Even though I’m more introverted, I speak in public regularly. It’s both part of my marketing plan and part of my business. I get similar reactions like, “You’re no introvert!” I can exclaim three times over, I’ve always assessed as INTJ. But it seems to fall on deaf ears. Is being accomplished, successful and able to speak in public, something that some people disassociate from you because you are more introverted? Do you do it to yourself?

Arts, sciences, mathematics, technology, health – if I bet, I would wager that there are more accomplished introverts than extroverts in these fields. Kari Kenefick actually has statistics about the distribution of introversion and extroversion in some of the general science categories. You guessed it – more introverts than extroverts.

Want names? If you do an internet search on “successful introverts” you’ll get names like – Warren Buffet, Condoleeza Rice, Ashley Judd, Steven Spielberg – all introverts. Some of their work requires that that be on the platform, on stage or speaking in public. You can’t dispute it; they’re accomplished. But the myth tends to be that if someone is on the platform, on stage or speaking in public and then they have to be an extrovert.

There’s just no direct correlation.

Here’s why I’m really sick of this one:

Because so many people (wrong or right) associate success with public speaking, there’s a popular but irritating misconception that introverts must be poor at public speaking because they lack the social skills. The truth is that public speaking uses many of the natural tendencies of introverts already have in place; but that’s another myth isn’t it?

Do you really think you are not accomplished and that you can blame it on lack of extroverting skills? I hope you will think again because it just isn’t so. Check it out yourself with that internet search!