Issue #04 · April 2026
This Week's Topic
The Story You Tell About Yourself Is a Choice
Most founders are walking around with a narrative they didn't write. Here's how to take it back, and why it changes everything about how a room receives you.
7 minute read · Every Wednesday
Why I Am Writing This

I've watched founders walk into rooms with everything they needed, the experience, the results, the clarity of vision, and still lose the room in the first two minutes. Not because they said the wrong thing. Because the story underneath everything they said was working against them.

The Founder Within is about the inner work that makes the outer work land. And few things are more inner than the narrative you carry about who you are, what you've built, and why any of it matters.

This week: What storytelling for confidence actually means, why most founders are telling the wrong story, and three ways to take the narrative back so it lands in every room you walk into.

I once watched a founder spend forty-five minutes trying to explain why her startup deserved to exist. The investors were patient. But she'd already lost them in the first thirty seconds, not from what she said, but from the apology buried in how she said it.

She knew her numbers. She'd lived the problem she was solving. Her team was strong. On paper, it was a fundable story.

But the version she told in that room was hedged at every turn. She over-explained things that didn't need explaining. She qualified her own achievements before anyone questioned them. She was, without realising it, telling a story in which she was still asking for permission to be taken seriously.

After the meeting, she asked me what went wrong. I told her the honest thing: the business was fine. The story wasn't. And the story, in a room like that, is everything.

What she had walked in with wasn't really her story. It was an assembled version of herself built from years of being told to be careful, stay humble, prove yourself before you claim anything. It was the narrative other people had handed her, and she'd been carrying it so long she'd stopped noticing it was there.

The Narrative Problem

Most founders are not struggling to tell their story. They are struggling to believe it.

The version that lands in a room is not the most polished one. It is the most owned one. The one you've stopped needing to justify to yourself before you say it out loud.

Somewhere between your first failure, your harshest critic, and the noise of everyone else's opinion of what you should be building and why, the narrative gets complicated. You start to carry two stories simultaneously: the one you tell publicly, and the one running underneath it, full of doubt, full of "but what if they're right," full of the parts of the journey you've decided aren't worth mentioning.

That second story leaks. You can't control it. It comes through in the pause before you say your revenue number. It comes through in the way you handle the first pushback. It comes through in whether you occupy the room or apologise for being in it.

Storytelling for confidence is not about learning to perform better. It is about getting clear enough on your own narrative that you stop performing at all.

From My Own Journey
The Version of Me I'd Been Hiding

For a long time, I had two versions of my introduction depending on who was in the room. With some people, I led with VisionVoyage, the programs, the outcomes, the work. With others, especially in rooms where I felt I had to earn my place, I led with credentials. UCL. Certified trainer. The logos of the organisations I'd worked with.

What I was doing, without fully naming it, was choosing which story would make me feel safe in that particular room. I was letting the room decide which version of me was worth presenting.

The shift came when I realised I was doing this, and that the version I led with told the room exactly how much authority I'd decided to give myself in that moment. When I led with credentials, I was asking for permission. When I led with the work and what I believed, I was offering something.

The room doesn't decide your story. You do. Every time you walk in.

The founders I work with who carry the most authority in a room are not always the ones with the most impressive background. They are the ones who have done enough inner work to know which parts of their story are load-bearing, and which parts they were carrying out of habit or fear.

When you know that, you stop editing yourself in real time. You stop monitoring the room's reaction to decide whether you're allowed to continue. You say the thing you came to say, and you let the room catch up.

That is not confidence as a performance. That is confidence as a settled state.

Three Ways to Take the Narrative Back
This Week's Tools
How to Own the Story That Lands
1
Find the sentence that only you can say
Every founder has a line, somewhere in their story, that nobody else could deliver with the same authority. It might be a specific failure they turned around. A counterintuitive belief about the market. A moment that made the whole path make sense in retrospect. Most founders never say this line, because it feels too personal, too specific, too exposed. That feeling is exactly why it works. The room doesn't need more information. It needs to feel that the person speaking has genuinely lived what they're talking about. Find the sentence. Say it without softening it.
2
Stop editing the hard parts out
Most founders have learned, often the hard way, that talking about failure, doubt, or the parts of the journey that went wrong makes them seem less credible. So they scrub those parts out and present a cleaned-up version. The problem is that the cleaned-up version is also the less believable one. People don't trust a story with no friction in it. When you include the hard parts, briefly and without drowning in them, you signal that you are someone who has actually been through something. That builds more trust in thirty seconds than a perfectly polished narrative builds in ten minutes. The edit should be about what's relevant, not what makes you look safest.
3
Know the ending before you start
The most common reason a founder's story loses the room is not a weak opening. It's a weak close. They build context, they describe the problem, they explain the solution, and then they trail off. The story ends where the facts run out, rather than where the conviction lands. Before any high-stakes conversation, know the one thing you want the person in front of you to leave believing. Not about your product. About you. About why you are the person who is going to see this through. Structure everything else around delivering that. A story that knows where it is going pulls the listener forward. A story that is still figuring itself out makes the listener do the work, and most won't.

Owning your narrative is not a one-time exercise. It is something you return to every time you walk into a new kind of room, every time the stakes go up, every time the version of yourself you've been presenting starts to feel like it's wearing thin.

The founders who do this work consistently are the ones who seem to carry the same ease whether they're talking to a first-time founder or a room full of investors. It's not that they've rehearsed more. It's that they've settled something internally that most people haven't.

That settling is what makes a story land. And it is available to every founder who is willing to sit with the uncomfortable question: which parts of my story have I been telling for the room, and which parts am I actually ready to own?

This Week's Reflection

Think of the last room where you felt like you underdelivered. Not technically, but in terms of how you showed up. What story were you telling about yourself before you walked in? Whose version of you was it?

The story you tell about yourself is not fixed. It was built, piece by piece, from everything that happened to you and everything you decided it meant. Which means it can be rebuilt. Deliberately. In a direction that actually serves you.

That is the work. Issue by issue, that is what we are doing here.

Next week, we get into something that derails more capable professionals than almost anything else: why brilliant founders struggle to hold onto their best people, and what the gap is actually about.

See you Wednesday.
Riddhi
Founder, VisionVoyage

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