Eleven years before the launch of the Macintosh, Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger picks up the phone to call his special assistant, Winston Lord, into
his office.
Lord is a man of considerable intellect. He will go on to become
ambassador to China and also a U.S. congressman. Kissinger has a
straightforward, even routine request: He asks Lord to write a presidential
foreign policy report. Lord knows his boss demands the best from everyone
who works for him, but even he is unprepared for what happens next.
(Perhaps Lord forgot that Kissinger's extraordinary thesis as an
undergraduate at Harvard was entitled “The Meaning of History” and was
no less than 377 pages long!).
Lord himself tells the story:
I developed a good draft of the policy report, and turned it in to
Kissinger. He calls me in the next day and says, “Is this the best you
can do?” I say, “Henry, I thought so, but I'll try again.” So I go back in
a few days with another draft. He calls me in the next day and he says,
“Are you sure this is the best you can do?” I say, “Well, I really
thought so. I'll try one more time.” Anyway, this goes on eight times,
eight drafts; each time he says, “Is this the best you can do?” So I go in
there with a ninth draft, and when he calls me in the next day and asks
me that same question, I really get exasperated and I say, “Henry, I've
beaten my brains out—this is the ninth draft. I know it's the best I can
do: I can't possibly improve one more word.” He then looks at me and
says, “In that case, now I'll read it.”
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Kissinger was a taskmaster. But there is no question that those who
worked for him produced the best, highest-quality work of their lives. Small
wonder. They were a crack, superb team. But most important was
Kissinger's admonishment—“Is this the best you can do?”
This is an exceptional power question. Use it sparingly and carefully—it
can drive someone nearly mad. But use it. You will help others achieve
things they did not believe possible.
When you want to push someone to exercise their abilities to the
maximum—when you need their best possible work, ask:
“Is this the
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