Self-confidence isn't reserved for those who've always had it. It's a dynamic skill built through experience, self-awareness and intentional work on your beliefs.

Self-confidence vs self-esteem: what's the difference?

Self-confidence is the conviction that you can accomplish specific actions and face challenges. Self-esteem is the overall value you assign to yourself as a person. You can lack confidence in certain areas (public speaking, leadership) while having good self-esteem, and vice versa. Understanding this distinction is key to targeting the right work.

Why do some people lack self-confidence?

Lack of self-confidence develops mainly through repeated experiences of perceived failure or rejection, negative messages received during childhood, perfectionism that makes every success feel insufficient, unfavourable social comparison, and avoidance of challenges that prevents building evidence of competence.

How to build genuine self-confidence?

Building self-confidence requires simultaneous work on three levels: beliefs (what you think of yourself), behaviours (exposing yourself to small progressive challenges), and emotions (learning to navigate discomfort without avoidance). Coaching, NLP and hypnotherapy allow effective work on all three dimensions.
1

Identify and transform limiting beliefs

"I'm not good enough" is a belief, not a truth. In coaching, you learn to identify them, question them and replace them with empowering beliefs grounded in real evidence.

2

Build evidence of competence

Confidence is built through action. Progressive challenges, even small ones, create "proof" the mind can use to counter automatic doubts.

3

Emotional anchoring (NLP/hypnosis)

Create and anchor resource states — calm, confidence, competence — accessible on demand in difficult situations.

4

Develop self-compassion

Learn not to turn every mistake into proof of incompetence. Self-compassion is the foundation of lasting confidence.

Frequently asked questions

Frequent questions about self-confidence concern the distinction from self-esteem, whether it can be learned, the most effective tools and the duration of coaching support.

Absolutely. The brain is plastic throughout life. Even if beliefs often form early, they can be transformed at any time with the right tools and appropriate support.

False confidence (arrogance, defensive ego) is a façade that often hides fragility. Genuine confidence is quiet, flexible and comes with humility. It doesn't depend on others' opinions.

Yes. Hypnosis allows access to the deep layers where limiting beliefs are anchored, and replaces them with new resources. Results can be rapid and lasting.

David combines ICF coaching (structured, goal-oriented), NLP (pattern transformation) and hypnotherapy (access to unconscious resources). This triple approach is particularly effective because it works simultaneously on all three levels: thoughts, emotions and behaviours.

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