Why Technical Leaders Undersell Themselves and How to Stop

Why Technical Leaders Undersell Themselves and How to Stop

From Meta-Cast by Bob Galen & Josh Anderson

March 16, 2026 · 32 min · Season 2 · Episode 117

About this episode

The episode discusses how technical leaders often undersell themselves and the importance of effective self-promotion in shaping their careers.

Most leaders will tell you they hate bragging — and they mean it. But somewhere between "I don't want to be that person" and never talking about what you've done, a lot of genuinely talented people quietly disappear from the conversations that shape their careers. Josh opens with a real scenario — joining a new company and being asked to introduce himself at an all-hands — and the tension of threading that needle. Bob admits this is his kryptonite. As a self-described introvert and chronic underseller, he's spent years over-correcting away from self-promotion because it feels slimy. The episode digs into the nuance between "I" stories and "we" stories, and why the most effective communicators learn to weave both together naturally. The harder truth surfaces when Bob connects this to the Capital One Agile layoffs — 1,100+ roles eliminated, not because the work wasn't valuable, but because no one made the case for it. Servant leadership culture convinced an entire profession that talking about results was someone else's job. It wasn't. Josh drives it home with Nick Saban's retirement: Alabama is still good, but they're not the same, because the person whose presence elevated…

People in this episode

Hosts: Bob Galen, Josh Anderson

Topics covered

  • self-promotion
  • leadership
  • communication
  • career development
  • Agile management

Keywords

  • self-promotion
  • leadership
  • communication
  • Agile
  • career
  • introvert
  • results

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: Capital One

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