A curious thing has happened in the workplace over the past two years. People who once prided themselves on being fast, smart, and witty (what in scientific terms we would labeled “intelligent”) are now quietly wondering whether they’re too slow, too dull, or too analog, at least to keep up with their daily work challenges.
It’s not that they suddenly got worse at their jobs; rather, their new synthetic coworker never sleeps, never stares blankly at the screen, and can produce a polished answer to almost anything in about eight seconds. Generative AI has become the office’s overeager intern, churning out memos, slide decks, and even dad jokes with unnerving speed. And instead of simply enjoying the free labor, many of us are feeling inferior.
Welcome to AI Impostor Syndrome: the creeping suspicion that you’re not good enough because you can’t keep up with a machine. Previously, impostor syndrome benchmarked itself against other humans who were (irrationally) deemed superior to us, but now the benchmark is everyday genAI, which we use and admire but makes us feel useless.
What is AI Impostor Syndrome?
The original impostor syndrome was about doubting your own talent in the presence of other humans. AI impostor syndrome is its new cousin: except this time, you’re not being compared to your coworkers but to a dutiful learning machine with unlimited fuel and dedication.
It manifests in small, unsettling ways: guilt about taking more than a minute to draft an email; embarrassment when ChatGPT finds a citation you couldn’t remember; or the nagging thought that if you had to whiteboard a strategy without digital assistance, you’d be exposed as a fraud.
In short, AI impostor syndrome is the feeling that you’re somehow failing simply because you’re human.
A Self-Assessment Checklist
Are you suffering from the condition? Ask yourself these questions.
- Do you hesitate to send a first draft because you think “AI could make it cleaner”?
- Have you caught yourself googling “best ChatGPT prompts” as if they were cheat codes to intelligence?
- Do you feel guilty taking longer than 30 seconds to compose a Slack reply?
- Have you hidden the fact that an idea was yours (not the bot’s) because you assumed people would be disappointed?
- Does proofreading now feel pointless because the machine “wouldn’t miss this typo”?
- Do you introduce deliberate typos and grammar mistakes to pretend its not AI
- Do you feel a secret envy or FOMO when colleagues brag about how quickly they “co-pilot” with AI?
- Have you started apologizing for your brain’s loading time?
If you answer “yes” to most of these, you might be experiencing AI impostor syndrome.
Why and How to Overcome It
Like its human-to-human predecessor, AI impostor syndrome thrives in environments where speed, reliability, predictability, and net output (quantity rather than quality) are fetishized. The machine is dazzling precisely because it plays to those values. But intelligence is not only about speed: it’s also about judgment, originality, and the messy process of connecting dots in ways that don’t always make sense at first.
Here are three ways to push back:
1. Redefine “value.”
Instead of asking “Can I do this as fast as AI?” ask “What can I do that AI cannot?” Context, taste, and empathy are still stubbornly human domains. Fundamentally, make sure what you do or optmize actually has value. As the great Peter Drucker noted, “there is nothing so useless as to do efficiently that which should be not done at all.”
2. Build cognitive fitness.
Like physical exercise, thinking is a muscle. If you never lift anything heavier than a predictive text suggestion, your mental biceps will atrophy. Deliberately take on problems without digital shortcuts to keep your mind sharp.
3. Treat AI as a sparring partner, not a rival.
Good athletes don’t resent their training equipment, they use it to push themselves. If AI raises the bar for what’s possible, lean into the opportunity rather than shrinking from it.
In Defense of Natural Intelligence (even Natural Stupidity)
The dirty secret of progress is that we rarely learn by being right. As Amy Edmondson brilliantly highlights, we learn by being wrong: painfully, publicly, and repeatedly. Natural stupidity is the fertile soil from which insight grows. AI can optimize away mistakes, but in doing so it risks robbing us of the very failures that shape judgment.
There’s a virtue in struggling through a problem set, fumbling with a blank page, or blurting out a half-formed thought in a meeting. These experiences are not efficient, but they are developmental. They’re the rough drafts of wisdom.
Think of it as cognitive Pilates: the point isn’t to get somewhere faster but to keep the brain flexible, resilient, and less prone to injury. Writing an essay without AI won’t always be publishable, but it keeps you mentally supple in a way that autocomplete never will.
AI and the Redefinition of Smart
The arrival of generative AI has upended our collective definition of intelligence. Memorization used to matter; now it doesn’t. First drafts used to matter; now they don’t. Even creative riffing can feel less impressive when a model spits out 20 metaphors in two seconds.
So what does it mean to be smart in an AI world? The answer lies not in competing with the machine but in using it wisely. There are clever ways of integrating AI into your workflow, asking it to brainstorm counterarguments, to structure messy notes, or to stress-test your assumptions. And there are stupid ways: copy-pasting outputs as your own, outsourcing all original thought, or using it as a crutch for problems you should actually wrestle with.
A smart use of AI is leveraging it to scale your creativity; a stupid use is letting it replace your curiosity.
Double down on your strengths
AI impostor syndrome is real, but it’s also misplaced. Feeling inadequate because you’re slower than the machine is like feeling inadequate because a calculator multiplies faster than you. Of course it does. That’s the point.
Our task is not to mimic AI’s strengths but to double down on our own: curiosity, judgment, empathy, taste, and the ability to learn from our glorious blunders. Natural intelligence (including its beautful human imperfections) is still the most generative force we have, which is why it is capable of inventing artificial intelligence. If we remember that, then AI won’t make us impostors, but remind us of our capabilities.

