Doubt is tricky. It’s both a warning signal and an invitation.
No Doubt is the posture of confidence. The clarity of vision that moves people, inspires action and sets the course. It’s the feeling when everything clicks, when the direction is clear, and when decisions are made without hesitation.
In Doubt, however, is where many leaders, creatives, and decision-makers find themselves more often than they’d like to admit. It’s the space of hesitation, second-guessing, and questioning if the next move is the right one.
So, which one is better? The answer isn’t as obvious as it seems.
Are you operating from No Doubt or In Doubt?
NOW: The Power (and Danger) of No Doubt
We admire those who seem to lead with No Doubt. Those are the ones who project certainty, make decisive moves, and commit fully to their vision.
But here’s the truth: certainty can be a trap.
~ No Doubt can blind you to better alternatives. If you’re too sure, you stop listening, stop iterating, and miss signals that might change everything.
~ No Doubt can alienate others. If you push forward with total conviction without considering other perspectives, you create resistance rather than alignment.
~ No Doubt can be mistaken for real confidence. Some leaders mistake stubbornness for strength. But conviction without adaptability is just ego in disguise.
Take a moment:
Where in your leadership or decision-making are you operating with No Doubt?
Is that clarity real or are you holding onto it because uncertainty feels uncomfortable?
The Now is about recognizing that absolute certainty can be just as risky as hesitation.
NEW: The Hidden Power of Being In Doubt
We’re trained to believe doubt is a weakness. It’s not.
Being In Doubt—when harnessed correctly—is one of the most powerful tools for creativity, leadership, and reinvention.
Here’s how:
1. Doubt Creates Openings – When you question something, you’re making room for better ideas to emerge. Some of the best innovations come from leaders who were willing to say, “What if we’re wrong?”
2. Doubt Encourages Learning – If you’re in doubt, it means you haven’t settled. You’re still exploring, still testing, and still refining.
3. Doubt Builds Trust – A leader who acknowledges uncertainty invites collaboration. It signals to others that their input matters.
But here’s the catch: Doubt only works if you don’t get stuck in it.
Ask yourself:
Where am I In Doubt right now?
Am I using that doubt to explore—or am I letting it stall me?
In the New, doubt becomes a tool rather than a trap.
NEXT: Knowing When to Shift Between No Doubt and In Doubt
The best leaders, creators, and decision-makers don’t live in one mode or the other. They move fluidly between No Doubt and In Doubt.
~ They start in doubt. They ask questions, explore options, and challenge assumptions.
~ Then they move to conviction. Once they’ve explored enough, they commit fully and push ahead.
~ And then they revisit doubt when necessary. They stay open, and willing to adapt when new information comes in.
Ask yourself:
Where in my life or leadership do I need to embrace doubt before moving forward?
Where am I too certain and could benefit from asking better questions?
Payoff: The Leaders Who Win Know How to Play Between the Two
Being stuck in No Doubt is dangerous. So is being stuck In Doubt.
In the Now, assess where you are operating from certainty or hesitation.
In the New, use doubt as a tool to explore rather than as a reason to stall.
In the Next, master the ability to shift between doubt and conviction, using both as a competitive advantage.
Here’s your challenge:
If you’re In doubt, don’t let it freeze you—let it push you to explore.
If you’re in No Doubt, don’t let it blind you—make sure it’s earned.
Because the ones who lead best aren’t the ones who are always certain. They’re the ones who know when to be certain and when to question everything.
"I wanted a perfect ending. Now I've learned, the hard way, that some poems don't rhyme, and some stories don't have a clear beginning, middle, and end. Life is about not knowing, having to change, taking the moment and making the best of it, without knowing what's going to happen next." - Gilda Radner, comedian
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Many days I live In Doubt, but I also have moments of No Doubt. I see this in my clients as well. If you want to learn how to build alignment between you and your narrative, book a free consultation with me, and let's consider the possibilities.
I am a Narratologist and my craft is to help others find and design their unique form of self-expression. For companies, it is about alignment around a Narrative Northstar and the mission to achieve it. For executives over 45, it is about owning your narrative equity and actively sharing or spending it. For movements, it is about generating visible narrative equity that inspires a call to action.
For me, it is about improving human connection and that starts with you.