Research shows that when girls reach puberty, their confidence takes a hit. From second-guessing themselves to raising their hands less in class, the teenage years are when girls are often at risk of falling off the so-called “confidence cliff.”
It’s part of the reason why over the last decade, award-winning journalists Katty Kay and Claire Shipman have published a series of bestsellers exploring how women can harness confidence to bust self-doubt at work, in life, and in school.
And on the heels of the success of “The Confidence Code for Girls,” their first book geared toward younger readers, the two have teamed up with author JillEllyn Riley to publish “Living the Confidence Code,” which features the stories of more than 30 trailblazing young women and their own tips for living confidently.
“We know that the best role models for girls can often be not their parents, but other girls,” Shipman told NBC News’ Know Your Value.
In the book’s pages, we meet Melati and Isabel Wijsen, the Indonesian sisters at the forefront of an international campaign to remove plastic from the oceans; Gitanjali Rao, the teen who invented a device to detect lead in water using a smartphone in response to the Flint, Michigan water crisis; Aaron Philip, the disabled and transgender rights activist who became the first trans Black disabled model to be signed to a major agency; and Yekaba Abimbola, an Ethiopian girl who cultivated the community support to get out of a marriage her father had arranged for her at age 12.
The book, which came out this week, is filled with the stories of young women around the world who are doing things big and small to change their own circumstances, their communities, and the world — and most importantly, how they grew their own confidence and resilience to overcome challenges along the way.
“Some of the struggles that we [write about] from around the world are not struggles obviously that girls in America have, but the process of dealing with those struggles, whether you’re in Indonesia or Ethiopia or Nepal or Afghanistan or the U.K. or America — that process of taking a risk and overcoming a hurdle, and sort of carrying through fear, that’s the same wherever you are,” Kay said. “And that feeling of satisfaction and growing your confidence is the same, too. The result is equally powerful.”
Here are Kay and Shipman’s top five takeaways from “Living the Confidence Code”:
1. It’s OK to fail
“We wanted to make sure there were girls in the book who were honest about how they had failed in their ventures as well [and] we wanted to show other girls that this is normal and it’s part of how you build your confidence and how you have success,” Kay said.
“And I think if you can normalize failure by showing your daughters and our daughters, our girls, our own failures and the moments when we haven’t been perfect, and the moments when they’ve had a struggle, but have come through it and survived it and gone over the hurdles, I think all of that is really the most helpful thing you can do for your daughter,” Kay said. “Stop them from catastrophizing and get them used to the idea of having failures and hurdles, because if they get so terrified, as our research has shown that girls become terrified of the prospect of failing, then they won’t take action, then they won’t take risks, then they won’t ever grow their confidence because they’ll stick in a very, very narrow comfort zone, because just the fear of failing is so great. So let’s try to normalize failure as much as we can.”
2. You don’t have to be a superhero
“These girls are incredible, but they’re not superheroes,” Shipman said. “We were very deliberate in finding girls who would articulate the struggles they have, who sound like my own teenager in expressing their vulnerabilities and their concerns about things. But then something would click, and they just managed to — with whatever confidence tricks they used or an ability to get over a fear of failure or the fear of a risk they were going to take — they would just do it and take that next step.”
“We really tried to detail the struggle and get into the nuts and bolts, [and] there was a hidden how-to message in each of these stories,” Shipman said. “I learned little tricks and tips from some of these girls, some of them would talk about looking in the mirror and telling themselves something. Some of them would talk to each other to boost themselves up. Some of them would hide in their room for two days after they had a failure. I guess it was a feeling of connection, really, and thinking, ‘Okay, well, If Anahi can do that and she’s in high school then, I guess I could send that email today.’”
3. Shake it off and just do it
“What we really learned is that to build resilience in life, and the feelings of positivity and accomplishment, you have to be able to do things,” Shipman said. “Confidence is just about doing, and it is that kind of virtuous circle where the more you do, the more confidence you create, the more risk you take, the more you fail, the more confidence you create, and therefore that lets you do more.”









