"The way to do well is to do well"
About this Quote
A tautology dressed up as advice, "The way to do well is to do well" is the kind of line that sounds like common sense until you notice how aggressively it dodges everything people actually want to know: do well by whose standard, at what cost, and under what accountability. Coming from Donald Rumsfeld, it reads less like a self-help maxim than a governing philosophy that prizes performance optics over moral argument. The sentence closes the loop before anyone can pry it open.
Its specific intent is disciplinary. It tells subordinates and skeptics alike that outcomes justify the method, and that the method is simply "good performance" - an answer that refuses to disclose criteria. That slipperiness is the point. Rumsfeld was famous for linguistic maneuvers that managed inquiry rather than satisfied it (his "known knowns" taxonomy is the canonical example). Here, the subtext is managerial: stop litigating motives, stop demanding a theory, stop asking for guardrails; execute.
Context matters because Rumsfeld’s public persona was forged in the post-9/11 national security state, where ambiguity could be framed as strategic and questions could be treated as friction. In that environment, tautology becomes a rhetorical weapon: it sounds unassailable, almost folksy, while insulating power from evaluation. If you fail, you simply "didn't do well". If you succeed, the process is vindicated by definition.
It works because it’s circular in a way that feels decisive. The line performs competence even as it withholds meaning - a miniature of Rumsfeldian authority, crisp on the surface, sealed against interrogation.
Its specific intent is disciplinary. It tells subordinates and skeptics alike that outcomes justify the method, and that the method is simply "good performance" - an answer that refuses to disclose criteria. That slipperiness is the point. Rumsfeld was famous for linguistic maneuvers that managed inquiry rather than satisfied it (his "known knowns" taxonomy is the canonical example). Here, the subtext is managerial: stop litigating motives, stop demanding a theory, stop asking for guardrails; execute.
Context matters because Rumsfeld’s public persona was forged in the post-9/11 national security state, where ambiguity could be framed as strategic and questions could be treated as friction. In that environment, tautology becomes a rhetorical weapon: it sounds unassailable, almost folksy, while insulating power from evaluation. If you fail, you simply "didn't do well". If you succeed, the process is vindicated by definition.
It works because it’s circular in a way that feels decisive. The line performs competence even as it withholds meaning - a miniature of Rumsfeldian authority, crisp on the surface, sealed against interrogation.
Quote Details
| Topic | Motivational |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Rumsfeld, Donald. (2026, January 15). The way to do well is to do well. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-way-to-do-well-is-to-do-well-141097/
Chicago Style
Rumsfeld, Donald. "The way to do well is to do well." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-way-to-do-well-is-to-do-well-141097/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The way to do well is to do well." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-way-to-do-well-is-to-do-well-141097/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.
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