Tag: board presentation nerves

28 May 2026
When Stakes Are Too High to Think Straight: The Pre-Presentation Ritual

When Stakes Are Too High to Think Straight: The Pre-Presentation Ritual

Quick answer: When the stakes of a presentation are high enough to disrupt clear thinking, more preparation makes things worse, not better. What works is a structured 30-minute pre-presentation ritual: physical movement to discharge cortisol, slow exhale-led breathing to lower heart rate, a fixed verbal anchor for the opening line, and ten minutes of complete quiet before walking into the room. Rituals work because they shift the nervous system out of threat mode without requiring you to “calm down” through willpower — a strategy that consistently fails when stakes are highest.

Tomás was an excellent presenter on quarterly business reviews. He had presented forty of them. Then he was asked to present a £6m restructuring proposal to the parent group’s executive committee in Madrid. New room. New audience. Higher stakes. He spent the morning re-reading his deck, drinking coffee, and trying to “get his head right”. By the time he stood up to present, his hands were shaking visibly, his voice was thinner than he had ever heard it, and he could not remember the order of his own opening three slides. The presentation he had given competently forty times before suddenly felt impossible.

This is not a competence problem. It is not even a confidence problem in the usual sense. What Tomás experienced is what happens when the stakes of a presentation are high enough to push the nervous system into threat response — and the response interferes with the very cognitive resources he needed to deliver. Working memory narrows. Recall slows. The body floods with cortisol and adrenaline. The presenter becomes aware of their own heartbeat. None of that can be reasoned away in the moment.

What works is not more preparation. By T-30 minutes, the deck is the deck. What works is a structured pre-presentation ritual designed to shift the nervous system back into a state where clear thinking is possible. The protocol below is built from techniques that have worked across financial services, biotech, and government settings — for senior people who could deliver in lower-stakes rooms but were collapsing in the high-stakes ones.

If you want a complete framework for high-stakes presentation nerves:

Conquer Your Fear of Public Speaking is a structured programme covering the psychology, physiology, and practical techniques senior professionals use to walk into high-stakes rooms calm.

Explore Conquer Your Fear of Public Speaking →

Why thinking fails when stakes are highest

The body does not distinguish between physical and social threat. A boardroom where your reputation, role, or career-trajectory might be on the line registers in the nervous system the same way a confrontation with a predator would. The autonomic stress response activates: heart rate rises, breathing shortens, blood is redirected away from the digestive system and toward muscles, attention narrows, and — crucially for presenters — the prefrontal cortex (the part of the brain responsible for working memory, complex reasoning, and verbal fluency) becomes less efficient.

This is why telling yourself to “calm down” or “think clearly” before a high-stakes presentation almost never works. The system that would calm down is the same system being suppressed by the threat response. You cannot use the prefrontal cortex to override what the limbic system is doing — at least, not without first interrupting the physiological signal that is keeping the limbic system activated.

What works is the opposite direction: change the body first, and the brain follows. Physical movement, slow breathing, and reducing stimulation lower the threat signal. Once the threat signal drops, the prefrontal cortex comes back online. Working memory returns. Recall improves. The presenter who could not remember their opening three slides at T-30 minutes can deliver them cleanly at T-0 — but only if the intervening time is used for nervous-system recovery, not more cognitive grinding.

Why a ritual works when willpower does not

A ritual is a fixed sequence of actions performed in the same order every time. It is the opposite of a decision. When stakes are highest and cognitive capacity is lowest, decisions become harder — even small ones like “should I have one more coffee?” or “should I read through the deck again?” Each of those decisions costs energy that is already in short supply. By the time you walk into the room, you have spent your reserves on micro-choices that did not need to be made.

Why Rituals Work infographic showing four numbered stages: 1) Decision-load drops because every step is fixed in advance, 2) Body resets through movement and slow breathing, 3) Attention narrows to one anchor instead of scattering, 4) Confidence rebuilds through familiarity not willpower — laid out as a 2x2 grid with central hub.

A pre-presentation ritual eliminates those decisions. The same sequence, every time. After three or four high-stakes presentations using the same ritual, the nervous system starts to associate the ritual itself with calm — the way a familiar warm-up routine settles an athlete before competition. The ritual does not depend on you feeling calm. It works because it bypasses the part of the brain that is currently failing.

This is not woo. It is how the autonomic nervous system actually responds to predictable, repeated input. Slow exhales lengthen the activation of the parasympathetic nervous system. Movement metabolises stress hormones. Reducing visual and auditory stimulation lowers the threat signal further. None of these depend on belief. They are physiological mechanisms.

The 30-minute pre-presentation ritual

The protocol below is structured to fit into the 30 minutes before you walk into the room. If you have only 15 minutes, compress proportionally — keep the sequence and shrink the durations. If you have 45 minutes, do not extend it. More time spent in the ritual past 30 minutes does not produce more calm; it produces room for re-entering the deck mentally, which is what you are trying to avoid.

Stop trying to “think your way calm”. The body has to lead.

Conquer Your Fear of Public Speaking is the structured programme for senior professionals who present competently in low-stakes rooms but collapse in high-stakes ones. Five years of being terrified of presenting taught Mary Beth what actually works — the techniques that go beyond breathing exercises and address the underlying nervous-system response. £39, instant access.

  • The physiology of high-stakes presentation fear (and why “just relax” fails)
  • Body-led techniques that lower heart rate when willpower cannot
  • The pre-presentation ritual structure for senior settings
  • What to do when nerves hit mid-presentation, not before
  • Long-term reconditioning for presenters who have collapsed once and now dread the next one

Get Conquer Your Fear of Public Speaking — £39 →

Designed for senior professionals across financial services, biotech, technology, and consulting.

Minutes 0-10: Movement. Walk. Take stairs if you have them. Walk briskly outside if the building permits. The goal is to elevate the heart rate slightly through voluntary physical effort — which paradoxically reduces the involuntary stress-driven heart rate that nerves produce. Cortisol and adrenaline are designed to fuel physical action. If you are sitting still in a meeting room while your body floods with stress hormones, those hormones have nowhere to go and the symptoms get worse. Movement metabolises them. Even a ten-minute walk in the corridor measurably reduces shaking, racing heart, and the cluster of physical symptoms that destabilise the opening of a presentation.

Minutes 10-20: Slow exhale-led breathing. Find a quiet space. Sit or stand still. Breathe in through the nose for 4 counts, exhale through the mouth for 6-8 counts. The exhale is the active part — longer than the inhale by at least 50%. This activates the parasympathetic nervous system in a way that fast or shallow breathing does not. Five minutes barely moves the needle. Ten full minutes resets the autonomic baseline. Most presenters skip this step because it feels too long. That is precisely why it works — the duration is the mechanism. See 4-7-8 breathing for board presentations for the technical detail and an alternative count pattern if 4-6-8 does not suit you.

Minutes 20-25: Verbal anchor (see next section). Speak your opening line out loud, twice. Not the whole opening — just the first sentence or two. The voice, the cadence, the breath. This rehearses the single most important moment of the presentation while you are now in a calmer physiological state.

Minutes 25-30: Stillness. Stop everything. No phone. No notes. No conversations. No “quick check” of anything. Stand or sit completely still, looking at a single point in the distance, breathing slowly. Five minutes feels much longer than it sounds when you are anxious. Hold the stillness anyway. This is where the nervous system fully resets before you walk in.

The verbal anchor: your opening line

The first 30 seconds of a high-stakes presentation are the highest-risk window. If your opening goes well, the nervous system reads it as a successful start — threat signal drops, working memory expands, recall improves. If the opening goes badly, the threat signal escalates and the next two minutes of the presentation are spent trying to recover.

The intervention is to memorise your opening line — the literal words — verbatim. Not the rest of the presentation. Just the opening. Once memorised, repeat it during the ritual until your voice feels steady saying it.

The 30-Minute Pre-Presentation Ritual roadmap showing five sequential milestones: Minutes 0-10 Movement, Minutes 10-20 Slow Breathing, Minutes 20-25 Verbal Anchor, Minutes 25-30 Stillness, then Walk In Calm — alternating top/bottom milestone cards on a navy gradient.

The opening line itself should be short, declarative, and not require improvisation. “Thank you. The recommendation is straightforward. We are asking the committee to approve £6m of restructuring across the next 18 months — and I will walk through the rationale, the alternatives we considered, and the risks.” That is one sentence. It is composed and committed before you enter the room. You will not have to construct it under pressure.

Memorising the opening removes the most common point of nervous-system collapse. Once the opening is delivered, the rest of the presentation flows from material you already know well. The opening is the moment that needs to be automatic.

For more on what to do when the body still betrays you mid-presentation — voice shaking, hands trembling — see the 10-second reset for when your voice shakes mid-presentation and grounding techniques for boardroom anxiety.

What to stop doing in the final 30 minutes

Equally important is what to remove from the final 30 minutes. Three habits consistently make high-stakes presentation nerves worse, not better.

Re-reading the deck. By T-30 minutes, the deck is the deck. Re-reading it does not strengthen recall — it actually overwrites the consolidated memory you built during yesterday’s rehearsal. More damaging, scrolling through slides at this point invites you to spot something you wish you had changed, which spikes anxiety and gives you no time to act on it. Close the laptop.

Conversations. Last-minute “quick check-ins” with colleagues, sponsors, or anyone connected to the presentation transfer their nervous energy into yours. Even a well-meant “you’ll be great!” from a peer can register as evidence that you might not be. The 30 minutes before a high-stakes presentation are not a social window. Be alone.

Caffeine and sugar. Both elevate heart rate, increase tremor, and intensify the physical symptoms of nerves. The double espresso “for energy” 20 minutes before a high-stakes presentation is the single most common mistake senior presenters make. Water is the only thing you should be drinking in the final 30 minutes. The energy you need is already there — you do not need to add to a system that is already over-activated.

For more on how the 72 hours leading up to T-30 should be structured, see the partner article on the 72-hour protocol senior leaders use.

Frequently asked questions

Does this ritual work the first time, or does it take practice?

It works partially the first time and more completely each subsequent use. The physical mechanisms — slow breathing activating the parasympathetic system, movement metabolising stress hormones — work immediately. The associative effect, where the ritual itself starts to trigger calm, builds over three or four uses. Senior professionals who use the same ritual before every high-stakes presentation report that by the fifth use, the ritual has become a reliable settling sequence regardless of room or audience.

What if I am presenting back-to-back and cannot do a full 30 minutes?

Compress to 10-15 minutes. Five minutes of movement, five minutes of slow breathing, three minutes verbal anchor, two minutes of stillness. The shortened version is less effective than the full protocol, but materially more effective than no ritual at all. The minimum effective dose is roughly 8-10 minutes. Anything shorter does not allow the nervous system enough time to shift state.

What about beta-blockers or anti-anxiety medication?

That is a conversation for a doctor, not for an article. Some senior professionals use them under medical supervision for specific high-stakes events. The ritual described here works alongside or independently of medication, and addresses the underlying nervous-system response rather than masking the symptoms. Most presenters find that with consistent ritual practice, they need less pharmacological intervention over time.

My voice still shakes when I start. What do I do in the moment?

Slow your opening pace deliberately. The first 30 seconds should feel almost too slow to you — that pace will sound composed to the audience. A shaking voice is amplified by speed. If you walk in and immediately start speaking quickly, the tremor is audible. If you walk in, pause for two seconds, and begin slowly, the tremor often does not register. Combined with the memorised opening line, this is usually enough to get through the opening cleanly.

When nerves hit physically — shaking hands, racing heart — in the moment:

Calm Under Pressure covers rapid-response techniques for the physical symptoms of presentation anxiety: shaking hands, racing heart, trembling voice, nausea — methods you can use in the room, in the moment, without anyone noticing. £19.99, instant access.

Get Calm Under Pressure — £19.99 →

A structured framework, not a list of breathing tips.

Conquer Your Fear of Public Speaking — the system designed for senior professionals who can present competently most of the time but collapse when stakes are highest. £39, instant access. Built from 5 years of being a terrified presenter and the techniques that actually moved the needle.

Get Conquer Your Fear of Public Speaking — £39 →

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Not ready for the full programme? Start here instead: download the free Virtual Presentation Quick-Start Checklist — covers the setup, delivery, and rescue elements every high-stakes presentation needs.

Next step: Block 30 minutes in your calendar before your next high-stakes presentation — not “prep time”, labelled clearly as “ritual”. The structure does the work.

About the author

Mary Beth Hazeldine is Owner & Managing Director of Winning Presentations Ltd, founded in London in 1990. With 24 years of corporate banking experience at JPMorgan Chase, PwC, Royal Bank of Scotland, and Commerzbank, she advises executives across financial services, healthcare, technology, and government on the psychology and preparation that sustains performance under pressure.

30 Apr 2026
Imposter Syndrome Promotion Anxiety: Why Presentations Feel Harder Higher Up

Imposter Syndrome Promotion Anxiety: Why Presentations Feel Harder Higher Up

Quick answer: Imposter syndrome often intensifies after a promotion because the stakes, visibility, and peer group all shift upwards at once — while your internal sense of competence lags behind your new title. Presentations feel harder because you are now performing for a room that you used to be in the audience for. The solution is not to wait until the feeling fades but to build a competence-evidence protocol that steadies the brain before high-stakes delivery, so your preparation, pacing, and opening language do not betray the confidence you have actually earned.

Ines Carvalho had presented hundreds of times at her previous level. As Head of Commercial Strategy she had been calm, clear, occasionally funny. Three months after her promotion to Chief Commercial Officer, she stood in front of the board for the first time — a full agenda item on pricing architecture — and by slide four she felt the imposter wave rise through her chest.

It was a specific moment. She had just finished explaining the margin implications of a tiered pricing model when she noticed the senior non-executive chair frown and glance at the CFO. That was all. A frown. But inside Ines the internal voice started a recursive commentary: he thinks this is basic, they can see you do not belong here, any minute now someone will ask the real question and you will not have the answer. Her next sentence came out in a higher register and slightly too fast.

What saved her was a small intervention she had used once years earlier. She stopped talking, looked at her slide, took one deliberate breath, and said, “Let me slow down on this next point, because it is the most commercially important one.” The chair’s frown, as it turned out, was not about her — he had been puzzled by a figure on the previous slide. The presentation recovered. The board approved the direction.

Ines came through. But on the drive home she knew she could not run her C-suite presenting life on the hope that a panic-interruption technique would save her every time. She needed a way to walk into a board room already anchored in evidence of her own competence, so that a frown from a non-exec could never again become a five-minute internal spiral while her mouth kept moving.

If the step up into a more senior presenting role has brought a sharper edge of anxiety with it, Conquer Speaking Fear is a structured programme for executives who need to steady their nervous system before high-stakes delivery — without pretending the feeling is not there.

Explore Conquer Speaking Fear →

Why Promotion Triggers Presentation Imposter Syndrome

Imposter syndrome is often framed as a confidence problem that people should have grown out of by the time they reach senior leadership. In practice, the opposite tends to happen. Many executives who felt entirely steady at their previous level experience a distinct uptick in presentation anxiety in the first year of a more senior role. The title changes faster than the self-image, and the gap between the two expresses itself most clearly in front of a room.

Three structural shifts drive this, and understanding them matters because it separates the feeling from any judgement about your actual capability. First, the peer group changes. You are no longer presenting to the people you used to lunch with; you are presenting to people who chaired your interview panel, or to non-executives whose CVs you quietly read before the meeting. The social signalling you used to rely on — the warm nods, the in-jokes, the familiar rhythm of a team you have worked with for years — disappears overnight.

Second, the stakes rise. A presentation at Head-of-X level that went sideways was embarrassing; a presentation at C-suite level that goes sideways affects strategic decisions, capital allocation, or regulatory standing. Your brain registers that escalation accurately, and it responds with heightened arousal. That heightened arousal is useful in small amounts. In larger amounts, it starts to read the room through a threat-detection filter rather than a collaboration filter. The same people who would look engaged before a promotion start to look sceptical after one, even when nothing about their actual expression has changed.

Third, and most uncomfortably, there is no longer a mentor above you on the slide track. At Head-of level, you could privately rehearse with the director above you. At director level, the EVP. At C-suite, the options narrow dramatically — the CEO is not going to walk you through your own pricing presentation, and you would not ask. The loss of that rehearsal scaffolding is under-recognised. It is a real structural change, not a character flaw. These overlapping dynamics are explored further in our guide on promotion presentation anxiety, which looks at the first-year transition in more detail.

Steady Your Delivery Before the Next Board Meeting

Conquer Speaking Fear is a structured programme for senior professionals whose presentation anxiety has followed them into a more exposed role. It addresses the nervous-system response, the internal commentary, and the delivery distortions that imposter feelings create — so that your preparation can actually reach the room.

£39, instant access. Designed for executives presenting at board and committee level.

Get Conquer Speaking Fear →

Fraud-Detection Anxiety at Board Level

There is a specific flavour of imposter experience that appears for the first time when executives start presenting to boards or board committees. It is not the familiar “I hope I do well” nerves of earlier career stages. It is closer to a low-grade fear of being detected as a fraud — even in people with decades of genuine expertise behind them. This is worth naming because the usual confidence advice (“remember how qualified you are”) does not touch it.

Fraud-detection anxiety has a few recognisable features. It tends to activate around the presence of one specific person in the room — often the non-exec whose expertise overlaps most with your own, or the long-serving chair. It focuses your attention on the questions you cannot answer rather than the material you have prepared. And it creates a distinctive somatic pattern: a tightness in the upper chest, a dryness in the throat, and a narrowing of peripheral vision so that the room starts to feel smaller and more claustrophobic than it actually is.

The brain under this kind of load is running an old pattern-match: “people with more experience than me are going to notice that I do not really know what I am doing.” The fact that you do know what you are doing, that you were promoted precisely because you demonstrated that knowledge, does not land emotionally. The body is treating the room as an audit of your legitimacy, and it is preparing accordingly.

The paradox is that this anxiety is most common in people who are very well prepared. Over-preparation is often a coping response to fraud-detection fear, not an expression of conscientiousness. The pattern is: the more scared I am of being exposed, the more I will try to pre-empt every possible question. And the more pre-emptive detail I load into the deck, the more anxious I become about whether I can hold all of it together under pressure. This overlap between preparation and fear is explored in our companion piece on executive confidence in speaking.


Four-part framework showing how promotion intensifies imposter syndrome through peer-group shift, higher stakes, loss of mentor-above, and fraud-detection anxiety in board presentations

How Imposter Feelings Distort Your Delivery

One of the most painful aspects of post-promotion imposter syndrome is that it produces visible signals in your delivery, which then reinforce the feeling. The internal experience is “I am worried they can see I am not meant to be here.” The external behaviour includes a cluster of small tells that make the room subtly less sure of you than it otherwise would be — which increases the chance of exactly the sceptical look that triggered the spiral in the first place.

Over-preparation. A 60-slide deck for a 20-minute agenda item. Every possible objection pre-answered in a back-up slide. A briefing pack so thick that it telegraphs anxiety rather than mastery. Senior rooms read over-preparation as a lack of editorial judgement, which is the opposite of what the over-prepared presenter wants to signal.

Hedging language. “I think this might suggest that perhaps we could consider…” The sentence arrives with so many softeners that the actual recommendation is invisible. This is almost always an imposter-driven linguistic choice — the presenter is distancing themselves from the claim so that, if challenged, they have an escape route. Boards experience this as evasiveness even when it is really self-protection.

Apologetic openings. “Sorry, this is going to be quite technical,” or “I know this is not my area of core expertise, but…” These openings pre-concede the room before the material has even started. They come from a place of trying to manage expectations downward, but they function as an invitation for the audience to listen less carefully — which then often results in the outcome the presenter was most afraid of.

Speed. The single most common delivery distortion under imposter stress is accelerated pace. The brain wants to get through the exposed moment as quickly as possible, and the mouth cooperates. Pace is the first thing to go and the most reliable outward signal that something internal has shifted. This is particularly noticeable when presenting to former peers, where the contrast between your usual pace and your promoted-role pace is most visible to the room.

Eye-contact collapse. Under imposter load, the eyes start to find the easy faces — the one friendly peer, the people looking at their papers, the back of the room. The person most likely to trigger the fraud-detection fear is precisely the person you stop looking at, which is often the senior figure whose engagement you most need.

Recognising these distortions is not the same as fixing them. You cannot out-will a nervous-system response mid-sentence. But naming them in advance makes them catchable, and catchable is the first step to manageable. If you would like a structured tool for resetting during a presentation when one of these patterns appears, the Conquer Speaking Fear programme includes specific in-the-moment protocols for each of them.

The Competence-Evidence Protocol

The most durable intervention for post-promotion presentation anxiety is not a breathing technique or a power pose. It is a structured pre-meeting protocol that gives the anxious brain something specific to do with the evidence of your actual competence, rather than leaving it abstract. Generalised affirmations (“you are qualified, you belong here”) do not work well under pressure because the threat-detection system discards them as reassurance. Concrete, reviewable evidence does work, because the brain can anchor to it.

The protocol has four steps, and it takes about forty minutes in total. It is done the afternoon or evening before the presentation, not in the ten minutes beforehand — the work is to enter the room already regulated, not to try to rescue a panicked state at the door.

Step 1: Write out the appointment evidence. In specific, factual language, note the decisions that were made by named people to put you in this role. Who interviewed you. Who signed off. What capability they cited in doing so. The goal is not to flatter yourself; it is to externalise the reality that this promotion was a deliberate, informed decision by people whose judgement you respect. Imposter thinking floats when the appointment feels vague. It steadies when the appointment becomes an event with names and reasoning attached.

Step 2: List three pieces of relevant track record. Not your whole career — three specific pieces of work that map to the subject of the presentation you are about to give. For a pricing architecture presentation: the pricing decision you drove in 2023, the margin recovery you led last year, the model you built that is still in use. The brain needs to see that the topic of the meeting is not a novel exposure — it is a field in which you have demonstrable history.

Step 3: Pre-answer the three hardest questions. Not in slide form — in plain English, written out in full sentences. The act of writing, rather than mental rehearsal, is what embeds the answer. Under pressure, written-out answers retrieve far more reliably than rehearsed ones. This is the single highest-leverage part of the protocol. It also short-circuits the “what if they ask the thing I cannot answer” loop, because you have already gone and found the thing.

Step 4: Define the minimum successful outcome. Write one sentence: “If this meeting goes well enough, what will have happened?” Often the imposter brain treats the meeting as a career-defining exam. Defining a minimum successful outcome shrinks it to a manageable transaction: “The board will have understood the commercial logic of the recommendation and agreed the direction, even if the detail needs a follow-up session.” That is a realistic target. “The board will think I am brilliant” is not.

This protocol does not remove the anxiety. What it does is prevent the anxiety from colonising your preparation and your opening minutes. You arrive with a written anchor. When the familiar wave rises, you have something specific to return to — which is what a nervous system actually needs in a high-stakes room.


Four-step competence-evidence protocol for reducing imposter syndrome before board presentations showing appointment evidence, track record, hardest questions, and minimum successful outcome

A Structured Programme for Senior-Role Presentation Anxiety

Conquer Speaking Fear walks through the nervous-system response, the imposter patterns that follow a promotion, and the in-the-moment protocols for steadying your delivery when the wave rises mid-sentence. Written for executives, not beginners.

£39, instant access.

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Reframing Your New Peer Group

One of the quieter drivers of post-promotion imposter anxiety is a subtle misreading of the new room. At earlier career stages, an audience full of more senior people is genuinely auditing you; that is part of how progression works. By the time you reach C-suite, the room’s orientation is different, but the presenter often does not update their internal model to match.

A board committee or executive committee is not primarily there to audit your legitimacy. They are there to make a governance decision or a strategic decision based on material you know more about than they do. Your expertise is the reason you are in the room; they are looking to you for judgement, not for justification. The non-exec who frowns is usually not thinking “does she belong here?” She is thinking “do I understand this figure?” or “how does this affect the risk appetite we set in January?”

This reframe is important because the feeling of being audited produces defensive behaviour, and defensive behaviour produces exactly the outcome the imposter brain most fears. The presenter hedges, over-explains, or apologises, and the room’s attention subtly re-orients from the content to the presenter’s discomfort. By contrast, a presenter who walks in holding the frame “my job is to help you make a good decision” tends to sound clear, specific, and calmly authoritative — because the relationship to the room is cooperative, not performative.

In practical terms, try rewriting your opening line to reflect this reframe. Not “I am going to talk you through the pricing architecture,” which is presenter-centred, but “There is a commercial decision in front of the board today that I want to make as straightforward as possible. The pricing architecture matters because…” The second version positions you as a partner to the committee’s work, not a candidate for their approval.

Building a Steady State for Future Presentations

The first year after a promotion is when imposter-driven presentation anxiety is most acute. By the end of that year, most executives have either built a stable presenting rhythm at the new level — or they have developed chronic avoidance patterns that will shape the rest of their tenure. The difference between the two outcomes is rarely about natural confidence. It is about whether a few specific habits are deliberately put in place.

After every significant presentation, write a three-line debrief. What worked. What did not. What I will do differently next time. Do not rely on memory. Imposter thinking systematically misremembers presentations — it retains the moments of perceived failure and discards the moments of competence. A written debrief corrects for this distortion over time. After twelve presentations, you have a factual record of what actually happens when you present at your new level, which is far more useful than a feeling.

Find one peer-level rehearsal partner. Ideally someone else who has been recently promoted into a similar exposure. You are not asking for coaching; you are asking for thirty minutes of “run your opening past me before the meeting.” This restores a version of the mentor-above rehearsal scaffolding that the promotion removed, just in a horizontal rather than vertical form.

Build a personal file of competence evidence. Save the email where the CEO said the board was impressed. Save the note from the non-exec chair. Save the pricing decision that your model produced. Not for vanity — for review before the next high-stakes meeting. When fraud-detection anxiety rises, concrete evidence has to be retrievable within sixty seconds, or the anxiety will win.

Normalise the feeling. The goal is not to reach a state where board presentations feel easy. Senior presentations should carry a healthy weight — the stakes are real, and a certain level of internal arousal is both appropriate and useful. The goal is to uncouple the arousal from the self-concept. You can feel the wave rise and not take it as evidence that you do not belong. That is a skill, and it is trainable. The same uncoupling principle underpins our framework for emotional regulation during Q&A, which is often the moment when imposter pressure peaks.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does presentation anxiety get worse after a promotion?

Because three things shift upwards at the same time: the stakes of the presentation, the seniority of the audience, and the absence of a mentor above you to pre-rehearse with. Your internal sense of competence tends to catch up more slowly than your title does, and that gap is where imposter-driven anxiety lives. It is not a sign that you are less capable than before — it is a predictable response to a more exposed role.

Does imposter syndrome eventually go away on its own?

For some people it settles as they accumulate a track record in the new role. For many others it becomes quieter but does not disappear, and it can re-intensify at the next promotion or whenever the stakes rise again. Waiting for it to fade is a high-risk strategy because it can shape avoidance patterns that constrain your career. A deliberate pre-meeting protocol, a written debrief habit, and a peer rehearsal partner tend to produce more reliable steadying than the passage of time alone.

How do I stop apologising at the start of board presentations?

Write your opening line out in full and read it back. If it contains any version of “sorry,” “I know this is,” or “bear with me,” rewrite it. Replace the apology with a framing sentence that positions you as a partner to the committee’s decision rather than a candidate for approval — for example, “There is a commercial decision in front of the committee today, and the purpose of the next ten minutes is to give you what you need to make it well.” Apologetic openings are almost always a learned habit, and they are changeable with a written script.

Should I tell my CEO or chair that I am feeling imposter syndrome?

There is no universal answer, but a measured version of the conversation is often helpful with a trusted chair or sponsor — not framed as a request for reassurance, but as a practical discussion about how your first year in the role is going. A good chair will usually respond with specific feedback on what they have observed, which is more useful than generalised encouragement. Keep it professional and structural. The aim is not to be rescued but to open a feedback channel that the promotion might otherwise have closed.

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Read next: Imposter pressure often peaks in the Q&A rather than the prepared remarks. See Emotional Regulation and the Q&A Reset for a practical protocol on steadying yourself between a difficult question and your answer.

Next step: Pick your next board or committee presentation and run the four-step competence-evidence protocol the evening before — written out, not mental. Compare how the opening five minutes feel against your last one. That is the quickest way to test whether a structured approach changes your delivery in the rooms that now matter most.

Mary Beth Hazeldine is the Owner & Managing Director of Winning Presentations. With 25 years of corporate banking experience at JPMorgan Chase, PwC, Royal Bank of Scotland, and Commerzbank, and 16 years training executives, she advises senior leaders across financial services, healthcare, technology, and government on presenting with confidence in newly promoted and board-level roles.