Walk into any boardroom, strategy session, or executive meeting and you will notice a familiar dynamic. Some voices dominate the conversation almost immediately. Their delivery is firm. Their tone carries certainty. Their ideas are presented with conviction.
They appear confident.
And confidence, especially in corporate environments, can be persuasive. It captures attention. It signals leadership. It creates the impression of control. But if you observe long enough, long enough to see how decisions actually unfold, you may notice something interesting. The professionals who ultimately shape the final outcome are not always the most confident voices in the room.
More often, they are the most competent. This observation raises an important question for professionals at every stage of their careers:
What truly drives decisions, confidence or competence?
Confidence gets attention. Competence earns trust.
The Misunderstood Relationship Between Confidence and Competence
In many professional environments, confidence and competence are often treated as if they are the same thing. They are not. Confidence is about how certain a person sounds. Competence is about how reliably a person performs.
One reflects perception.
The other reflects capability.
Understanding the distinction is more than a theoretical exercise. It shapes how professionals build credibility, influence decisions, and advance in their careers.
Confidence affects visibility.
Competence determines credibility.

A confident professional is more likely to speak up during meetings, present ideas, and challenge assumptions. Confidence allows individuals to step forward and participate actively in conversations that shape strategy. In many cases, confidence is what opens the first door. But confidence alone rarely sustains influence.
Sooner or later, ideas must withstand scrutiny. Strategies must be tested against real-world constraints. Proposals must survive difficult questions. That is when competence becomes indispensable.
The Two Imbalances Many Professionals Experience
Competence Without Confidence
Many highly capable professionals struggle with visibility. They possess deep technical knowledge, thoughtful analysis, and valuable insights, yet they hesitate to present their views. They wait to be asked before contributing. They second-guess their ideas. Sometimes they assume their work will speak for itself.
Unfortunately, in many organizational settings, silence can be mistaken for uncertainty. Ideas that remain unspoken rarely influence decisions. Competence without confidence therefore leads to skills that remain invisible.
Confidence Without Competence
The second imbalance moves in the opposite direction. Some professionals project strong confidence but lack the preparation or analytical depth required to support their claims. Initially, confidence can be persuasive. It creates momentum. It shapes perception. In some situations, it may even drive early decisions.

But over time, reality has a way of exposing weaknesses. When assumptions are challenged, when deeper analysis is required, or when outcomes fail to align with projections, confidence alone cannot sustain credibility. Eventually, confidence without competence leads to credibility that collapses. Competence, in the long run, cannot be faked.
When Competence Leads and Confidence Follows: A Personal Reflection
At one point in my career, I experienced this dynamic in a very real way.
After spending several years building my foundation in the Life Insurance market, I had the opportunity to transition into the Non-Life Insurance (Property & Casualty) space. It was a new environment, a different set of risks, and a steeper learning curve.
Within just nine months, I was presented with an unexpected opportunity, an offer to manage one of a company’s branch offices. On paper, it was a great opportunity. In reality, it was intimidating.
I questioned whether I had enough experience in the non-life insurance market to succeed. My confidence was low. But deep down, I believed in my ability to learn, analyze, and execute.
So I accepted the offer.
I still remember the very day I was introduced to the office. My then operations manager made a statement that has stayed with me ever since:
“I know this office has got challenges, but see it as an opportunity to build your resume.”
That perspective shifted everything. Instead of focusing on what I lacked, I focused on what I could build. I approached the role the only way I knew how—with competence. I took time to understand the issues. I analyzed the operational gaps. I developed strategies to address them. I communicated consistently with my line manager, proposing clear action steps and practical solutions.
At one point, my manager told me something that reinforced the entire lesson:
“I don’t know how this will play out, but I want to trust your competence.”
That trust became a responsibility. We implemented the strategies. I provided regular updates, recommended adjustments, and tracked measurable improvements. Gradually, the results began to show.
Issues that once seemed overwhelming were resolved one after the other. Systems improved. Performance stabilized and the office was transformed. The role initially came with a six-month probation period. I was confirmed in three months.
Within six months, three additional offices were added under my supervision. Within a year, I was managing an entire branch with nine offices and over twenty-five staff.
Looking back, one thing is clear:
I did not start with confidence.
I started with competence.
And over time, competence built the confidence I needed. That experience reinforced a lesson I carry into every professional environment:

Confidence may open the door, but competence is what proves you belong in the room.
Lessons from Business Development and Analysis
This dynamic continues to play out in business development and strategic analysis. Confidence helps initiate conversations. It allows professionals to present ideas, engage stakeholders, and create momentum. Often, confidence secures the first meeting. But competence determines what happens next.
Deals do not move forward because someone sounds certain. They move forward because the assumptions were tested, the risks were understood, and the logic held up under pressure. Confidence may open up the conversation, but competence shapes the outcome.
The Quiet Power of Clarity
The most effective professionals I have worked with do not always perform with confidence. They project clarity.
Clarity signals that the thinking behind an idea is structured, disciplined, and well-formed. It reflects depth, preparation, and understanding. And when clarity is present, confidence becomes natural. It does not need to be forced.
These are the professionals who influence decisions, not because they are the loudest, but because they are the most credible.
A Simple Matrix Worth Remembering
To make this dynamic practical, consider this simple matrix:
- High Confidence + High Competence → The Ideal
These are trusted leaders. They communicate clearly and deliver consistently. They influence decisions and drive results. - High Confidence + Low Competence → The Risk
Persuasive in the short term, but credibility erodes over time. This combination often leads to poor decisions. - Low Confidence + High Competence → The Hidden Asset
Highly capable but under-leveraged. With the right confidence, these individuals can become top performers. - Low Confidence + Low Competence → The Starting Point
This is where growth begins—through learning, exposure, and experience.
This matrix is more than a framework. It is a reminder. Where you start does not define where you finish.
A Question Worth Reflecting On
Every professional eventually encounters the tension between confidence and competence. Some environments reward visibility. Others reward expertise. But in the moments that truly matter, moments involving strategy, risk, and long-term impact, competence tends to become the deciding factor.
Confidence may begin the conversation. Competence determines where the conversation ends.
So the question remains:
At the decision table, what matters more, confidence or competence?
Perhaps the better answer is this:
Confidence gets you noticed.
But competence is what ensures you are remembered, trusted, and given even greater responsibility.
Author Profile

Boniface Asante, MBA, ACIIG is a business development and analytics professional with over a decade of experience across corporate Ghana and the United States, where he drives revenue growth, market expansion, and data-informed commercial strategy. He specializes in business development, sales leadership, market analysis, and operational optimization. Boniface brings a relationship-first approach to growth, blending execution excellence with strategic insight to build high-performing teams and sustainable results.
Email: bonifaceasante30@gmail.com
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/boniface-asante
Facebook: https://facebook.com/nanayaw.boniface1
My research paper worth reading: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19560490