I hear this advice all the time – fake it till you make it.
And I understand where it’s coming from. It’s supposed to give you confidence. It’s supposed to push you to start.
But here’s the thing no one really says:
People can feel when something isn’t real.
You don’t need to be perfect to be credible.
But you do need to be honest about where you are and how you got there.
Because credibility doesn’t come from acting like you’ve already made it.
It comes from showing your path.
People don’t trust titles, they trust stories
A lot of people try to look more credible by adding bigger titles, stronger words, or more “impressive” descriptions.
But when someone lands on your profile, they’re not thinking:
“Wow, nice title.”
They’re thinking:
“Do I believe this person?”
And the only way to answer that is through your story.
How did you start?
What made you choose this work?
What have you actually done so far?
Even small things matter here. Especially in the beginning.
Because when people can follow your journey, they start trusting you.

Show what you do, don’t just say it
One of the simplest ways to look more credible online is this:
Stop telling people what you do. Start showing them.
If you create sales pages, don’t just write that you do it.
Show a page you worked on.
Explain what you changed.
Talk about why it works better now.
It doesn’t have to be complicated.
Sometimes a simple visual, a short breakdown, or a small comparison is enough.
This is also where things like simple graphics or even tools like Microsoft Clarity can help you explain your thinking in a way people actually understand.
And when people understand your work, they trust it more.
What if you don’t have testimonials yet?
This is where many people stop.
They think:
“I’m not ready yet. I need more proof.”
But you don’t need to wait.
If you don’t have testimonials, you can still show your skills.
You can:
Talk through your process
Break down someone else’s work and improve it
Show how you would approach a real problem
Compare different versions and explain your choices
This is still proof.
It just looks a little different.
And sometimes, it’s even more powerful because people see how you think.
Make your work easy to understand
Credibility is not about sounding smart.
It’s about being clear.
If someone needs to read your content three times to understand what you do, they will leave.
But if they immediately get it, they stay.
So instead of trying to sound impressive, try to make things simple.
Explain your work like you would explain it to a friend.
This is what makes people feel comfortable.
And when people feel comfortable, they trust you.
You don’t need to be perfect to be taken seriously
There’s this idea that you need everything figured out before you show up online.
That your product needs to be perfect.
That your path needs to be clear.
But that’s not how it works.
Some of the most credible people online are still figuring things out.
The difference is — they don’t hide it.
They share what they’re learning.
They show what they’re building.
They talk about what’s working and what isn’t.
And that’s exactly what makes them believable.
The mindset that changes everything
If there’s one thing I’ve learned, it’s this:
You don’t build credibility by pretending to be someone else.
You build it by doing the work and letting people see it.
Even when it’s not perfect yet.
Because once you figure it out once, you can do it again.
And that’s where real confidence comes from.

If you want to get better at this
If you’re trying to build your personal brand and show up in a way that actually feels like you, this is something we go deeper into inside Digital Business College.
Not in a complicated way.
Not with big words or “strategies.”
Just simple, real guidance on how to show your work, tell your story, and build something that people trust.
Because at the end of the day, credibility is not about pretending.
It’s about being understood.
