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Visible, Honest, and Wrong — Why Certainty Is Costing You Credibility
Episode 11914th July 2026 • IMPACTFUL Teamwork • Julia Felton
00:00:00 00:27:11

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Julia Felton explores two research findings: 65% of leaders would rather appear decisive and be wrong than admit uncertainty and be right, and “invisibility is no longer read as neutral” but as avoidance.

Drawing on a Forbes article by Doug Melville, she argues that C-suite credibility now depends on visible, human storytelling aligned with operational truth, not polished messaging, especially amid rapid change like AI and expectations of headcount reduction.

She contrasts this with the “decisiveness crisis” research on “certainty theatre,” linking it to shame, threat responses, and transformation failure driven by uncertainty resistance.

Felton argues the real issue is teamship: performing certainty trains teams not to surface doubts, undermining co-ownership. She invites leaders to name a current unknown aloud as an invitation to think together and suggests modeling “I’m not sure” without apology.

03:14 Visibility Is Credibility

07:03 Imperfect Presence Builds Trust

10:57 The Decisiveness Crisis

13:46 Shame And Certainty Theater

16:56 Where Research Meets Reality

19:02 Teamship And The Horse Herd

20:39 Make Uncertainty Safe

21:58 Weekly Challenge And Close

23:51 Final Takeaways And Next Steps

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