'

So staying quiet feels safer than the risk of being judged, misunderstood, or criticised.

3. Perfectionism

You wait until the thing you say is 'perfect', and never say it. You wait until you feel fully qualified and never start.

This isn’t a personality flaw. It’s a protection strategy your brain learned a long time ago.


How silence quietly hurts your career

The hard part is this:

While you know you’re thoughtful and careful, others may read your silence as:

  • less confident
  • less competent
  • less potential

And when you want to stand out as a thought leader, build a business, or get that promotion, perception matters.

It affects who gets opportunities, visibility, stretch roles and sponsorship. Not because you don’t deserve them, but because people can’t see what you don’t show.


The good news: you don’t need to become someone else

In this week's podcast episode, I share how you can change this in detail.

You don’t need a 'new personality' or pretend to be someone you're not. You need:

  • micro-bravery (tiny, safe reps of speaking up)
  • different beliefs (about what it means to be seen)
  • a shift in identity (and how you're showing up)

Here are 3 simple action steps from the episode you can try this week:

  1. Choose 1 micro step, e.g. leave one thoughtful comment on LinkedIn
  2. Upgrade your belief, e.g. from 'I’m not experienced enough to share' to 'My experience can help at least one person'
  3. Reframe your identity, e.g. 'My perspective is valid because I’ve lived it.'

It seems small. But this is how confidence is actually built, one tiny rep at a time.


Listen to the full episode

If any of this feels uncomfortably familiar, this week’s episode is for you:

The Real Reason Smart Women Stay Silent (And How to Break the Pattern)

Listen here:
https://feeds.buzzsprout.com/1390135.rss


Want help applying this to your career?

If you’re a high-achieving corporate woman who:

  • knows you’re holding back
  • wants to share your expertise without risking your job
  • wants to show up on LinkedIn or at work more confidently, but doesn’t know where to start

I’d love to support you.

Book a free discovery call
We’ll look at your current situation and figure out how I can help you.

Click here to book your call.

Have a great week.

Sharon

Sharon Singh Sidhu

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