Embrace ‘Good Enough’ Curb your perfectionist tendencies by embracing the principle of GEMO – the letters stand for “Good enough, move on.” fter all, you always could do more, but maximum productivity requires you to recognize when continuing to plug away on a project isn’t offering enough return on your time invested.
In some cases you can return to the project later, after you have cleared something else from your to-do list or gained fresh perspective. Other times, you just need to move on.
– Adapted from “Finding GEMO,” David Zinger