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Many novice qualitative researchers quietly carry the belief that they are not yet real researchers. They describe themselves as “still learning,” “not confident enough,” or “not experienced enough” to trust their analytic judgments. This uncertainty often surfaces early and intensifies as projects become more complex.
At RTM, we see this not as a personal shortcoming but as a predictable moment in researcher development.
Qualitative research often asks researchers to make interpretive decisions. There is rarely a single correct answer, no definitive checklist that guarantees analytic correctness, and no early confirmation that one is “doing it right.”
For researchers trained in environments that privilege certainty, control, and procedural mastery, this can feel destabilizing. Confidence has often been tied to:

A common misconception is that confident researchers produce better qualitative work. In practice, the relationship often runs in the opposite direction.
Confidence in qualitative research emerges after sustained engagement with data, not before it. It develops as researchers:
Feeling unsure does not mean you are unprepared. It often means you are encountering the analytic responsibility that qualitative research requires.

Becoming a qualitative researcher is not a credentialing event. It is a process of learning to think, question, and analyze in different ways.
Researchers begin to feel more grounded not when doubt disappears, but when they learn how to work with doubt:

Throughout this series, we will return to this theme: qualitative research requires researchers who are willing to grow into their analytic role over time.