Why You Should Stop “Gilding the Lily” at Work

By SalaryFor.com – real salaries for all professions

In Shakespeare’s King John, the original sentiment was clear: to paint the lily or throw perfume on the violet is “wasteful and ridiculous excess.” In the modern workplace, we call this Gilding the Lily—the act of obsessively polishing a task that is already finished, functional, and effective.

While the desire for excellence is admirable, there is a sharp tipping point where “better” becomes the enemy of “done.”


The Law of Diminishing Returns

In productivity, effort and output do not always have a linear relationship. This is best illustrated by the S-Curve of Productivity.

  1. The Ascent: You put in the initial effort to build the foundation.
  2. The Plateau: You reach the “90% mark” where the task is high-quality and meets all requirements.
  3. The Gilding Phase: You spend hours tweaking fonts, rephrasing sentences that already work, or adding “nice-to-have” features that no one asked for.

At this third stage, you are investing 80% more effort for a mere 1% gain in value.


Why We Do It (and Why It’s Dangerous)

Gilding the lily usually isn’t about the work itself; it’s about the psychology of the worker.

The Danger: When you over-polish one task, you are effectively stealing time and energy from your other responsibilities. It leads to burnout and missed deadlines for projects that actually need your attention.


How to Stop Before You Start Painting Flowers

To avoid the trap of unnecessary perfection, try implementing these three “Stop Loss” strategies:

1. Define “Done” at the Start

Before you open a document, list the criteria for success.

2. The 80/20 Rule (Pareto Principle)

Recognize that 80% of your results come from 20% of your efforts. Focus on the core substance. If the substance is solid, the extra “flair” is often just noise.

3. Time-Boxing

Give yourself a “Polishing Window.” Tell yourself: “I have 15 minutes to make this look pretty, and then I am hitting send.” This creates an artificial scarcity of time that forces you to prioritize meaningful edits over trivial ones.


Summary: The Value of “Good Enough”

In a high-stakes environment, “good enough” isn’t a sign of laziness; it’s a sign of strategic prioritization.

A lily is already beautiful. A report that clearly answers a question is already successful. Adding gold leaf to either won’t make them perform their function any better—it just makes them heavier and more expensive to produce.

Learn to trust your first draft of excellence.

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Posted on April 20, 2026 at 5:26 am by salaryfor.com · Permalink
In: On The Job Advice · Tagged with: