"Perfect" is a pop rock song written by Jacob Hoggard, David Bendeth, and Dave Genn which lasts for four minutes and ten seconds. The ballad opens on a short pianoriff, which is then repeated in the background during the verses. According to the sheet music published by Universal Music Publishing Group, "Perfect" is composed in the key of C major and set in common time to a moderate tempo of 76 BPM. The song follows a chord progression of Am – F – C – G – G and includes a vocal range of one octave and three notes, from G to C. Lyrically, the song is about a man owning up to his mistakes and vowing to try and be a better man. Hoggard told the Toronto Sun that "Perfect" represents the band "feeling confident in this new line of music," and described the song as "a big turning point for ."
Reception
Critical
"Perfect" received a SOCAN Award in 2010 in the category of Pop / Rock for performing well on radio. The following year, "Perfect" was nominated for Single of the Year at the Juno Awards of 2011, but lost to Young Artists for Haiti's cover of K'naan's "Wavin' Flag". Jacob Hoggard of Hedley was one of the artists contributing to the supergroup, making him one of the recipients of the award.
Commercial
"Perfect" entered the Billboard Canadian Hot 100 at number 36 on the chart dated December 5, 2009. It was the week's highest-ranking debut and also notably debuted one spot above the position of their previous single, "Don't Talk to Strangers", which was the week's "airplay gainer". After reaching the top 10 in April 2010, "Perfect" peaked at number 7 on the chart dated May 8, 2010. The song reached a peak position of 5 on the Canadian Digital Songs component chart the same week. "Perfect" is the band's first song to enter one of the US Billboard charts, debuting at number 40 on the Adult Pop Songs chart dated October 2, 2010. The song spent 20 weeks on the chart and reached a peak of 25 on the chart dated January 1, 2011.
Music video
The music video for "Perfect" was directed by Kyle Davison and Guy Todd Williams and premiered March 5, 2010. It alternates between performance shots – first of Hoggard alone at a piano, and later the whole band – in an all-white room and "abstract vignettes" that depict a tumultuous relationship; the latter are presented in slow motion, with images of flames or shattered glass superimposed on the scene. Toward the end of the video, Hoggard is shown dressed all in white while the female character hurls a bucketful of red paint at him. This red splatter imagery is used in the single artwork. According to Davison, the video is meant to represent "a relationship at the beginning of the end."