Perfection Is a Leadership Trap
In moments of change, leaders often wait for perfect clarity before acting. But in the age of AI and rapid transformation, perfection can quietly become avoidance.
Leaders pride themselves on prudence.
Especially in Jewish nonprofits.Especially in uncertain times.
We are entrusted with mission, donor dollars, and community trust. Acting carefully is not just wise it’s required.
But there is a quiet shift happening in board rooms and executive conversations that deserves attention.
Perfection has started to masquerade as responsibility.
“We’re not ready yet.”“We need a full policy before we begin.”“Let’s wait until the landscape settles.”“Let’s see what other organizations do first.”
On the surface, these are cautious, thoughtful responses.
Underneath, they can become something else.
The pace of technological change, particularly around AI, is unsettling. It touches communication, education, development, operations. It forces leaders to confront questions about ethics, risk, and workforce design.
We commission another study.Schedule another conversation.Add another layer of approval.
Meanwhile, staff experiment quietly on their own. Systems remain inefficient. Capacity drains. And opportunities to serve more effectively pass by.
This is the paradox of leadership in moments of transformation:
Waiting for certainty does not preserve stability.It often erodes it.
Perfection feels responsible because it minimizes visible risk.
But there is another risk we talk about less.
Judaism has never been a tradition of paralysis. It is a tradition of structure and discipline but also of adaptation. Law evolves. Practice adjusts. Tools change. Values endure.
Shabbat does not eliminate work from the world. It structures it.
In the same way, responsible leadership in the age of AI does not require flawless plans before first steps. It requires disciplined experimentation.
Start small.Pilot intentionally.Set guardrails.Learn openly.
Perfection demands total clarity before movement.
Discipline allows movement with boundaries.
Boards do not need to approve sweeping transformations overnight. Executives do not need to redesign entire systems in a quarter.
But they do need to create permission to begin.
After October 7, many Jewish organizations learned how quickly circumstances can change. Agility became a necessity. Clarity became precious. Decisions had to be made with incomplete information.
That lesson applies here as well.
Responsible AI is not built through hesitation.It is built through thoughtful practice.
The organizations that will serve their communities best in the coming years will not be the ones that waited for the perfect framework.
They will be the ones that combined prudence with motion.
Leadership has always involved balancing risk.
In this moment, one of the greatest risks may be mistaking perfection for care.
Because sometimes, the most responsible thing a leader can say is not, “We’re not ready.”
It’s, “Let’s begin — carefully.”
