Daily Press (Sunday)

A perfection­ist mindset can hinder your progress

- By Aytekin Tan Fast Company

I can admit it: I’m a recovering perfection­ist. My way of reacting to uncertaint­y often involves trying to execute everything flawlessly — to be everywhere and available to everyone, sometimes to my own detriment.

I’ve been known to burn the candle at both ends trying to get a project just right. But what I’ve learned in recent years — and this year especially — is that avoiding any kind of mishap won’t help me move the needle forward as a CEO.

When running a business, so many factors remain out of our control, particular­ly now. This isn’t to say we should embrace complacenc­y, but we also shouldn’t allow ourselves to be hijacked by our mistakes. In fact, according to co-authors Rasmus Hougaard and Jacqueline Carter, an unhealthy fixation on perfection can even slow us down when it matters most.

“In a crisis, when reality is changing by the day (or even by the hour), when there is no way of knowing with certainty what lies ahead or the best course of action to take, there is no time for perfection,” they note in a story for the Harvard Business Review. “Suddenly, perfection­ism has become a liability.”

There’s no denying that the current landscape we’re living in demands our close attention. But the truth is, perfection­ism is harmful even without a global pandemic throwing a wrench into our routines.

In the past 14 years I’ve spent building my company, JotForm, I’ve found the following strategies helpful in learning to embrace failure and focus on the bigger picture.

Leave your ego at the door

In my experience, most leaders tend to be intense perfection­ists, which isn’t necessaril­y bad. It drives innovation and the pursuit of excellence. But it can be harmful when it keeps us in the “selfblame game” — a vicious cycle of rehashing every little error and looking it over with a magnifying glass.

Mentally berating ourselves only keeps us from seeing new opportunit­ies, thereby killing our ability to be agile. “Our egos tend to be attached to our past successes and how things used to be,” according to Hougaard and Carter. “When everything gets upended, and our past successes and usual approaches are suddenly not relevant anymore, our ego hurts. We begin to hold on even tighter to the world we used to know and understand.”

What is the remedy? Try on some selflessne­ss for a change. The authors recommend extracting ego from the situation before you show up for work every day.

For leaders, this boils down to being honest, asking for advice and perspectiv­e, admitting you don’t have all the answers, and “recognizin­g that it takes more than two eyes to look into an unknown future,” the authors say.

Remember that success isn’t linear

When I launched my startup, I knew that I would build my business slowly and steadily. This decision relieved enormous pressure to focus on improving our product rather than fixating on insane growth.

What this meant for me in the long term is that I learned to look at failure as a temporary condition. By seeing each mishap as a series of experiment­s, I was able to avoid internaliz­ing my situation as a measure of self-worth.

Keep in mind that failure and innovation often go hand in hand. Take the company Rovio, for example. Before riding high with the creation of their Angry Birds franchise, they spent six years developing and releasing 51 preliminar­y games that failed to become hits, and they even came close to going bankrupt.

Then, everything changed on their 52nd try.

As the saying goes, success isn’t a straight line. Some companies will make big mistakes, but it’s often those attempts that lead them to finding greater solutions.

For me, the missteps I made taught me a great deal about entreprene­urship, software developmen­t and creating a culture I can feel proud of today. But most of all, they taught me more about myself and my own resilience.

Focus in on your “arena”

In one of his most widely quoted speeches, former president Theodore Roosevelt wrote, “It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcomin­g.”

All of this is to say failure should not be an ending but a sign that you’re trying.

At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter how many times we’ve stumbled — it matters that we showed up. In life and work, focus on personal developmen­t and continuous improvemen­t instead of perfection. It’s the only real way to keep moving forward.

Aytekin Tank is the founder of JotForm, a popular online form builder. Establishe­d in 2006, JotForm allows customizab­le data collection for enhanced lead generation, survey distributi­on, payment collection­s and more.

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