How To Interpret Your Superpower Quiz Results

Confidence is a choice and mindset, before it becomes a behavior. We can use reminders, like our Inner Child Challenge , to help us make this choice. Then, we can start our journey to having gravitas by believing in our superpowers.


We’ve had thousands of people take our superpowers quiz . The most common reactions we see are:


  • “Do I really have this many superpowers?” Yes! Maybe you’ve been underestimating yourself, not giving yourself credit for your strengths, or underleveraging your talents.
  • “But there are ones I don’t have!” Focus first on the ones you do have. Then, connect your superpowers to a moment in your life when you’ve felt strong and capable, and you’ll begin the journey to believing in your innate strengths. Your superpowers have driven success in your life already.

With the quiz results, you will better understand your starting-point, or default, confidence language. From there, the journey continues:


  1. Believe in your superpowers
  2. Own your confidence language (your unique combination of superpowers)
  3. Deploy your superpowers
  4. Take and get credit for your confidence language
  5. Grow and level up with new superpowers

Chapters 5 and 6 from my book, GRAVITAS: The 8 Strengths That Redefine Confidence , are a great guide on how to do this. In these chapters, we provide the tools to put on that cape with your superpower portfolio and continue growing.


Believing in our superpowers gives us the strongest foundation to take on every day with self-assurance. We cannot give what we do not know we have.


And self-assurance inspires others. Share the MyConfidenceLanguage.com quiz with friends, family, and colleagues as a way to celebrate all the strengths around us!

As Election Day approaches, we’re gearing up to cast our votes and make statements. Why not wear something that speaks as boldly as your ballot? Our Suffragist Collection celebrates the trailblazers who paved the way for progress, featuring newspaper articles from 1910-1920 and the 1965 Voting Rights Act.