Saturday, August 27, 2011

Perfectionism: A Flawed Perspective?

At the beginning of a project at work that had a pretty tight deadline, the Project Manager on the customer's side sent out an email describing the importance of avoiding feature creep. At the end he included a quote that said "Perfect is the enemy of good." I don't have time to write a post going as in depth with this subject as I would like to, but at the least maybe it will spark a discussion, or at least give everyone something to chew on.

In my career, and in my personal projects, I have been thinking a lot recently about perfection, and how inefficient it can be. I have been accused from time to time of being a perfectionist, and recently as I have been trying to increase my efficiency at work, and spreading my free time across multiple personal projects at home, I have been questioning the effectiveness of wasting time being perfect. Today, I accidentally came across this blog post which provided some definition on the abstract ideas floating around in my head on the subject. Ironically, I felt that it clarified to me that some of my least favorite flaws about myself probably come from my inability to recognize when myself or others have done a good job, or even a great job, and move on to the next task, rather then getting hung up, upset, or negative because the job isn't "perfect" by my standards.

I am not trying to vindicate shoddy work. Great work does not have to be perfect. Improvement should still always be sought for. We should always be trying for the best that we are capable of doing. But with a little extra mental effort on our part, we might be able to recognize that the best we are capable of in our social lives, career, or personal projects is not just one absolutely perfect task, but instead accomplish a lot of tasks that we perform very well.