ELEMENTS OF SUCCESS IN BUSINESS
In order to succeed in business life, it is necessary to
cultivate and develop certain qualities and traits of
character. These are a portion of the capital of the successful
man, and a more essential portion than money or goods.
COUNSEL AND ADVICE
HONESTY.
"Sharp practice" may bring a temporary gain but in the long
run of life that man will be far ahead who deals squarely and
honestly at all times. A thoroughly honest clerk will command a
higher salary than one of equivocal habits, while the merchant
who has a reputation for honesty and truthfulness in regard to
the quality and value of his goods, will on this account he
favored with a considerable custom. The business man whose
"word is as good as his bond" can in any emergency, control
large amounts of capital, the use of which brings him a rich
return, while the man who sells his neighbor's good opinion for
a temporary gain, will find that he has discounted his future
success, but taking an advantage at the cost of ten tines its
value.
INDUSTRY.
No other quality can take the place of this, and no talents
of mind, however excellent, will bring success without labor;
persistent systematic labor. The young man who expects to find
some royal road to success with little or no effort, or who
imagines that his mental abilities will compensate for a lack
of application, cheats and ruins himself. Horace Greeley
probably never said a grander thing than this: "The saddest
hour in any man's career is that wherein he, for the first
time, fancies there is an easier was of gaining a dollar than
by squarely earning it." and Horace Greeley was himself an
example of success through industry.
It is not genius, but the great mass of average people, who
work, that make the successes in life. Some toil with
the brain, and others toil with the hand, but
all must toil. Industry
applies to hours in business and out of business. It means
not only to perform all required work promptly, but to
occupy spare moments usefully, not to idle evenings, and to
rise early in the morning.
An
employee
should not confine himself to his mere obligatory duties.
He should be ready to work sometimes over hours or in
other departments if it is desired of him. Willingness to
work is one of the finest qualities in a character,
and will compensate for many other deficiencies.
MEMORY.
This faculty, always so useful, is pre-eminently so to the
business man. It must be both retentive and quick. By proper
training this faculty may be so cultivated that names, dates
and events to a surprising number may be readily recalled. The
ability to greet a customer by calling him by name is
considered very valuable in any class of business. It makes a
very agreeable impression when a man who has not seen us but
once or twice, and who is not expecting us, meets us promptly
as we enter his store, with, "Why, Mr. ——, how do
you do? Glad to see you. When did you leave Newark?" We feel as
if we had occupied that man's thoughts since we saw him before.
He appreciates us, and we feel like patronizing him. Whereas,
on the other hand to meet a customer with a blank, inquiring
expression, and greet him with, "Your face is familiar, but I
can't recall your name." is unpleasant and tends to drive away
custom. Every hotel keeper knows the value of this greeting of
customers. Facts, figures and dates are very necessary to
remember in business, and these often form the basis of a
business transaction or venture by which large profits are
made. Superior ability in remembering prices and their
fluctuations has been the secret of more than one brilliant
success.
Desultory reading injures the memory, while close
application to a subject, recalling the various points therein,
tends greatly to improve this faculty. The clerk or employe in
receiving instructions from his principal should endeavor to
impress every point clearly on his mind, and retain them there
until they are carried out in action. Carelessness and
forgetfulness often causes the discharge of otherwise worthy
and competent young persons, as employers do not like to repeat
their orders.
PROMPTNESS.
A very essential element in the character of the business
man is promptness. Filling all engagements at exactly the
appointed time, answering letters or forwarding goods with
promptness, the man of business finds that much more can be
accomplished and with far greater accuracy, than by a loose
system of putting off till to-morrow, or according to
convenience. Not only so, but competition in business is such
that the merchant or tradesman who does not deal with
promptness can hardly expect to hold his custom. Young men
starting out in the world should form the resolution of doing
everything on time. Better to be ahead in the performance of
duties than behind. This promptness then acts as a stimulant in
itself, and is oftentimes the means of winning success in an
enterprise.
A thing that is worth the doing, ought to be done quickly
when the time is ripe for it. A prompt man or woman is valued,
as he respects his word and has due regard for the convenience
of others.
EXECUTIVE ABILITY.
Wavering, timid and uncertain, the man without executive
ability never achieves distinction in active life. Intelligence
to decide on any measure, firmness in adhering to the decision,
and force of will in carrying it out, constitute executive
ability, and are as essential to the business man as his stock
in trade.
The timid man never makes up his mind until after the
opportunity is past, or decides, then recalls his decision, and
feels incapable of promptly estimating all the facts in the
case. This weakness is oftentimes natural, but more frequently
it is a bad habit which should be broken up.
Rashness is to decide and act without taking the trouble to
weigh intelligently the facts in the case. This is inexcusable
folly, and always brings serious trouble sooner or later.
Through executive ability the labor or services of one man
may be made to produce largely, or without proper direction
such services may be almost worthless; and in the case of many
employes under one executive head, the results of this combined
labor may be great success, or where executive ability is
wanting, a great failure.
The successful farmer, merchant, manufacturer, banker, and
professional man must have this combination of ability,
firmness, and will
power.
PERSEVERANCE.
Those who put their minds on their work, whatever kind that
may be, and persist in its thorough execution; who get
interested in something for their own advancement, that they
may become more capable as men and women of sense and tact;
such persons have a lively appreciation of the fact that
success is never more certain to be gained by any other
course.
These people have a just pride in learning the best methods
of giving expression to the faculties and powers they possess,
and which they desire to make the most of. It is incumbent that
they do all in their power for their own and other people's
good. Feeling this, an ever present incentive keeps them
employed, and they are never idle.
If one does not succeed from persisting in doing the best he
knows how, he may conclude that the ministry of failure is
better for him than any worldly success would be.
CIVILITY.
Good behavior is an essential element of our civilization.
It should be displayed every day through courteous acts and
becoming manners.
Politeness is said to be the poetry of conduct; and like
poetry, it has many qualities. Let not your politeness he too
florid, but of that gentle kind which indicates a refined
nature.
In his relations with others, one should never forget his
good breeding. It is a general regard for the feelings of
others that springs from the absence of all selfishness. No one
should behave in the presence of others as though his own
wishes were bound to be gratified or his will to control.
In the more active sphere of business, as in the larger
localities where there is close competition, the small merchant
frequently outstrips his more powerful rival by one element of
success, which may be added to any stock without cost, but
cannot be withheld without loss. That element is civility. A
kind and obliging manner carries with it an indescribable
charm. It must not be a manner that indicates a mean,
groveling, timeserving spirit, but a plain, open, and agreeable
demeanor that seems to desire to oblige for the pleasure of
doing so, and not for the sake of squeezing an extra penny out
of a customer's purse.
INTEGRITY.
The sole reliance of a business man should be in the
integrity of his transactions, and in the civility of his
demeanor. He should make it the interest and the pleasure of a
customer to come to his office or store. If he does this, he
will form the very best "connections," and so long as he
continues this system of business, they will never desert
him.
No real business man will take advantage of a customer's
ignorance, nor equivocate nor misrepresent. If he sells goods,
he will have but one price and a small profit. He will ere long
find all the most profitable customers—the cash
ones—or they will find him.
If such a man is ever deceived in business transactions, he
will never attempt to save himself by putting the deception
upon others; but submit to the loss, and be more cautious in
future. In his business relations, he will stick to those whom
he finds strictly just in their transactions, and shun all
others even at a temporary disadvantage.
The word of a business man should be worth all that it
expresses and promises, and all engagements should be met with
punctilious concern. An indifferent or false policy in business
is a serious mistake. It is fatal to grasp an advantage at ten
times its cost; and there is nothing to compensate for the loss
of a neighbor's confidence or good will.
The long-established customs and forms of business, which in
these times are assumed to be legitimate, already have within
them enough of the elements of peculiarity, commonly termed
"tricks of trade," or, in the sense of any particular business,
"tricks of the trade." Therefore it does not behoove any active
man to make gratuitous additions of a peculiar nature to the
law of business. On the contrary, all should strive to render
business transactions less peculiar than they are.
ECONOMY.
One may rest in the assurance that industry and economy will
be sure to tell in the end. If in early life these habits
become confirmed, no doubt can exist as to the ultimate triumph
of the merchant in attaining a competency.
There should be no antagonism between economy and a generous
business policy. Narrow selfishness is to be avoided in the use
of money or means. In buying goods, one should not take
advantage of another's necessities to beat him down to a figure
which leaves him little or no profit, perhaps a loss, because
he must have money. This is against
manhood and is a ruinous policy, because it tends to
picayunishness and chicanery. A sacred regard for the
principles of justice forms the basis of every transaction,
and regulates the conduct of the upright man of
business.
If economy is wealth, it is not so because of a niggardly
and parsimonious policy. Perhaps the simplest, fewest and best
rules for economical business are these, by observance of which
a noted merchant amassed a large fortune: 1. Obtain the
earliest and fullest information possible in regard to the
matter in hand. 2. Act rapidly and promptly upon it. 3. Keep
your intentions and means secret. 4. Secure the best
employees you can obtain, and reward them liberally.
Proprietors of institutions will early discover that order,
and neatness, are necessary as economical agents in prosecuting
a successful business. And the youth who would grow up to
become well-to-do, to gain complete success, to be a valuable
member and assume a position in society, should take pains to
acquire habits of cleanliness, of order, and of business.
To this effect each one may early learn the simple rules of
health and good order by paying reasonable attention to those
so-called minor details, which pertain to the well-being of the
person, and which must be faithfully observed in order to avoid
failure and win success.
A person, young or old, in or out of business, may keep a
memorandum-book in his pocket, in which he notes every
particular relative to appointments, addresses, and petty cash
matters. An accurate account of personal expenses should be
kept, which should be balanced each week. By this means each
individual will be more careful and economical in his
expenditures, and generally live within his income. He must be
reasonable in spending, or his memorandum or record-book, if it
be honestly kept, will stand to his discredit.
A well-kept memorandum-book is often very useful, as it is
very convenient, and sometimes serves to settle a troublesome
query, arising in other minds, by which the possessor is
absolved from the prejudice of doubt. Young people who expect
to labor with their hands for what they have of this world's
goods, or rise by their own efforts, should by all means
acquire habits of economy, learn to save, form correct habits,
and no time will be required overcoming these. So surely as
they do this, so surely will they be in a situation to ask no
special favors. Every man wants to learn to look out for
himself and rely upon himself. Every man needs to feel that he
is the peer of every other man, and he cannot do it if he is
penniless. Money is power, and those who have it exert a wider
influence than the destitute. Hence it should be the ambition
of all young men to acquire it, as well as to store their minds
with useful knowledge.
GETTING A SITUATION.
In seeking a situation, it is always best to appear in
person if practicable. A business man who requires the services
of a salesman or clerk, a bookkeeper, stenographer, or some one
to remain in his employ a considerable time, usually prefers to
see an applicant and have a few words with him about the work
that is to be done.
If an application has to be made by letter, it should be
done in the handwriting of the applicant. It may be brief, and
should include references.
It is best for a young man to learn a trade. In this country
the trades offer more stable means of subsistence than do other
departments of active life. His knowledge of a trade will form
no bar to any effort he may afterward make to rise to a higher
or more congenial calling.
When a position has been obtained by an applicant, he should
at once proceed to render himself indispensable to his employer
by following up the details of his work in a conscientious and
agreeable manner. Thus he will gain confidence and grow in
favor with men who are quick to recognize merit, and who
respond to that which contributes to the success of a
meritorious man.
There is always room in every business for an honest,
hard-worker. It will not do to presume otherwise; nor should
one sit down to grumble or concoct mischief. The most perilous
hour of one's life is when he is tempted to despond. He who
loses, his courage loses all. There are men in the world who
would rather work than be idle at the same price. Imitate them.
Success is not far off. An honorable and happy life is before
you. Lay hold of it.
|