by Josh Ball | Jun 16, 2025 | Brand Building, Career Transition, leadership
Too many high-performers second-guess themselves the moment the room gets bigger. New titles, new stakes, new people, same you. But imposter syndrome thrives in silence. And leadership isn’t about having all the answers; it’s about bringing the right presence.
You Belong in the Room, Even If It Feels New
There’s a moment in every leader’s journey where the table changes.
New job, new industry, new challenge.
And suddenly, the same confidence that carried you through storms starts whispering doubts…
“Do I really belong here?”
I’ve been there. Stepping from law enforcement into corporate security. Sitting across from executives in tailored suits with business school pedigrees. And here I was boots-on-the-ground experience, a different kind of resume, and a whole lot of lessons learned from the field.
It felt like a mismatch. But it wasn’t. It was growth.
Here’s what I had to learn the hard way…and maybe you do too
- The room didn’t invite you by accident
- You weren’t a charity hire. You were chosen because your perspective is needed. Full stop.
- New doesn’t mean unqualified.
- There’s a difference between being unprepared and being uncomfortable. The first requires action. The second requires belief.
- Humility and authority can coexist.
- You don’t have to pretend to know everything. Ask the smart questions. Listen well. Speak when it counts.
- Growth always feels unfamiliar.
- That’s the point. If it were comfortable, it wouldn’t be growth it’d be repetition.
Try This
Next time you walk into a new room, whether it’s an executive meeting, project kickoff, leadership roundtable, remind yourself:
- “I earned this seat.”
- “I bring value no one else does.”
- “I don’t have to prove everything today, I just have to show up aligned with who I am.”
The Bottom Line
Belonging isn’t about comfort it’s about conviction. You belong in the room not because you’ve mastered it, but because you’re willing to grow inside of it.
And that’s exactly what real leadership looks like.
by Josh Ball | Jun 3, 2025 | Career Transition
To the officer reading this who’s considering the leap…
Let’s get one thing straight.
You are not starting over.
I know it can feel that way, like you’re burning the career you spent decades building just to pick up a new, unfamiliar trade. One where your badge doesn’t carry weight, your title doesn’t open doors, and your experience doesn’t translate with a clean copy-paste.
But that’s not what’s happening here.
You’re not starting over.
You’re building something new.
The Shift Is Real but So Is Your Foundation
Leaving law enforcement isn’t like quitting a job. It’s shedding an identity. The uniform, the structure, the constant vigilance, it all gets into your DNA. So when you take that leap into the private sector, it’s normal to feel disoriented.
But this transition doesn’t erase who you are.
It reveals who you’ve become.
- You’ve led people in chaos.
- You’ve managed risk in real time.
- You’ve made decisions with imperfect information and owned the outcome.
Those aren’t just “police” skills.
- They’re leadership skills.
- They’re crisis management skills.
- They’re operational skills.
You just need to learn how to speak the language of your next room.
Your Skills Still Matter They Just Need Translation
In law enforcement, you might say:
“I led tactical operations involving high-risk warrant service.”
In the private sector, that becomes:
“I directed high-pressure, cross-functional teams in complex, time-sensitive environments.”
It’s the same just in different packaging.
Translation, not transformation.
This is the work of the transition.
Not proving your worth but articulating it in a way that new industries can recognize.
You’re not faking anything.
You’re aligning language with impact.
You Didn’t Lose Your Purpose, You’re Reframing It
Purpose doesn’t disappear when you turn in your badge.
But it does evolve.
You may no longer be serving through patrol, but you can serve through protection, leadership, risk mitigation, or organizational resilience.
You’re not walking away from purpose.
You’re walking toward a new expression of it.
That mission-driven mindset? It still applies.
The values that made you great in uniform, integrity, discipline, calm under pressure, they don’t expire in the private sector. If anything, they become your competitive advantage.
Here’s the Bottom Line
The private sector doesn’t need less of who you are. It needs more of you, clearly communicated, boldly positioned, and purposefully deployed.
So to the officer reading this who’s ready to leap:
- You’re not starting over.
- Your skills still matter.
- Your purpose still lives.
Now it’s time to build what’s next.