
Measuring Workplace Confidence – What happens when you teach self-belief?
Introduction - Studying the results of workplace confidence training
“Participants reported a stronger understanding of concepts like negative self-talk, limiting beliefs and personal values.”
— Northumbria University Evaluation Report, 2025
- Methodology: How the workplace confidence study was carried out
- Key findings from the evaluation of workplace confidence
- Workplace confidence tools participants found most useful
- How the benefits of workplace confidence training showed up in real working life
- How the ideas around confidence in the workplace took on a life of their own
- What got in the way
- What helped the learning stick
- What limited the study
- How organisations can use these findings
- Conclusion
- About the authors
-
Inside the study: what we’ve learned from mastermind groups in police leadership
- Confidence Programmes, training and workshops

Bit Famous works with businesses and organisations to help them communicate with confidence.
By Penny Haslam
MD and Founder - Bit Famous
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Penny Haslam
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1. Methodology: How the workplace confidence study was carried out
Northumbria University evaluated the Workplace Confidence Training using a simple three-stage design. Participants were surveyed before attending, again immediately after the session and then three months later. This gave the researchers a clear timeline of what changed at each point.
Two kinds of evidence were collected. The numerical survey data tracked shifts in confidence, job satisfaction, peer and manager support and people’s understanding of the tools introduced in the session.
Alongside this, participants provided written comments. These qualitative responses offered insight into what they remembered, what they applied and how the training showed up in their everyday roles.
Participation was strongest at the start — nearly 500 people completed the pre-session survey, dropping to 184 after the session and 16 at the 3-month follow-up. Although small, the final group provided detailed reflections that helped explain the longer-term patterns behind the numbers.
This mixed-methods approach allowed the evaluation to capture both measurable outcomes and the lived experience of putting the learning into practice.
2. Key findings from the evaluation of workplace confidence
Confidence levels
Understanding of confidence-building concepts
Job satisfaction
The ability to challenge limiting self-beliefs
“I can challenge my own limiting self-beliefs”
Understanding of negative self-talk
“I understand what negative self-talk is.”
They felt more equipped to build trust and confidence in their teams
3. Workplace confidence tools participants found most useful
YETI - “Be a yeti and challenge your limiting beliefs”
ICE - Indentify, challenge and extinguish your inner critic
Understanding self-talk
Values - How to identify and be guided by your inner values (Val-YOUs)
4. How the benefits of workplace confidence training showed up in real working life
“Interpersonal skills improvements included increased patience, enhanced listening skills and a great ability to understand colleagues”
— Northumbria University Evaluation Report, 2025
In summary, participants reported:
- More patience and thoughtful responses
- Better listening and understanding of others
- Calmer, more confident decision making
- Reduced negative self-talk
- Taking on new or challenging tasks
- Greater awareness of their behaviour and impact
- Applying the tools in public-facing or victim-support roles.
5. How the ideas around confidence in the workplace took on a life of their own
“Some participants applied learning to both themselves and to ‘victims they support in their work’”
— Northumbria University Evaluation Report, 2025
In summary, participants described:
- Passing confidence-building tips on to colleagues
- Using the techniques to support victims or members of the public
- Talking more openly about confidence with teammates
- Explaining the tools to others who were struggling
- Helping colleagues reframe negative self-talk
- Bringing the ideas into everyday conversations and interactions.
6. What got in the way
Not everyone found it easy to put the learning into practice. The biggest barrier was unsupportive management, with some participants saying their line managers didn’t see the relevance of the training or didn’t create the space to use the tools. Organisational uncertainty — including restructures and workload pressure — also made it harder for people to focus on confidence-building.
A few participants identified themselves as the main barrier, noting long-standing confidence habits that were hard to shift without more time or support. Others said they simply forgot the tools once work became busy, or hadn’t realised a video recording was available to revisit.
Several people reported no barriers at all, but for those who did, the challenges tended to come from the wider environment rather than the tools themselves.
7. What helped the learning stick
When participants reflected on what supported them, one factor came up far more than anything else: personal determination. Many said they made a conscious decision to use the tools, challenge negative self-talk and keep practising the techniques.
Supportive line managers also made a difference. Where managers encouraged people or showed belief in their abilities, participants found it easier to put the learning into action. Colleagues — and in some cases family members — provided similar encouragement.
A few participants said that simply revisiting the ideas or remembering the session helped them stay on track. Others highlighted chances to practise, whether through everyday tasks or opportunities like acting roles that pushed them to speak up or take the lead.
Not everyone had this support, but for those who did, these small boosts made it easier to turn the tools into lasting habits rather than one-off insights.
8. What limited the study
The evaluation offers clear insights, but there are limits to what the data can show. The biggest issue was the drop in responses over time. Nearly 500 people completed the pre-session survey, but only 184 responded afterwards and just 16 took part in the three-month follow-up. With such a small final group, the longer-term findings can show patterns, but they can’t be taken as the experience of everyone who attended.
Because of the small numbers, the researchers couldn’t run statistical tests on the follow-up results. They could describe what the data suggested, but they couldn’t say for certain whether the changes were caused by the training or simply happened by chance.
Even so, the three-month comments gave useful insight into how people were using the tools. The limitation is size, not substance — the feedback is still meaningful, just not large enough to speak for the whole group.
8. How organisations can use these findings
The evaluation makes one thing clear: confidence training works best when it doesn’t stand alone. Organisations that want to get the most from this kind of session can use the findings to strengthen what happens around it — before, during and after the training itself.
The biggest opportunity lies with line managers. The study shows that manager support is one of the strongest enablers of long-term change, and a lack of support is one of the biggest barriers. When managers understand the tools, talk about them and reinforce them in everyday work, people are far more likely to use them.
The feedback also highlights the value of follow-up and reminders. Even simple prompts — a short recap, a tool refresher or a quick check-in — can help people remember the techniques and keep them in play. Some organisations may choose to offer short follow-up sessions, confidence cohorts or peer support groups to help maintain momentum.
Finally, the findings show that people often share the tools informally, passing techniques on to colleagues or using them to support others. Organisations can build on this by encouraging open conversations about confidence, creating space for people to talk about what’s working and helping the ideas spread naturally through teams.
Taken together, these steps help the learning stick — turning a single session into something that can shape daily working life long after the workshop ends.
Conclusion
Note from Penny Haslam, Founder Bit Famous
"Confidence is a strategic issue in the workplace"
— Penny Haslam
Founder, Bit Famous
About the research
Authors: Dr Vicki Elsey and Dr Kieran Ball, Northumbria University
Commissioned by: Bit Famous, in collaboration with the College of Policing
Participants: 500 senior police leaders from forces across England and Wales
Study period: May – October 2025
Research type: Mixed-method evaluation (quantitative and qualitative data)
Purpose: To assess the impact of the Workplace Mastermind Groups training on confidence, collaboration and professional development.












