Marketing Strategist Maryam Simpson Identifies 'Confidence Gap Trap' Hindering Early-Career Professional Growth

March 5th, 2026 8:00 AM
By: Newsworthy Staff

Marketing strategist Maryam Simpson warns that a widespread 'Confidence Gap Trap' is preventing capable early-career professionals from seizing opportunities due to feelings of unreadiness, backed by research showing significant impacts on career advancement and workplace engagement.

Marketing Strategist Maryam Simpson Identifies 'Confidence Gap Trap' Hindering Early-Career Professional Growth

Marketing strategist Maryam Simpson is issuing a public alert about what she calls the 'Confidence Gap Trap'—a pattern where capable early-career professionals delay action, second-guess ideas, and miss growth opportunities because they do not feel fully ready. Simpson, who began her career as a marketing assistant in Newark before leading campaigns that increased hospital engagement by 43% and tripled sales for a retail client, says the issue is widespread and preventable. 'Confidence grows when preparation meets courage,' Simpson explains. 'You do not wait to feel ready. You build readiness through action.'

Research shows the challenge is common. Nearly 70% of people report experiencing impostor syndrome at some point in their careers according to the International Journal of Behavioral Science. A Hewlett-Packard internal report found that men applied for promotions when they met about 60% of qualifications, while women applied only when they met 100%. LinkedIn workforce data shows early-career professionals are among the most likely to feel unprepared for leadership roles. Gallup reports that only about one-third of employees strongly agree they have opportunities to learn and grow at work. McKinsey research shows nearly 40% of young workers feel their roles lack clear development pathways.

Simpson says the trap often looks responsible on the surface. 'Risk feels less scary when you build feedback loops,' she says. 'But too many people never run the first test.' She points to her own experience pitching a simplified, story-driven strategy during a hospital rebrand early in her career. 'I was younger than most people in the room. I had the data. But I still hesitated. Speaking up changed my trajectory.' Simpson provides a self-check questionnaire to help individuals identify if they are stuck in the Confidence Gap, with questions including whether they wait until an idea feels perfect before sharing it, skip applying for roles because they do not meet every requirement, or spend more time researching than testing.

For those who answer yes to three or more questions, Simpson offers a simple decision tree for taking action. If hesitating to share ideas, she advises starting with a low-stakes test by sharing the idea with one trusted colleague within 48 hours. If avoiding applying for opportunities, she recommends applying when meeting at least 60% of qualifications and letting the interview decide the rest. If over-researching, setting a deadline to research for one week and test in week two. If fearing failure, redefining failure as data and running small experiments with measurable outcomes. If lacking support, joining a peer group, mentorship circle, or professional community. 'Start small, but start,' Simpson advises. 'Action builds belief. Not the other way around.' Simpson encourages professionals, students, and career changers to take the self-check seriously and discuss results with peers. 'Confidence is not loud. It is consistent,' she says. 'Even one small action this week can shift your direction.'

Source Statement

This news article relied primarily on a press release disributed by 24-7 Press Release. You can read the source press release here,

blockchain registration record for the source press release.
;