In today’s world, being good is no longer enough. Across careers, institutions, and creative fields, a quiet inversion has taken place: image has overtaken talent as the primary driver of success . Visibility is rewarded over substance. Confidence outperforms competence. Explanation replaces understanding. Those who perform well advance—often faster than those who actually know. Image Defeats Talent is not a self-help guide and not a motivational manifesto. It is a structural analysis of how modern systems actually work—and why effort, depth, and expertise so often fail to translate into recognition or influence. Through a clear, unsentimental examination of contemporary professional life, Oytun Bozkır shows how this shift happened, why it persists, and why it feels increasingly impossible to correct. He traces the mechanics behind image-driven success: the dominance of visibility, the moralization of speed, the performance of intelligence, the punishment of complexity, and the quiet burnout of those whose real contributions remain unseen. This book does not promise that talent will win if you work harder. It explains why that promise stopped being true. Instead, Image Defeats Talent offers clarity for readers who have sensed the misalignment but lacked the language to describe it. It reframes personal frustration as structural reality and replaces confusion with understanding—without false hope, hacks, or hollow optimism. This is a book for readers who value depth over noise, clarity over comfort, and honesty over reassurance. It does not tell you how to win the system. It tells you how the system actually wins.