Konferenzprogramm

Die im Konferenzprogramm des GTD 2024 angegebenen Uhrzeiten entsprechen der Central European Time (CET).

Ihr benötigt mehr Übersicht vor Ort?
» Zur Programmübersicht als PDF (Mittwoch)
» Zum Raum- und Expoplan

Konferenzprogramm 2024

The Impostor's Guide to Tooting Your Own Horn

Look, this is exactly the problem I want to talk about. I have to write a compelling abstract telling you why I should be accepted at the conference and why you should absolutely listen to my talk. But there’s a tiny monster in my ear telling me I’m a rubbish speaker, my talk stinks and I shouldn’t even try. See my conundrum? The monster is called impostor syndrome and many smart, accomplished, high-achieving people suffer from it and are held back in their careers because of it. But not all is lost: Here I am, telling you you should absolutely listen, because I have tips and tricks for dealing with it, and I’d like to share them with you!

Target Audience: Everyone is welcome.
Prerequisites: None
Level: Basic

Extended Abstract:
There’s a tiny little monster that lives inside my ear. The monster likes being mean. It keeps whispering to me, telling me that I don’t know anything about nothing, that I am bad at everything I have ever tried my hand at, and that I can’t do anything right. If presented with evidence to the contrary, it says that every single one of my achievements happened because I was lucky that nobody realized that I am actually very stupid. It’s mean, but sadly quite convincing. Does that sound familiar? The monster is called impostor syndrome and many people have met it. It makes life hard, never being able to fully trust in your intelligence and your abilities, never being proud of what you worked for, and constantly fearing that you might be found out as a fraud. In your professional life especially, you must be able to sing your own praise. Job interviews, performance reviews, meetings with a potential new client: all of these are situations in which saying “Here I am; this is what I can do, and that’s why I deserve what I want from you” is a key ability. Truth be told, you even must be able to lay it on a little thick. No easy feat when the monster tells you the exact opposite. I still suck at this but … Whoops, that was the monster talking again. Shut up, monster! Let’s try again: I have, over the years of living with the monster, found a few handy tips and tricks how to deal with it. It is not gone and probably never will be, but it is tamed, and I can say with - at least some, hard earned - confidence that I know how to advocate for myself. And I would like to share these tricks with you. Welcome to “Tooting your own horn 1.01”. I’ll be your guide.

As a child, Sophie Küster wanted to be a ballerina or an astronaut; or both. Today, she holds diplomas in math and yodeling and is a test automation engineer at Cronn, a Bonn based IT company. After years of successfully hunting bugs, she also trains and leads other testers. Recently, she has also dared to look behind the curtain as a developer so she can cut out the middle person and introduce the bugs herself. Sometimes, she speaks at conferences. No stranger to the universe's gut punches, she is passionate about improving awareness and communication about mental health and self-care. When she's not busy testing or coding away at her computer, you can find her on a stand-up paddle board, in a tent (surprisingly often in the rain), or at a ballet barre. Sadly, never in a spaceship.

Sophie Küster
17:30 - 18:05
Vortrag: Di1.3
Themen: Inspiration

Vortrag Teilen