I recently received a kind note from an F1Y who got a job offer from one of the top firms. She was excited and thanked me for helping her to achieve “perfection” in her case preparation.
I was thrilled for her and appreciate the gratitude in the spirit it was given.
In thinking about the conversation, I realized that her use of the word “perfection” didn’t sit well with me for some reason. After thinking about it for a few days, I realized why.
I prefer the concept of striving for “excellence” instead of aiming to achieve “perfection.”
Excellence is about setting a high standard for yourself and focusing on getting as good as you can possibly be. It is ultimately inward-focused.
It’s about being as excellent as YOU can be.
It’s your current ability vs. YOUR maximum potential.
The concept of perfection (at least the way I think about it) feels much more like an external standard. We are aiming to be “perfect” based on someone else’s standard. It is you vs. an impossible-to-achieve standard.
This may seem like semantics — arguing over subtle differences in words.
BUT like I’ve said on previous occasions, your words reveal your thinking, and your thinking dictates your actions. (Your thinking also determines how you feel emotionally about your actions.)
Let me give you an example.
Assume that you’re an athlete at the Olympics.
If you strive for “excellence,” break your own personal record by a HUGE amount and win a silver medal, you’re thrilled about your accomplishment.
Alternatively, let’s say you’re a “perfection”-oriented person. At the Olympics, you also break your personal record and when the competition ends, you discover you “lost gold” (a.k.a., won silver). Under these circumstances, you will feel terrible about failing to be perfect.
Key Insight (worth writing down):
The problem with striving for perfection is no matter how much you accomplish, you will (I hypothesize) NEVER be happy.
I saw a lot of this addiction to perfection at McKinsey. I also saw it a lot when I spent a decade in Silicon Valley.
In Silicon Valley, for example, you see this perfectionism play out as follows:
If you sell a company for $100 million, how do you know you didn’t just get lucky?
If you sell two companies for $100 million each, you still didn’t sell either for $1 billion.
If you are “only” a $1 billionaire, you’re not as “perfect” as being a MULTI-billionaire.
If you have a Harvard undergrad degree, you still don’t have a Harvard Law degree.
Striving for perfection is an incredibly slippery slope because no accomplishment is ever enough.
As a guy with three daughters, I’ve started paying attention to perfectionism in women.
The entire American culture of being a woman (from my perspective) is heavily perfection-based. You see it in women’s magazines.
Buy this product to look more beautiful/less blemished/attract a guy. In short, every product assumes you’re flawed, and every product promises to get you closer to perfection.
I used to be an occasional reader of Cosmo Girl magazine — before the magazine went out of business. When I told this to moms in my community, they were always puzzled and had a look of concern on their faces…. basically, as if I was some kind of freak.
But, once I explained why I read it, they just laughed.
So, why did I used to read Cosmo Girl magazine?
ANSWER:
To know thy enemy.
Whatever brainwashing society was going to inflict on my girls, I wanted to know it well so I could attempt to inoculate my girls from it.
So, what problem did I have with Cosmo Girl magazine (and by extension, Cosmo magazine for adult women)?
It’s the premise.
The premise = You are (very) flawed and that’s a problem.
I found the entire thing disgusting.
Literally, every page — every ad, every article — was laced with this presupposition. It’s one thing to put this in front of adult women who can make their own choices, it’s another thing entirely to put it in front of an impressionable 11-year-old girl.
Got pimples? We can fix that.
Don’t know how to do your hair the right way? We can fix that too.
How to get boys to pay attention to you? We can fix that too.
Unless you know what the publisher or advertiser is doing, and why they are doing it, you will (after say 10 years of reading this stuff in one’s formative years) assume you’re hopelessly flawed.
What I try to teach my kids:
Yes, you are flawed (because EVERYBODY is flawed… NOBODY is perfect) and you’re perfectly fine the way you are.
Yes, strive for excellence to see how good you can become at whatever you’re striving for, but NEVER feel bad for not being perfect.
What’s ironic is the more successful someone is, the more it seems they’re likely to suffer from addiction to perfection.
When I was at Stanford, a survey of Stanford women showed that roughly 85% of Stanford women were unhappy with their bodies.
Here were some of the most accomplished women in the world — future supreme court justices, Nobel prize winners, contributors to society, and the amount of genuine concern (and energy) about not having a perfect body really surprised me.
At McKinsey, the open secret is a lot of McKinsey people are incredibly talented AND incredibly insecure (in their lack of perfection). Many even argue that McKinsey targets the over-achieving, highly insecure — because they “need” the validation McKinsey provides.
This obviously isn’t completely true, but neither is it completely false either.
Arguably, the people with the greatest accomplishments are the MOST insecure — in part because they are close enough to perfection to see it, but never close enough to reach it.
I am not immune.
When I left McKinsey to do my first (of many) startups, my first one failed (the second one too). I kept benchmarking my career success vs. my former peers.
Geez — so and so sold his company for $300 million. I did not (and still haven’t). Then, my wife’s former college roommate sold her company for $950 million. Geez, I’m nowhere close.
In my early days as an entrepreneur, I struggled quite a lot.
I built and maintained a financial model comparing my current earnings vs. what I’d be earning if I were still at McKinsey vs. what I would be earning if I were working at McDonald’s.
(Sadly, McDonald’s won in more months than I care to admit.)
Yes, this is what ex-McKinsey people do with their spare time and insecurities… we QUANTIFY how much of a loser we feel like. Some habits, even when wallowing in self-pity, are hard to break!
Needless to say, those estimation skills came in handy… 🙂
Is striving for perfection really that bad?
YES, it is.
Let me explain why.
Perfectionism is an addiction. A perfectionist needs the “high” of achievement in order to feel good about himself.
Although addiction to achievement doesn’t seem like that big of a deal, the problem comes when the perfectionist is willing to put achievement over and above everything else in life — marriage, children, health (and for some, even the law).
The thought process of the perfectionist is to sacrifice (potentially everything) to achieve what’s “missing,” and once that has been achieved, to appreciate life at that point in time.
This is a fool’s journey.
The accomplishment addict will never stop and will never be satisfied for more than a few brief moments.
If you think management consultants, who are hyper-analytical, are immune from this, you are wrong.
Just ask Rajat Gupta — the former head of McKinsey worldwide… who is now in prison for insider trading.
Why would someone who is on the board of Goldman Sachs and P&G, who is a personal advisor to Bill Gates AND Bill Clinton engage in insider trading?
The speculation is Rajat Gupta, who has an estimated net worth of $125M, was frustrated that he wasn’t a billionaire.
Many of his (Wall Street) friends were billionaires and he thought he was just as smart (if not more so) than them… and wondered how come I’m not a billionaire yet?
Like I said earlier… any addiction, even to perfection, when taken to an extreme can be dangerous.
My key message in sharing all this is to make the following two points:
1) Success is getting what you strive for.
2) Happiness is appreciating what you got.
Never CONFUSE the two. They are INDEPENDENT.
Do you want to be successful? To be happy? or to be Both?
These are entirely distinct (but not mutually exclusive) paths.
Statistically speaking, in the United States once a person’s income reaches the country-wide median income (around $50,000 USD for Americans), their level of happiness does not increase as income increases.
Translated, once you know you will not starve to death and die, more money does not equal more happiness.
Once again, the two are SEPARATE.
Success is achieved externally. Happiness is achieved internally (through introspection).
I mention this because I wish someone had explained this to me very early in life.
While I understood this idea intellectually, I never experienced it personally until very recently.
You see over the past year or so, I’ve been working through my emotional baggage and issues with a therapist. Yes, I am terribly flawed.
Until recently, I always saw this as a problem… something never to be admitted to and in my heart of hearts to be ashamed of.
And after a year of working through the therapeutic process, I’m for the first time in my life actually okay with my flaws and “failures.”
There was a time in my life (most of it actually) where the thought of my even “admitting” that I had problems and was seeing a therapist was horrifying.
I would have feelings of shame and fear that I would lose the respect of others.
(And yes, I really hope my parents never read this article… obviously, I’m not 100% “cured” yet!)
I’ve decided to share this part of my life for two reasons.
1) It is what it is. I am what I am… and I am finally accepting this to be true and even appreciating it.
2) I wanted to share my experience with you and my other readers in the event anything I’ve said resonates with you.
I wish I’d had an emotionally healthy role model to learn from early in life. I never did. Although I’m not sure I’m 100% emotionally healthy, I am certain I’m emotionally healthier than before.
Through this introspective process, I’ve come to recognize a theme in my professional work.
I like helping the “underdog,” and I like “leveling the playing field” for the audiences I serve — small business owners and more recently, aspiring and new management consultants.
For many years, I was reluctant to admit to either for fear of embarrassment.
Four years ago, I was giving a keynote speech at a conference hosted by Fortune magazine. The Chief Marketing Officer for Dell wasn’t able to give the keynote, and they asked me to step in as the keynote speaker.
The conference was geared towards mid-size companies — companies that are a lot more lucrative to serve as consulting clients (than small businesses) because they can afford higher fees.
I was explaining the work I do and more importantly the size (or lack thereof) of the clients I serve to another speaker. His response has stuck with me all these years.
“Victor, I get it. You have this stellar Fortune 500 background and you are willing to help the little guy and you aren’t even the slightest bit embarrassed by it. That’s so interesting,” (in reference to the lack of my embarrassment… which of course implied I SHOULD be embarrassed by it).
I was too surprised by the remark to be offended — but that’s what I was… offended.
Along similar lines, about two years ago, I was reading a message board post about me written by an anonymous user… you know how snarky and mean anonymous posters can get. I’ll never forget one criticism of me.
“If that Victor Cheng guy is so good, why in the hell would he be helping all of us get jobs. If he were really THAT good, he’d be CEO somewhere by now. He’s a loser.” (I edited out the 4-letter words that were used to describe me.)
Ouch!
I suppose at some level, it’s true. If I really were “good enough” to be a Fortune 500 CEO, I probably would not be writing this right now. But, you know, I’m okay with it.
You see, the real reason I work with “underdogs” is because I get great personal satisfaction from doing so.
Of all the emails I get, my favorite one was from a young undergrad from Brown University (I think it was Brown). She had just gotten double offers from McKinsey and BCG.
She was raised by a single mother who earns $25,000 USD (very close to the U.S. poverty line) — a mother who sacrificed enormously to be able to get her to Brown. The F1Y herself had worked hard and sacrificed for years to help create a better life for herself and for her mother.
As she explained, it was a HUGE deal for her (and her family) when she got two consulting job offers as a 21-year-old soon to be college graduate. Her first-year compensation?
$90,000 USD — nearly 4 TIMES what her mother earns in a year.
I was THRILLED for her.
I remember her closing lines were something like, “For years I wondered if all the work and hardship would ever pay off, thanks to your help, it did pay off. Thank you so much.”
It was one of the most meaningful emails I received in my life. Up until that time, I thought I was just helping people out with a tough job interview.
After I received that email, I realized that I had just helped to change someone’s life for the better. I never thought of it that way before. I’ve also never stopped thinking about it that way since that email.
THAT is why I do what I do.
In fact, not only am I not embarrassed by what I do and whom I do it for, I’m PROUD of helping others. It is the most psychologically rewarding work I’ve ever done in my life. And selfishly, it makes me happy.
So maybe if I were “better,” I would be a CEO by now.
Maybe if I wanted more money, I’d serve the big clients who have a lot of it.
Maybe if I did those things, I’d be more “successful” (by someone else’s definition).
But all of that just isn’t me. I realize and appreciate this about myself… enough to speak openly about it.
I love what I do and who I do it for.
By traditional standards, I’m probably the farthest I’ve ever been from being perfect and “successful” (I am not a gazillionaire, a CEO of a public company, nor do I manage 500 employees), but I do strive for excellence in my work every day, I’m successful by my own standard, and I’ve never been happier.
Success vs. Happiness…. and Excellence vs. Perfection
Give it some thought as it applies to your life.
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131 thoughts on “Striving for Excellence vs. Perfection”
Hi Victor,
Absolutely brilliant email. It really resonates with me and I am sure with other FFYs. I have been introspecting a lot over the past few years and your statements are very true. I strive for perfection and I am very competitive, but I hardly relish my success and go in pursuit of new goal. It never feels enoug and tend to compare to other people.
I have come across few brilliant articles on the issue you touched about. The problem is more with keeping it in mind, because I tend to fall back to older habits. I have to remind myself occasionally to step back and analyze my life, so much so it is actually on my calendar now. From what I have seen so far, it is an ongoing process. It doesn’t end, one has to keep themselves in check. Your article is fresh in my mind, but a few weeks down the line, I ll start back to fall into old mindset. As important it is to read and understand your email (trust me your email is one of the important issue in life), it is more important to reinforce in future. I have noticed even when I have had very brilliant insights, I have fallen back to old mindset when unchecked and had to remind myself. Just wanted to share my thoughts. I have also stored your email text and put a reminder to read it occasionally.
Again I think this is your best email so far, its about us, how we live life as human beings and there is a lot of gold in your words. Thanks!!!
Dear Mr Cheng!
I have lots of respect for what you do for others. I get your email automatically and I read majority of them. Although I will probably not go into consulting industry, I truly appreciate your insights as they can be applied on a wider specter of life.
It is refreshing to know that there are people like you who are despite their success ( cause you are successful and there is no need to be CEO of Fortune 500 company) they are present and willing to share their knowledge and wisdom with others.
Also, it is obvious that you care for people in general.
So, Thank You very much for all your emails, time and help to others.
Elena
Dear Victor:
Rarely do I feel compelled to reply to your mails. One of the best reads from you. I’m not in the consulting profession, in fact the more I read about this industry (through your site and blogs) the less chances I see for myself, but that’s a story for another day.
For long I’ve been UNHAPPY about my LIFE and WORK, despite getting a PhD in sciences and working as a postdoctoral researcher. I’ve always COMPARED me with my PEERS (it’s just as in any other profession/business, except that making money/profits are replaced with grants/scientific publications). I always have felt that I’ve settled for LESS and life has treated me “UNFAIR.”
After reading your excellence vs. perfection content [and looking over my shoulder (LOMS) ;-)], I feel like, hey, I’m not doing THAT bad. Yes, I’ve had a few tough breaks, and I mean who hasn’t. My LIFE, after all, is OK!
My biggest take home MESSAGE from your post is this: if I’m spending way too much time trying to compare/BEAT others (aka TRYING to achieve PERFECTION), I’m never going to get ahead! Run my OWN race, instead. COMPETE with myself for EXCELLENCE and be CONTENTED!
Recently, I was asked who my ROLE MODEL was and I quoted “VICTOR CHENG” (which, of course, resulted in who-the-heck-is-he and/or what-has-he-accomplished responses in my institute). My REASONS are — and I’m not saying this to flatter you — you aren’t just HELPING people SUCCEED in their careers, but also positively IMPACTING their LIVES profoundly. The numerous success STORIES from them are the TESTIMONY. It’s a hallmark of a LEADER, a ROLE MODEL, a trusted ADVISER, and on a related note I’m very thankful for sharing your personal story with us.
Cheers,
GK
GK,
Thanks for your very kind words. I definitely empathize with your situation as it was analogous to my own for a long time… And even now it creeps in once in a while.
The first time I realized I had this negative “self-talk” was when I would take some kind of class (singing, writing, astronomy) my stated goal was I wanted to “suck less”.
My goal wasn’t to learn (at least not the top of mind goal) or to enjoy the activity, it was simply to “suck less”. At some point along the way, I realized that by focusing on that I didn’t really allow myself to enjoy the experience very much. I’m often surprised how much difference a simple mindset or attitude shift can make in how I feel about myself and what I do.
This is newer territory for me and I find it oddly reassuring to know that others are going through similar situation. Thank you for writing and sharing.
Victor
Hi Victor,
Just wanted to say it takes a lot of courage to admit something personal like that, and I really admire you for it. You are not only the best aspiring management consultant coach I’ve found in a technical sense, you’re also an inspiring, humble, and deeply caring guy.
I’ve got a final rounds with McKinsey next week, and I was really hoping afterwards (if the news is good) to send you one of those giant all-caps “THANK YOU” emails. But this post has reminded me that the *outcome* of that interview is not as important as the process of striving after a worthy goal in my life. It’s in the process, not the outcome, that I determine my character and happiness in this and other challenges. So regardless of how the interview goes, thank you for all the incredible work you do.
Cheers,
TN
TN,
” the *outcome* of that interview is not as important as the process of striving after a worthy goal in my life. It’s in the process, not the outcome, that I determine my character and happiness in this and other challenges”
Yes… and ironically when I’ve found CIBs embrace that attitude, they relax and usually perform better than when they see the interview as “do or die”.
Good luck with the interview (AND with the process called life).
-Victor
So far your best post…you have great heart
Very interesting perspective…I have been debating
about this with colleagues and friends….your findings
are amazing….keep doing the good karma
“Excellent” post. Thank you.
I learned this lesson a few years ago, after I read “The Search for Significance” by Robert McGee.
This $.35 book changed my life forever:
http://www.amazon.com/The-Search-For-Significance-Through/dp/0849944244/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1354937206&sr=8-1&keywords=search for significance
(I DON’T receive any compensation from this. Just passing on a life-changer.)
Much appreciated! Thank you for sharing, Victor!
Dear Victor,
I am not a consultant (I work in a Big 4 accounting firm in Sydney) but I always enjoy your blogs.
I found this blog about excellence vs. perfection so insightful thst I have printed it out and stuck on my desk to remind myself every day to strive to be the best that I CAN, not what OTHERS SAY I SHOULD BE!
Helen – Great!
Thanks for this post, Victor. I feel like I’m in an Al Anon group, except I’m recovering from perfection. I graduated from Princeton 12 years ago and am still plagued with comparing myself with other people’s success. Your distinction between excellence and perfection is a truly helpful way of sorting out why I’m doing something – is it to do the best that I can do, or is it to win approval? I will keep using this to set my perfection-addicted Ivy League head straight 🙂
Hearing that other people, even ones who are much more ‘successful’ than I, are still comparing themselves unfavorably to the bigger fish above them is a huge relief! It’s also a bit comic, albeit in a tragic way. I hope we can all get off the hamster wheel and find the kind of satisfaction you’re talking about.
Thanks for being so open.
Kristen — LOL… I know what you mean. (My name is Victor and I’m a recovering perfectionist)…
You’re (we) definitely aren’t alone.
-Victor
I read almost all your posts and always find little golden nuggets of wisdom. Quite often, and more so in the last few months, your posts make me reflect on what it means to live life well, which is really, what wisdom means. These wisdom-posts are infinitely more valuable than any piece of skill-building advice you have given because wisdom affects every life decision, and a life is so much more than just a career. When you understand what it means to live life well, have the insight to know how to do it and have the will/discipline to execute on that insight, you’ve hit the jackpot. At the end of the day, that is what everyone, billionaire or not, is striving for. It’s just that everyone has a different idea of the means to get there.
Because a life-lived-well is personal and unique to each individual, part of acheiving it requires that you stop caring about what other people think, so much easier said than done that it has become a cliche. I think most people are shackled by their fear of judgement from others, and that fear forms the foundation for the decisions that they make. People, especially those driven by the desire for acheivement, want to be respected, envied and admired by others, and will make decisions based on that desire. Ironically, when you stop making decisions that feed that desire, you very quickly become the object of everyone’s respect, envy and admiration. Why? Because people see that you are released from the need to please others, and have that true confidence and freedom to pursue what your purpose in life is; and nestled in the most intimate part of people’s insecurities, that is also what they want.
These questions are an excellent barometer to tell what you fear and worship, which are two things that directs people’s decision-making:
1. What are the things in your life, that if you lost, would make life not worth living?
2. When you have free time and/or during the moments before you drift off to sleep, where do your thoughts go?
Many thanks for sharing your thoughts and being authentic and vulnerable in the process!
Kind Regards,
Karen
Karen,
You ask several great question.
I love your point on “I think most people are shackled by their fear of judgement from others, and that fear forms the foundation for the decisions that they make. ”
The problem with this (among the points you already mention) is if you’re degrees of freedom are restricted only to that which others expect, you’ll rarely take risks or do anything innovative or different.
As you said, once you let go of everyone else’s expectations, it suddenly becomes very easy to do more interesting things — which others admire/envy. It’s a false envy because in reality anybody can do the equivalent in their own life if they just give themselves permission to do so.
-Victor