“Overcoming the Fear That Haunts Your Success” – The Effectiveness of Interventions for Reducing the Impostor Phenomenon

Mirjam Zanchetta, Sabine Junker, Anna-Maria Wolf, Eva Traut-Mattausch

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The impostor phenomenon (IP) refers to intense thoughts of fraudulence reported by high-achieving individuals. Since it has been shown to account for several personal and work-related complications, effective interventions are greatly needed. Against the background of mindset theory, we developed and tested two mindset interventions. We evaluated the impact of a coaching and a training intervention adopting a randomized controlled outcome design. One hundred and three young employees were randomly assigned to receive coaching (n = 36), training (n = 33), or no intervention (n = 34). Results reveal that coaching was an effective mindset intervention for sustainably reducing IP scores. Fear of negative evaluation emerged to mediate the relation between the coaching intervention and the reduced IP scores significantly. Moreover, coaching improved self-enhancing attributions and self-efficacy and reduced the tendency to cover up errors as well as the fear of negative evaluation. Training was superior in regard to knowledge acquisition. Specific implications are discussed.
Original languageEnglish
Article number405
Number of pages15
JournalFrontiers in Psychology
Volume11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 May 2020

Bibliographical note

Copyright © 2020 Zanchetta, Junker, Wolf and Traut-Mattausch.

Keywords

  • coaching
  • impostor phenomenon
  • intervention
  • mindset theory
  • training

Fields of Science and Technology Classification 2012

  • 501 Psychology

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