Why Instructional Designers Feel Undervalued, and How to Reclaim Professional Authority

A Strategic Perspective on Impostor Syndrome, Organizational Bias, and the Future of Learning Design

📌This Is Not Just “Impostor Syndrome”

In recent years, the concept of Impostor Syndrome has gained significant attention across industries. Instructional designers, in particular, frequently report feelings of self-doubt, under-recognition, and professional invisibility due to indirect competition among colleagues fostered by management. However, reducing this phenomenon to a purely psychological issue is analytically incomplete.

Emerging research and professional discourse suggest a more complex reality: Instructional designers are not only experiencing impostor syndrome but also operating within systems that structurally undervalue their work.

➡️This distinction is critical.


The Invisible Nature of Instructional Design Work

Instructional design is inherently outcome-based but indirectly observable. Unlike roles in finance, engineering, or operations, where outputs are tangible and measurable in real time, instructional designers often produce:

  • Behavioral change
  • Knowledge transfer
  • Performance improvement
  • Long-term organizational capability

These outcomes are:

  • Delayed
  • Difficult to isolate
  • Rarely attributed directly to the designer

According to industry discussions on 247 Teach and iDOL Courses, this lack of visibility significantly contributes to self-doubt among professionals in the field.

The Organizational Dimension: A Systemic Devaluation Loop

Beyond individual psychology, organizational dynamics play a decisive role. Research emerging from technical and academic spaces (e.g., AI-related labor studies such as those indexed on arXiv) highlights a recurring pattern:

The Devaluation–Internalization Cycle

  • Learning functions are categorized as “support” rather than “strategic.”
  • Budget allocation prioritizes operational or revenue-generating units.
  • Instructional design is reduced to content production.
  • Expertise is overlooked or simplified.
  • Designers internalize the perceived lack of value.
  • Replacing your primary task with another colleague without notification, or just providing assistance with your work.
  • Implicit competition between colleagues.

This cycle creates a feedback loop where:

  • Organizations undervalue the role
  • Professionals begin to question their own expertise
  • Questioning your own knowledge, skills, and capabilities

Competitive Work Cultures and Psychological Amplification

Studies such as those discussed by the Australian National University demonstrate that competitive work environments intensify impostor syndrome, particularly when:

  • Performance metrics are unclear
  • Goals are not clear
  • Misunderstanding of the Theory and Practice
  • Recognition is inconsistent
  • Value is perception-driven rather than data-driven

Instructional designers frequently operate in precisely these conditions. Additionally, critiques published in outlets like The New Yorker argue that the term “impostor syndrome” can be misleading because it individualizes what are often systemic issues.

Why Instructional Designers Are Particularly Vulnerable

Several structural characteristics make instructional designers more susceptible:

  • Hybrid identity (educator, designer, strategist, technologist)
  • Lack of standardized metrics across organizations
  • Misconception of the role as “content creation.”
  • Separation from business performance conversations

This creates a professional paradox:

Reframing the Narrative: From Content Creator to Performance Strategist

To disrupt this cycle, instructional designers must reposition themselves—not just behaviorally, but strategically. This requires shifting from:

I create training ➡️ to design measurable performance solutions.

What Instructional Designers Can Do: Strategic Interventions

Translate Learning Into Business Metrics

Move beyond completion rates and satisfaction scores. Instead, align with:

  • Productivity metrics
  • Error reduction rates
  • Compliance outcomes
  • Revenue impact

Adopt Evidence-Based Frameworks

Use established models such as:

  • Kirkpatrick Model
  • ROI methodologies
  • Performance consulting frameworks

These provide language that leadership understands.

Make the Invisible Visible

Document and communicate:

  • Before-and-after performance states
  • Learner behavior changes
  • Data-informed insights

Use dashboards, executive summaries, and visual analytics.

Reclaim Expertise Through Specialization

Position yourself in high-value domains:

  • Compliance and risk
  • Corporate intelligence
  • Cybersecurity training
  • Leadership development

Specialization increases perceived scarcity—and therefore value.

Integrate With Business Strategy

Instructional designers must move closer to:

  • Operations teams
  • HR strategy
  • Risk and compliance units

This integration shifts perception from “support” to “strategic partner.

Redefine Professional Identity

Language matters. Replace: I develop courses…➡️ I design systems that drive measurable performance outcomes.

A Strategic Opportunity for the Field

The current landscape presents a paradox:

  • Organizations increasingly need to learn to adapt to rapid change
  • Yet, learning professionals remain undervalued

Instructional designers who:

  • Quantify impact
  • Align with business objectives
  • Communicate value effectively

will not only overcome impostor syndrome—but redefine the field itself.

The Real Shift Is Structural, Not Personal

Instructional designers are not lacking talent. They are operating in systems that:

  • Fail to measure their impact
  • Misinterpret their role
  • Undervalue their contribution

Addressing impostor syndrome, therefore, requires more than confidence-building.

Its requieres:

  • Strategic positioning
  • Data-driven communication
  • Alignment with organizational outcomes

📌Learn more at: www.agneselisa.net

Australian National University. (2023). Competitive work culture fuels imposter syndrome.

Tulshyan, R., & Burey, J. (2021). Stop telling women they have imposter syndrome. Harvard Business Review.

The New Yorker. (2023). The dubious rise of impostor syndrome.

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