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How To Win Friends And Influence People [复制链接]

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发表于 2009-1-1 18:09:23 |只看该作者

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~~~~~~~

6 - How To Spur People On To Success

Pete Barlow was an old friend of mine. He had a dog-and-pony act

and spent his life traveling with circuses and vaudeville shows. I

loved to watch Pete train new dogs for his act. I noticed that the

moment a dog showed the slightest improvement, Pete patted and

praised him and gave him meat and made a great to-do about it.

That's nothing new. Animal trainers have been using that same

technique for centuries.

Why, I wonder, don't we use the same common sense when trying

to change people that we use when trying to change dogs? Why

don't we use meat instead of a whip? Why don't we use praise

instead of condemnation? Let us praise even the slightest

improvement. That inspires the other person to keep on improving.

In his book I Ain't Much, Baby-But I'm All I Got, the psychologist Jess

Lair comments: "Praise is like sunlight to the warm human spirit; we

cannot flower and grow without it. And yet, while most of us are only

too ready to apply to others the cold wind of criticism, we are

somehow reluctant to give our fellow the warm sunshine of praise."

(*)

----

  • Jess Lair, I Ain't Much, Baby - But I'm All I Got (Greenwich,

    Conn.: Fawcett, 1976), p.248.

    ----

    I can look back at my own life and see where a few words of praise

    have sharply changed my entire future. Can't you say the same thing

    about your life? History is replete with striking illustrations of the

    sheer witchery raise.

    For example, many years ago a boy of ten was working in a factory

    in Naples, He longed to be a singer, but his first teacher discouraged

    him. "You can't sing," he said. "You haven't any voice at all. It

    sounds like the wind in the shutters."

    But his mother, a poor peasant woman, put her arms about him and

    praised him and told him she knew he could sing, she could already

    see an improvement, and she went barefoot in order to save money

    to pay for his music lessons. That peasant mother's praise and

    encouragement changed that boy's life. His name was Enrico Caruso,

    and he became the greatest and most famous opera singer of his

    age.

    In the early nineteenth century, a young man in London aspired to

    be a writer. But everything seemed to be against him. He had never

    been able to attend school more than four years. His father had been

    flung in jail because he couldn't pay his debts, and this young man

    often knew the pangs of hunger. Finally, he got a job pasting labels

    on bottles of blacking in a rat-infested warehouse, and he slept at

    night in a dismal attic room with two other boys - guttersnipes from

    the slums of London. He had so little confidence in his ability to write

    that he sneaked out and mailed his first manuscript in the dead of

    night so nobody would laugh at him. Story after story was refused.

    Finally the great day came when one was accepted. True, he wasn't

    paid a shilling for it, but one editor had praised him. One editor had

    given him recognition. He was so thrilled that he wandered aimlessly

    around the streets with tears rolling down his cheeks.

    The praise, the recognition, that he received through getting one

    story in print, changed his whole life, for if it hadn't been for that

    encouragement, he might have spent his entire life working in ratinfested factories. You may have heard of that boy. His name was

    Charles Dickens.

    Another boy in London made his living as a clerk in a dry-goods

    store. He had to get up at five o'clock, sweep out the store, and

    slave for fourteen hours a day. It was sheer drudgery and he

    despised it. After two years, he could stand it no longer, so he got up

    one morning and, without waiting for breakfast, tramped fifteen

    miles to talk to his mother, who was working as a housekeeper.

    He was frantic. He pleaded with her. He wept. He swore he would

    kill himself if he had to remain in the shop any longer. Then he wrote

    a long, pathetic letter to his old schoolmaster, declaring that he was

    heartbroken, that he no longer wanted to live. His old schoolmaster

    gave him a little praise and assured him that he really was very

    intelligent and fitted for finer things and offered him a job as a

    teacher.

    That praise changed the future of that boy and made a lasting

    impression on the history of English literature. For that boy went on

    to write innumerable best-selling books and made over a million

    dollars with his pen. You've probably heard of him. His name: H. G.

    Wells.

    Use of praise instead of criticism is the basic concept of B.F.

    Skinner's teachings. This great contemporary psychologist has shown

    by experiments with animals and with humans that when criticism is

    minimized and praise emphasized, the good things people do will be

    reinforced and the poorer things will atrophy for lack of attention.

    John Ringelspaugh of Rocky Mount, North Carolina, used this in

    dealing with his children. It seemed that, as in so many families,

    mother and dad's chief form of communication with the children was

    yelling at them. And, as in so many cases, the children became a

    little worse rather than better after each such session - and so did

    the parents. There seemed to be no end in sight for this problem.

    Mr. Ringelspaugh determined to use some of the principles he was

    learning in our course to solve this situation. He reported: "We

    decided to try praise instead of harping on their faults. It wasn't easy

    when all we could see were the negative things they were doing; it

    was really tough to find things to praise. We managed to find

    something, and within the first day or two some of the really

    upsetting things they were doing quit happening. Then some of their

    other faults began to disappear. They began capitalizing on the

    praise we were giving them. They even began going out of their way

    to do things right. Neither of us could believe it. Of course, it didn't

    last forever, but the norm reached after things leveled off was so

    much better. It was no longer necessary to react the way we used

    to. The children were doing far more right things than wrong ones."

    All of this was a result of praising the slightest improvement in the

    children rather than condemning everything they did wrong.

    This works on the job too. Keith Roper of Woodland Hills, California,

    applied this principle to a situation in his company. Some material

    came to him in his print shop which was of exceptionally high

    quality. The printer who had done this job was a new employee who

    had been having difficulty adjusting to the job. His supervisor was

    upset about what he considered a negative attitude and was

    seriously thinking of terminating his services.
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    When Mr. Roper was informed of this situation, he personally went

    over to the print shop and had a talk with the young man. He told

    him how pleased he was with the work he had just received and

    pointed out it was the best work he had seen produced in that shop

    for some time. He pointed out exactly why it was superior and how

    important the young man's contribution was to the company,

    Do you think this affected that young printer's attitude toward the

    company? Within days there was a complete turnabout. He told

    several of his co-workers about the conversation and how someone

    in the company really appreciated good work. And from that day on,

    he was a loyal and dedicated worker.

    What Mr. Roper did was not just flatter the young printer and say

    "You're good." He specifically pointed out how his work was superior.

    Because he had singled out a specific accomplishment, rather than

    just making general flattering remarks, his praise became much

    more meaningful to the person to whom it was given. Everybody

    likes to be praised, but when praise is specific, it comes across as

    sincere - not something the other person may be saying just to make

    one feel good.

    Remember, we all crave appreciation and recognition, and will do

    almost anything to get it. But nobody wants insincerity. Nobody

    wants flattery.

    Let me repeat: The principles taught in this book will work only when

    they come from the heart. I am not advocating a bag of tricks. I am

    talking about a new way of life.

    Talk about changing people. If you and I will inspire the people with

    whom we come in contact to a realization of the hidden treasures

    they possess, we can do far more than change people. We can

    literally transform them.

    Exaggeration? Then listen to these sage words from William James,

    one of the most distinguished psychologists and philosophers

    America has ever produced:

    Compared with what we ought to be, we are only half awake. We

    are making use of only a small part of our physical and mental

    resources. Stating the thing broadly, the human individual thus lives

    far within his limits. He possesses powers of various sorts which he

    habitually fails to use.

    Yes, you who are reading these lines possess powers of various sorts

    which you habitually fail to use; and one of these powers you are

    probably not using to the fullest extent is your magic ability to praise

    people and inspire them with a realization of their latent possibilities.

    Abilities wither under criticism; they blossom under encouragement.

    To become a more effective leader of people, apply ...

    • Principle 6 - Praise the slightest improvement and praise every

    improvement. Be "hearty in your approbation and lavish in your

    praise."

    ~~~~~~~

    7 - Give A Dog A Good Name

    What do you do when a person who has been a good worker begins

    to turn in shoddy work? You can fire him or her, but that really

    doesn't solve anything. You can berate the worker, but this usually

    causes resentment. Henry Henke, a service manager for a large

    truck dealership in Lowell, Indiana, had a mechanic whose work had

    become less than satisfactory. Instead of bawling him out or

    threatening him, Mr. Henke called him into his office and had a

    heart-to-heart talk with him.

    "Bill," he said, "you are a fine mechanic. You have been in this line of

    work for a good number of years. You have repaired many vehicles

    to the customers' satisfaction. In fact, we've had a number of

    compliments about the good work you have done. Yet, of late, the

    time you take to complete each job has been increasing and your

    work has not been up to your own old standards. Because you have

    been such an outstanding mechanic in the past, I felt sure you would

    want to know that I am not happy with this situation, and perhaps

    jointly we could find some way to correct the problem."

    Bill responded that he hadn't realized he had been falling down in his

    duties and assured his boss that the work he was getting was not

    out of his range of expertise and he would try to improve in the

    future.

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    Did he do it? You can be sure he did. He once again became a fast

    and thorough mechanic. With that reputation Mr. Henke had given

    him to live up to, how could he do anything else but turn out work

    comparable to that which he had done in the past.

    "The average person," said Samuel Vauclain, then president of the

    Baldwin Locomotive Works, "can be led readily if you have his or her

    respect and if you show that you respect that person for some kind

    of ability."

    In short, if you want to improve a person in a certain spect, act as

    though that particular trait were already one of his or her

    outstanding characteristics. Shakespeare said "Assume a virtue, if

    you have it not." And it might be well to assume and state openly

    that other people have the virtue you want them to develop. Give

    them a fine reputation to live up to, and they will make prodigious

    efforts rather than see you disillusioned.

    Georgette Leblanc, in her book Souvenirs, My Life with Maeterlinck,

    describes the startling transformation of a humble Belgian Cinderella.

    "A servant girl from a neighboring hotel brought my meals," she

    wrote. "She was called 'Marie the Dish washer' because she had

    started her career as a scullery assistant. She was a kind of monster,

    cross-eyed, bandylegged, poor in flesh and spirit.

    "One day, while she was holding my plate of macaroni in her red

    hand, I said to her point-blank, 'Marie, you do not know what

    treasures are within you.'

    "Accustomed to holding back her emotion, Marie waited a few

    moments, not daring to risk the slightest gesture for fear of a

    castastrophe. Then she put the dish on the table, sighed and said

    ingenuously, 'Madame, I would never have believed it.' She did not

    doubt, she did not ask a question. She simply went back to the

    kitchen and repeated what I had said, and such is the force of faith

    that no one made fun of her. From that day on, she was even given

    a certain consideration. But the most curious change of all occurred

    in the humble Marie herself. Believing she was the tabernacle of

    unseen marvels, she began taking care of her face and body so

    carefully that her starved youth seemed to bloom and modestly hide

    her plainness.

    "Two months later, she announced her coming marriage with the

    nephew of the chef. 'I'm going to be a lady,' she said, and thanked

    me. A small phrase had changed her entire life."

    Georgette Leblanc had given "Marie the Dishwasher" a reputation to

    live up to - and that reputation had transformed her.

    Bill Parker, a sales representative for a food company in Daytona

    Beach, Florida, was very excited about the new line of products his

    company was introducing and was upset when the manager of a

    large independent food market turned down the opportunity to carry

    it in his store. Bill brooded all day over this rejection and decided to

    return to the store before he went home that evening and try again.

    "Jack," he said, "since I left this morning I realized I hadn't given you

    the entire picture of our new line, and I would appreciate some of

    your time to tell you about the points I omitted. I have respected the

    fact that you are always willing to listen and are big enough to

    change your mind when the facts warrant a change."

    Could Jack refuse to give him another hearing? Not with that

    reputation to live up to.

    One morning Dr. Martin Fitzhugh, a dentist in Dublin, Ireland, was

    shocked when one of his patients pointed out to him that the metal

    cup holder which she was using to rinse her mouth was not very

    clean. True, the patient drank from the paper cup, not the holder,

    but it certainly was not professional to use tarnished equipment.

    When the patient left, Dr. Fitzhugh retreated to his private office to

    write a note to Bridgit, the charwoman, who came twice a week to

    clean his office. He wrote:

    My dear Bridgit,

    I see you so seldom, I thought I'd take the time to thank you for the

    fine job of cleaning you've been doing. By the way, I thought I'd

    mention that since two hours, twice a week, is a very limited amount

    of time, please feel free to work an extra half hour from time to time

    if you feel you need to do those "once-in-a-while" things like

    polishing the cup holders and the like. I, of course, will pay you for

    the extra time.

    "The next day, when I walked into my office," Dr. Fitzhugh reported,

    "My desk had been polished to a mirror-like finish, as had my chair,

    which I nearly slid out of. When I went into the treatment room I

    found the shiniest, cleanest chrome-plated cup holder I had ever

    seen nestled in its receptacle. I had given my char-woman a fine

    reputation to live up to, and because of this small gesture she

    outperformed all her past efforts. How much additional time did she

    spend on this? That's right-none at all ."

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    There is an old saying: "Give a dog a bad name and you may as well

    hang him." But give him a good name - and see what happens!

    When Mrs. Ruth Hopkins, a fourth-grade teacher in Brooklyn, New

    York, looked at her class roster the first day of school, her

    excitement and joy of starting a new term was tinged with anxiety.

    In her class this year she would have Tommy T., the school's most

    notorious "bad boy." His third-grade teacher had constantly

    complained about Tommy to colleagues, the principal and anyone

    else who would listen. He was not just mischievous; he caused

    serious discipline problems in the class, picked fights with the boys,

    teased the girls, was fresh to the teacher, and seemed to get worse

    as he grew older. His only redeeming feature was his ability to learn

    rapidly and master the-school work easily.

    Mrs. Hopkins decided to face the "Tommy problem" immediately.

    When she greeted her new students, she made little comments to

    each of them: "Rose, that's a pretty dress you are wearing," "Alicia, I

    hear you draw beautifully." When she came to Tommy, she looked

    him straight in the eyes and said, "Tommy, I understand you are a

    natural leader. I'm going to depend on you to help me make this

    class the best class in the fourth grade this year." She reinforced this

    over the first few days by complimenting Tommy on everything he

    did and commenting on how this showed what a good student he

    was. With that reputation to live up to, even a nine-year-old couldn't

    let her down - and he didn't.

    If you want to excel in that difficult leadership role of changing the

    attitude or behavior of others, use ...

    • Principle 7 - Give the other person a fine reputation to live up to.

    ~~~~~~~

    8 - Make The Fault Seem Easy To Correct

    A bachelor friend of mine, about forty years old, became engaged,

    and his fiancйe persuaded him to take some belated dancing lessons.

    "The Lord knows I needed dancing lessons," he confessed as he told

    me the story, "for I danced just as I did when I first started twenty

    years ago. The first teacher I engaged probably told me the truth.

    She said I was all wrong; I would just have to forget everything and

    begin all over again. But that took the heart out of me. I had no

    incentive to go on. So I quit her.

    "The next teacher may have been lying, but I liked it. She said

    nonchalantly that my dancing was a bit old-fashioned perhaps, but

    the fundamentals were all right, and she assured me I wouldn't have

    any trouble learning a few new steps. The first teacher had

    discouraged me by emphasizing my mistakes. This new teacher did

    the opposite. She kept praising the things I did right and minimizing

    my errors. 'You have a natural sense of rhythm,' she assured me.

    'You really are a natural-born dancer.' Now my common sense tells

    me that I always have been and always will be a fourth-rate dancer;

    yet, deep in my heart, I still like to think that maybe she meant it. To

    be sure, I was paying her to say it; but why bring that up?

    "At any rate, I know I am a better dancer than I would have been if

    she hadn't told me I had a natural sense of rhythm. That encouraged

    me. That gave me hope. That made me want to improve."

    Tell your child, your spouse, or your employee that he or she is

    stupid or dumb at a certain thing, has no gift for it, and is doing it all

    wrong, and you have destroyed almost every incentive to try to

    improve. But use the opposite technique - be liberal with your

    encouragement, make the thing seem easy to do, let the other

    person know that you have faith in his ability to do it, that he has an

    undeveloped flair for it - and he will practice until the dawn comes in

    the window in order to excel.

    Lowell Thomas, a superb artist in human relations, used this

    technique, He gave you confidence, inspired you with courage and

    faith. For example, I spent a weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas;

    and on Saturday night, I was asked to sit in on a friendly bridge

    game before a roaring fire. Bridge? Oh, no! No! No! Not me. I knew

    nothing about it. The game had always been a black mystery to me,

    No! No! Impossible!

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    "Why, Dale, it is no trick at all," Lowell replied. "There is nothing to

    bridge except memory and judgment. You've written articles on

    memory. Bridge will be a cinch for you. It's right up your alley."

    And presto, almost before I realized what I was doing, I found

    myself for the first time at a bridge table. All because I was told I

    had a natural flair for it and the game was made to seem easy.

    Speaking of bridge reminds me of Ely Culbertson, whose books on

    bridge have been translated into a dozen languages and have sold

    more than a million copies. Yet he told me he never would have

    made a profession out of the game if a certain young woman hadn't

    assured him he had a flair for it.

    When he came to America in 1922, he tried to get a job teaching in

    philosophy and sociology, but he couldn't. Then he tried selling coal,

    and he failed at that

    Then he tried selling coffee, and he failed at that, too.

    He had played some bridge, but it had never occurred to him in

    those days that someday he would teach it. He was not only a poor

    card player, but he was also very stubborn. He asked so many

    questions and held so many post-mortem examinations that no one

    wanted to play with him.

    Then he met a pretty bridge teacher, Josephine Dillon, fell in love

    and married her. She noticed how carefully he analyzed his cards

    and persuaded him that he was a potential genius at the card table.

    It was that encouragement and that alone, Culbertson told me, that

    caused him to make a profession of bridge.

    Clarence M. Jones, one of the instructors of our course in Cincinnati,

    Ohio, told how encouragement and making faults seem easy to

    correct completely changed the life of his son.

    "In 1970 my son David, who was then fifteen years old, came to live

    with me in Cincinnati. He had led a rough life. In 1958 his head was

    cut open in a car accident, leaving a very bad scar on his forehead.

    In 1960 his mother and I were divorced and he moved to Dallas,

    Texas, with his mother. Until he was fifteen he had spent most of his

    school years in special classes for slow learners in the Dallas school

    system. Possibly because of the scar, school administrators had

    decided he was brain-injured and could not function at a normal

    level. He was two years behind his age group, so he was only in the

    seventh grade. Yet he did not know his multiplication tables, added

    on his fingers and could barely read.

    "There was one positive point. He loved to work on radio and TV

    sets. He wanted to become a TV technician. I encouraged this and

    pointed out that he needed math to qualify for the training. I decided

    to help him become proficient in this subject. We obtained four sets

    of flash cards: multiplication, division, addition and subtraction. As

    we went through the cards, we put the correct answers in a discard

    stack. When David missed one, I gave him the correct answer and

    then put the card in the repeat stack until there were no cards left. I

    made a big deal out of each card he got right, particularly if he had

    missed it previously. Each night we would go through the repeat

    stack until there were no cards left.

    Each night we timed the exercise with a stop watch. I promised him

    that when he could get all the cards correct in eight minutes with no

    incorrect answers, we would quit doing it every night. This seemed

    an impossible goal to David. The first night it took 52 minutes, the

    second night, 48, then 45, 44, 41 then under 40 minutes. We

    celebrated each reduction. I'd call in my wife, and we would both

    hug him and we'd all dance a jig. At the end of the month he was

    doing all the cards perfectly in less than eight minutes. When he

    made a small improvement he would ask to do it again. He had

    made the fantastic discovery that learning was easy and fun.

    "Naturally his grades in algebra took a jump. It is amazing how much

    easier algebra is when you can multiply. He astonished himself by

    bringing home a B in math. That had never happened before. Other

    changes came with almost unbelievable rapidity. His reading

    improved rapidly, and he began to use his natural talents in drawing.

    Later in the school year his science teacher assigned him to develop

    an exhibit. He chose to develop a highly complex series of models to

    demonstrate the effect of levers. It required skill not only in drawing

    and model making but in applied mathematics. The exhibit took first

    prize in his school's science fair and was entered in the city

    competition and won third prize for the entire city of Cincinnati.

    "That did it. Here was a kid who had flunked two grades, who had

    been told he was 'brain-damaged,' who had been called

    'Frankenstein' by his classmates and told his brains must have leaked

    out of the cut on his head. Suddenly he discovered he could really

    learn and accomplish things. The result? From the last quarter of the

    eighth grade all the way through high school, he never failed to

    make the honor roll; in high school he was elected to the national

    honor society. Once he found learning was easy, his whole life

    changed."

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    Gunter Schmidt, who took our course in West Germany, told of an

    employee in the food store he managed who was negligent about

    putting the proper price tags on the shelves where the items were

    displayed. This caused confusion and customer complaints.

    Reminders, admonitions, confrontations, with her about this did not

    do much good. Finally, Mr. Schmidt called her into his office and told

    her he was appointing her Supervisor of Price Tag Posting for the

    entire store and she would be responsible for keeping all of the

    shelves properly tagged. This new responsibility and title changed

    her attitude completely, and she fulfiled her duties satisfactorily from

    then on.

    Childish? Perhaps. But that is what they said to Napoleon when he

    created the Legion of Honor and distributed 15,000 crosses to his

    soldiers and made eighteen of his generals "Marshals of France" and

    called his troops the "Grand Army." Napoleon was criticized for giving

    "toys" to war-hardened veterans, and Napoleon replied, "Men are

    ruled by toys."

    This technique of giving titles and authority worked for Napoleon and

    it will work for you. For example, a friend of mine, Mrs. Ernest Gent

    of Scarsdale, New York, was troubled by boys running across and

    destroying her lawn. She tried criticism. She tried coaxing. Neither

    worked. Then she tried giving the worst sinner in the gang a title and

    a feeling of authority. She made him her "detective" and put him in

    charge of keeping all trespassers off her lawn. That solved her

    problem. Her "detective" built a bonfire in the backyard, heated an

    iron red hot, and threatened to brand any boy who stepped on the

    lawn.

    The effective leader should keep the following guidelines in mind

    when it is necessary to change attitudes or behavior:

    • 1. Be sincere. Do not promise anything that you cannot deliver.

    Forget about the benefits to yourself and concentrate on the benefits

    to the other person.

    • 2. Know exactly what it is you want the other person to do.

    • 3. Be empathetic. Ask yourself what is it the other person really

    wants.

    • 4. Consider the benefits that person will receive from doing what

    you suggest.

    • 5. Match those benefits to the other person's wants.

    • 6. When you make your request, put it in a form that will convey to

    the other person the idea that he personally will benefit. We could

    give a curt order like this: " John, we have customers coming in

    tomorrow and I need the stockroom cleaned out. So sweep it out,

    put the stock in neat piles on the shelves and polish the counter." Or

    we could express the same idea by showing John the benefits he will

    get from doing the task: "John, we have a job that should be

    completed right away. If it is done now, we won't be faced with it

    later. I am bringing some customers in tomorrow to show our

    facilities. I would like to show them the stockroom, but it is in poor

    shape. If you could sweep it out, put the stock in neat piles on the

    shelves, and polish the counter, it would make us look efficient and

    you will have done your part to provide a good company image."

    Will John be happy about doing what you suggest? Probably not very

    happy, but happier than if you had not pointed out the benefits.

    Assuming you know that John has pride in the way his stockroom

    looks and is interested in contributing to the company image, he will

    be more likely to be cooperative. It also will have been pointed out

    to John that the job would have to be done eventually and by doing

    it now, he won't be faced with it later.

    It is naпve to believe you will always get a favorable reaction from

    other persons when you use these approaches, but the experience of

    most people shows that you are more likely to change attitudes this

    way than by not using these principles - and if you increase your

    successes by even a mere 10 percent, you have become 10 percent

    more effective as a leader than you were before - and that is your

    benefit.

    People are more likely to do what you would like them to do when

    you use ...

    • Principle 9 - Make the other person happy about doing the thing

    you suggest.

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    In A Nutshell Be A Leader

    A leader's job often includes changing your people's attitudes and

    behavior. Some suggestions to accomplish this:

    • Principle 1 - Begin with praise and honest appreciation.

    • Principle 2 - Call attention to people's mistakes indirectly.

    • Principle 3 - Talk about your own mistakes before criticizing the

    other person.

    • Principle 4 - Ask questions instead of giving direct orders.

    • Principle 5 - Let the other person save face.

    • Principle 6 - Praise the slightest improvement and praise every

    improvement. Be "hearty in your approbation and lavish in your

    praise."

    • Principle 7 - Give the other person a fine reputation to live up to.

    • Principle 8 - Use encouragement. Make the fault seem easy to

    correct.

    • Principle 9 - Make the other person happy about doing the thing

    you suggest.

    ---------------------------

    Part 5 - Letters That Produced Miraculous Results

    I'll Bet I know what you are thinking now. You are probably saying to

    yourself something like this: " 'Letters that produced miraculous

    results!' Absurd! Smacks of patent-medicine advertising!"

    It you are thinking that, I don't blame you. I would probably have

    thought that myself if I had picked up a book like this fifteen years

    ago. Sceptical? Well, I like sceptical people. I spent the first twenty

    years of my life in Missouri—and I like people who have to be shown.

    Almost all the progress ever made in human thought has been made

    by the Doubting Thomases, the questioners, the challengers, the

    show-me crowd.

    Let's be honest. Is the title, "Letters That Produced Miraculous

    Results," accurate? No, to be frank with you, it isn't. The truth is, it is

    a deliberate understatement of fact. Some of the letters reproduced

    in this chapter harvested results that were rated twice as good as

    miracles. Rated by whom? By Ken R. Dyke, one of the best-known

    sales promotion men in America, formerly sales promotion manager

    for Johns-Manville, and now advertising manager for Colgate-

    Palmolive Peet Company and Chairman of the Board of the

    Association of National Advertisers.

    Mr Dykes says that letters he used to send out, asking for

    information from dealers, seldom brought more than a return of 5 to

    8 per cent. He said he would have regarded a 15 per cent response

    as most extraordinary, and told me that, if his replies had ever

    soared to 20 per cent, he would have regarded it as nothing short of

    a miracle.

    But one of Mr Dyke's letters, printed in this chapter, brought 42 1/2

    per cent; in other words, that letter was twice as good as a miracle.

    You can't laugh that off. And this letter wasn't a sport, a fluke, an

    accident. Similar results were obtained from scores of other letters.

    How did he do it? Here is the explanation in Ken Dyke's own words:

    "This astonishing increase in the effectiveness of letters occurred

    immediately after I attended Mr Carnegie's course in 'Effective

    Speaking and Human Relations.' I saw that the approach I had

    formerly used was all wrong. I tried to apply the principles taught in

    this book—and they resulted in an increase of from 500 to 800 per

    cent in the effectiveness of my letters asking for information."

    Here is the letter. It pleases the other man by asking him to do the

    writer a small favour—a favour that makes him feel important. My

    own comments on the letter appear in parentheses. Mr John Blank,

    Blankville, Indiana. Dear Mr Blank:

    I wonder if you would mind helping me out of a little difficulty?

    (Let's get the picture clear. Imagine a lumber dealer in Indiana

    receiving a letter from an executive of the Johns-Manville Company;

    and in the first line of the letter, this high-priced executive in New

    York asks the other fellow to help him out of a difficulty. I can

    imagine the dealer in Indiana saying to himself something like this:

    "Well, if this chap in New York is in trouble, he has certainly come to

    the right person. I always try to be generous and help people. Let's

    see what's wrong with him!")

    Last year, I succeeded in convincing our company that what our

    dealers needed most to help increase their re-roofing sales was a

    year 'round direct-mail campaign paid for entirely by Johns-Manville.

    (The dealer out in Indiana probably says, "Naturally, they ought to

    pay for it. They're hogging most of the profit as it is. They're making

    millions while I'm having hard scratchin' to pay the rent. ... Now

    what is this fellow in trouble about?")

    Recently I mailed a questionnaire to the 1,600 dealers who had used

    the plan and certainly was very much pleased with the hundreds of

    replies which showed that they appreciated this form of co-operation

    and found it most helpful.

    On the strength of this, we have just released our new direct-mail

    plan which I know you'll like still better.

    But this morning our president discussed with me my report of last

    year's plan and, as presidents will, asked me how much business I

    could trace to it. Naturally, I must come to you to help me answer

    him.

    (That's a good phrase: "I must come to you to help me answer him."

    The big shot in New York is telling the truth, and he is giving the

    Johns-Manville dealer in Indiana honest, sincere recognition. Note

    that Ken Dyke doesn't waste any time talking about how important

    his company is. Instead, he immediately shows the other fellow how

    much he has to lean on him. Ken Dyke admits that he can't even

    make a report to the president of Johns-Manville without the dealer's

    help. Naturally, the dealer out in Indiana, being human, likes that

    kind of talk.)

    What I'd like you to do is (1) to tell me, on the enclosed postcard,

    how many roofing and re-roofing jobs you feel last year's direct-mail

    plan helped you secure, and (2) give me, as nearly as you can, their

    total estimated value in dollars and cents (based on the total cost of

    the jobs applied).

    If you'll do this, I'll surely appreciate it and thank you for your

    kindness in giving me this information.

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    Sincerely, KEN R. DYKE, Sales Promotion Manager

    (Note how, in the last paragraph, he whispers "I" and shouts "You."

    Note how generous he is in his praise: "Surely appreciate," "thank

    you," "your kindness.")

    Simple letter, isn't it? But it produced "miracles" by asking the other

    person to do a small favour—the performing of which gave him a

    feeling of importance.

    That psychology will work, regardless of whether you are selling

    asbestos roofs or touring Europe in a Ford.

    To illustrate. Homer Croy and I once lost our way while motoring

    through the interior of France. Halting our old Model T, we asked a

    group of peasants how we could get to the next big town.

    The effect of the question was electrical. These peasants, wearing

    wooden shoes, regarded all Americans as rich. And automobiles were

    rare in those regions, extremely rare. Americans touring through

    France in a car! Surely we must be millionaires. Maybe cousins of

    Henry Ford. But they knew something we didn't know. We had more

    money than they had; but we had to come to them hat in hand to

    find out how to get to the next town. And that gave them a feeling

    of importance. They all started talking at once. One chap, thrilled at

    this rare opportunity, commanded the others to keep quiet. He

    wanted to enjoy all alone the thrill of directing us.

    Try this yourself. The next time you are in a strange city, stop

    someone who is below you in the economic and social scale and say:

    "I wonder if you would mind helping me out of a little difficulty.

    Won't you please tell me how to get to such and such a place?"

    Benjamin Franklin used this technique to turn a caustic enemy into a

    lifelong friend. Franklin, a young man at the time, had all his savings

    invested in a small printing business. He managed to get himself

    elected clerk of the General Assembly in Philadelphia. That position

    gave him the job of doing the official printing. There was good profit

    in this job, and Ben was eager to keep it. But a menace loomed

    ahead. One of the richest and ablest men in the Assembly disliked

    Franklin bitterly. He not only disliked Franklin, but he denounced him

    in a public talk.

    That was dangerous, very dangerous. So Franklin resolved to make

    the man like him. But how? That was a problem. By doing a favour

    for his enemy? No, that would have aroused his suspicions, maybe

    his contempt. Franklin was too wise, too adroit to be caught in such

    a trap. So he did the very opposite. He asked his enemy to do him a

    favour.

    Franklin didn't ask for a loan of ten dollars. No! No! Franklin asked a

    favour that pleased the other man—a favour that touched his vanity,

    a favour that gave him recognition, a favour that subtly expressed

    Franklin's admiration for his knowledge and achievements. Here is

    the balance of the story in Franklin's own words:

    Having heard that he had in his library a certain very scarce and

    curious book, I wrote a note to him, expressing my desire of

    perusing that book and requesting that he would do me the favour of

    lending it to me for a few days.

    He sent it immediately, and I returned it in about a week with

    another note expressing strongly my sense of the favour.

    When next we met in the House, he spoke to me (which he had

    never done before) and with great civility and he ever afterward

    manifested a readiness to serve me on all occasions, so that we

    became great friends and our friendship continued to his death.

    Ben Franklin has been dead now for a hundred and fifty years, but

    the psychology that he used, the psychology of asking the other man

    to do you a favour, goes marching right on.

    For example, it was used with remarkable success by one of my

    students, Albert B. Amsel. For years, Mr Amsel, a salesman of

    plumbing and heating materials, had been trying to get the trade of

    a certain plumber in Brooklyn. This plumber's business was

    exceptionally large and his credit unusually good. But Amsel was

    licked from the beginning. The plumber was one of those

    disconcerting individuals who pride themselves on being rough,

    tough, and nasty. Sitting behind his desk with a big cigar tilted in the

    corner of his mouth, he snarled at Amsel every time he opened the

    door, "Don't need a thing today! Don't waste my time and yours!

    Keep moving!"

    Then one day Mr Amsel tried a new technique, a technique that split

    the account wide open, made a friend, and brought many fine

    orders. Amsel's firm was negotiating for the purchase of a new

    branch store in Queens Village on Long Island. It was a

    neighbourhood the plumber knew well, and one where he did a great

    deal of business. So this time, when Mr Amsel called, he said: "Mr

    C——, I'm not here to sell you anything today. I've got to ask you to

    do me a favour, if you will. Can you spare me just a minute of your

    time?"

    "H'm—well," said the plumber, shifting his cigar. "What's on your

    mind? Shoot."

    "My firm is thinking of. opening up a branch store over in Queens

    Village," Mr Amsel said. "Now, you know that locality as well as

    anyone living. So I've come to you to ask what you think about it. Is

    it a wise move—or not?"

    Here was a new situation! For years this plumber had been getting

    his feeling of importance out of snarling at salesmen and ordering

    them to keep moving. But here was a salesman begging him for

    advice; yes, a salesman from a big concern wanting his opinion as to

    what they should do.

    "Sit down," he said, pulling forward a chair. And for the next hour,

    he expatiated on the peculiar advantages and virtues of the

    plumbing market in Queens Village. He not only approved the

    location of the store, but he focused his intellect on outlining a

    complete course of action for the purchase of the property, the

    stocking of supplies, and the opening of trade. He got a feeling of

    importance by telling a wholesale plumbing concern how to run its

    business. From there, he expanded into personal grounds. He

    became friendly, and told Mr Amsel of his intimate domestic

    difficulties and household wars.

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    "By the time I left that evening," Mr Amsel says, "I not only had in

    my pocket a large initial order for equipment, but I had laid the

    foundations of a solid business friendship. I am playing golf now with

    this chap who formerly barked and snarled at me. This change in his

    attitude was brought about by my asking him to do me a little favour

    that made him feel important."

    Let's examine another of Ken Dyke's letters, and again note how

    skilfully he applies this "do-me-a-favour" psychology.

    A few years ago, Mr Dyke was distressed at his inability to get

    business men, contractors, and architects to answer his letters

    asking for information.

    In those days, he seldom got more than 1 per cent return from his

    letters to architects and engineers. He would have regarded 2 per

    cent as very good, and 3 per cent as excellent. And 10 per cent?

    Why, 10 per cent would have been hailed as a miracle. But the letter

    that follows pulled almost 50 per cent. ... Five times as good as a

    miracle. And what replies! Letters of two and three pages! Letters

    glowing with friendly advice and co-operation.

    Here is the letter. You will observe that in the psychology used—

    even in the phraseology in some places—the letter is almost identical

    with that quoted on pages 188-89. As you peruse this letter, read

    between the lines, try to analyze the feeling of the man who got it.

    Find out why it produced results five times as good as a miracle.

    Johns-Manville

    22 EAST 40th STREET

    NEW YORK CITY

    Mr John Doe,

    617 Doe Street,

    Doeville, N.J.

    Dear Mr Doe:

    I wonder if you'll help me out of a little difficulty?

    About a year ago I persuaded our company that one of the things

    architects most needed was a catalogue which would give them the

    whole story of all J-M building materials and their part in repairing

    and remodelling homes.

    The attached catalogue resulted—the first of its kind. But now our

    stock is getting low, and when I mentioned it to our president he

    said (as presidents will) that he would have no objection to another

    edition provided / furnished satisfactory evidence that the catalogue

    had done the job for which it was designed.

    Naturally, I must come to you for help, and 7 am therefore taking

    the liberty of asking you and forty-nine other architects in various

    parts of the country to be the jury.

    To make it quite easy for you, I have written a few simple questions

    on the back of this letter. And I'll certainly regard it as a personal

    favour if you'll check the answers, add any comments that you may

    wish to make, and then slip this letter into the enclosed stamped

    envelope.

    Needless to say, this won't obligate you in any way, and I now leave

    it to you to say whether the catalogue shall be discontinued or

    reprinted with improvements based on your experience and advice.

    In any event, rest assured that I shall appreciate your co-operation

    very much. Thank you!

    Sincerely yours, KEN R. DYKE, Sales Promotion Manager.

    Another word of warning. I know from experience that some men,

    reading this letter, will try to use the same psychology mechanically.

    They will try to boost the other man's ego, not through genuine, real

    appreciation, but through flattery and insincerity. And their technique

    won't work.

    Remember, we all crave appreciation and recognition, and will do

    almost anything to get it. But nobody wants insincerity. Nobody

    wants flattery.

    Let me repeat: the principles taught in this book will work only when

    they come from the heart. I am not advocating a bag of tricks. I am

    talking about a new way of life.

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    -------------------------------

    Part VI: Seven Rules for Making Your Home Life Happier

    1 - How To Dig Your Marital Grave In The Quickest Possible Way

    Seventy-Five years ago, Napoleon III of France, nephew of Napoleon

    Bonaparte, fell in love with Marie Eugenic Ignace Augustine de

    Montijo, Countess of Teba, the most beautiful woman in the world—

    and married her. His advisors pointed out that she was only the

    daughter of an insignificant Spanish count. But Napoleon retorted:

    "What of it?" Her grace, her youth, her charm, her beauty filled him

    with divine felicity. In a speech hurled from the throne, he defied an

    entire nation: "I have preferred a woman I love and respect," he

    proclaimed, "to a woman unknown to me."

    Napoleon and his bride had health, wealth, power, fame, beauty,

    love, adoration—all the requirements for a perfect romance. Never

    did the sacred fire of marriage glow with a brighter incandescence.

    But, alas, the holy flame soon flickered and the incandescence

    cooled—and turned to embers. Napoleon could make Eugenic an

    empress; but nothing in all la belle France, neither the power of his

    love nor the might of his throne, could keep her from nagging.

    Bedeviled by jealousy, devoured by suspicion, she flouted his orders,

    she denied him even a show of privacy. She broke into his office

    while he was engaged in affairs of state. She interrupted his most

    important discussions. She refused to leave him alone, always

    fearing that he might be consorting with another woman.

    Often she ran to her sister, complaining of her husband,

    complaining, weeping, nagging, and threatening. Forcing her way

    into his study, she stormed at him and abused him. Napoleon,

    master of a dozen sumptuous palaces, Emperor of France, could not

    find a cupboard in which he could call his soul his own.

    And what did Eugenic accomplish by all this? Here is the answer. I

    am quoting now from E.A. Rheinhardt's engrossing book, Napoleon

    and Eugenic: The Tragicomedy of an Empire: "So it came about that

    Napoleon frequently would steal out by a little side door at night,

    with a soft hat pulled over his eyes, and, accompanied by one of his

    intimates, really betake himself to some fair lady who was expecting

    him, or else stroll about the great city as of old, passing through

    streets of the kind which an Emperor hardly sees outside a fairy tale,

    and breathing the atmosphere of might-have-beens."

    That is what nagging accomplished for Eugenic. True, she sat on the

    throne of France. True, she was the most beautiful woman in the

    world. But neither royalty nor beauty can keep love alive amidst the

    poisonous fumes of nagging. Eugenic could have raised her voice like

    Job of old and have wailed: "The thing which I greatly feared is

    come upon me." Come upon her? She brought it upon herself, poor

    woman, by her jealousy and her nagging. Of all the sure-fire, infernal

    devices ever invented by all the devils in hell for destroying love,

    nagging is the deadliest. It never fails. Like the bite of the king

    cobra, it always destroys, always kills.

    The wife of Count Leo Tolstoi discovered that—after it was too late.

    Before she passed away, she confessed to her daughters: "I was the

    cause of your father's death." Her daughters didn't reply. They were

    both crying. They knew their mother was telling the truth. They

    knew she had killed him with her constant complaining, her eternal

    criticisms, and her eternal nagging. Yet Count Tolstoi and his wife

    ought, by all odds, to have been happy. He was one of the most

    famous novelists of all time. Two of his masterpieces, War and Peace

    and Anna Karenina will forever shine brightly among the literary

    glories of earth.

    Tolstoi was so famous that his admirers followed him around day

    and night and took down in shorthand every word he uttered. Even if

    he merely said, "I guess I'll go to bed"; even trivial words like that,

    everything was written down; and now the Russian Government is

    printing every sentence that he ever wrote; and his combined

    writings will fill one hundred volumes.

    In addition to fame, Tolstoi and his wife had wealth, social position,

    children. No marriage ever blossomed under softer skies. In the

    beginning, their happiness seemed too perfect, too intense, to

    endure. So kneeling together, they prayed to Almighty God to

    continue the ecstasy that was theirs. Then an astonishing thing

    happened. Tolstoi gradually changed. He became a totally different

    person. He became ashamed of the great books that he had written,

    and from that time on he devoted his life to writing pamphlets

    preaching peace and the abolition of war and poverty.

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