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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Knack of Managing, by Lewis K. Urquhart
+and Herbert Watson
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Knack of Managing
+
+
+Author: Lewis K. Urquhart and Herbert Watson
+
+
+
+Release Date: May 22, 2012 [eBook #39761]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KNACK OF MANAGING***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 39761-h.htm or 39761-h.zip:
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/39761/39761-h/39761-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/39761/39761-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+THE KNACK OF MANAGING
+
+by
+
+LEWIS K. URQUHART and HERBERT WATSON
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Published by
+Factory Management And Maintenance
+330 West 42nd Street
+New York City, N. Y.
+
+[Illustration: A McGRAW-HILL PUBLICATION]
+
+330 West 42nd Street
+New York City, N. Y.
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+Analysis
+
+
+Someone once said--probably it was Mr. Schwab--that given the right
+organization it was no harder to manage the U. S. Steel Corporation than
+to operate a peanut stand.
+
+And Mr. Schwab ought to know, although no life-sized portrait of him all
+dressed up like a peanut vendor has ever been brought to our attention.
+
+However that may be, his statement is interesting--especially
+interesting because his appraisal of the job of managing very nearly
+approaches ours. In "The Knack of Managing," you see, much of the
+emphasis will be on the fact that the fundamental PRINCIPLES OF
+MANAGEMENT apply to every business alike. And if we may start out with
+the premise that managing Mr. Schwab's Bethlehem Steel Company is not
+such a far cry from operating a pretzel plant or a furniture factory,
+our battle is already half won.
+
+THE PRINCIPLES OF MANAGEMENT vary not at all, however different may be
+the MECHANICS OF APPLICATION.
+
+How often the editor, how often the equipment salesman, listens to that
+time-worn tale of woe: "My business is different. So-and-so can do that
+sort of thing. But I make gadgets--and your conveyors, your air
+conditioners or whatever it is you write about or sell, won't do me a
+bit of good."
+
+_Of course_ his business is different--different in its individual
+characteristics, its financial, sales, production, labor problems. But
+they are only the CLOTHES the business wears. They may differ from the
+clothes of another enterprise as widely as the frilly importation from
+the Rue de la Paix differs from the sleazy issue of the East Side sweat
+shop. But underneath the clothes the artist knows there is the human
+body--and a study of anatomy is necessary before he can paint the
+picture. Beneath the "clothes" of the business are the principles of
+management--The ANATOMY OF MANAGEMENT--the framework upon which the
+completed structure is built.
+
+Doesn't it all boil down to something like the Colonel's lady and Judy
+O'Grady? One, presumably, wore a brief peignoir with a Paris label; the
+other, a substantial bungalow apron from a department store basement.
+But weren't they "sisters under the skin"?
+
+Stripped of all the furbelows--the details of operation, of tools, of
+materials--the objectives of our steel master, our peanut vendor, our
+pretzel maker, our furniture manufacturer, are one and the same thing.
+Their every-day job, in short, is to _get something well done with
+maximum dispatch and at minimum expense_.
+
+That's management's job. It goes for every type of enterprise; whether
+it involves the use of a million dollars' capital, or only ten cents'
+carfare--or a few minutes of a man's time. The "clothes" matter not at
+all. Beneath them the fundamental steps in managing are identical. The
+basic KNACK OF MANAGING is the same.
+
+Consider one of the simplest forms of business enterprise--the delivery
+of a message. The errand boy--if he's worth his salt and is really
+_managing_ his job--does in principle exactly what the general manager
+of the glass plant, the automobile factory, the textile mill, does when
+he comes face to face with _his_ problems. _In principle_, mind you.
+
+FIRST--this is the errand boy managing his job--he settles in his mind
+exactly where he has to go. Not just over to Federal Street--but to 63
+Federal. In a word, he ANALYZES THE BUSINESS or the job to be done.
+ANALYSIS, then, is the first step.
+
+SECOND--he figures out the shortest, most economical way to go there. In
+other words, he PLANS THE DOING OF THE JOB for the least expenditure.
+PLANNING is the second step.
+
+THIRD--shall he walk or shall he ride? Shall he do the work himself? Or
+shall he hire someone else to do it for him? His third step, you see, is
+ORGANIZATION. He organizes the handling of his work. The "right
+organization," said Mr. Schwab----
+
+FOURTH--he must get service. There are other errand boys. There are
+elevator men, office boys to meet and get along with if he is to execute
+his errand with the greatest dispatch. Now, you see, he's HANDLING THE
+HELP. The manager of the piano plant, the agent of the cotton mill,
+would call that phase of his job INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS.
+
+FIFTH--All the time he's planning, going and doing, he never loses sight
+of the final object of his errand. He never forgets he has a message,
+perhaps a bunch of securities, to deliver. He keeps his eye on the
+parcel he's carrying. He gets a receipt before he lets go of it. In
+other words, he SUPERVISES AND CARES for his business. The manager of
+the shoe shop, of the furniture factory, never forgets the final
+objective. After all, it's PROFIT.
+
+ +---------------------------+
+ | Analyzing the Job |
+ +---------------------------+
+ /\
+ / \
+ / \
+ / \
+ +--------------+ +---------------+
+ | Planning the | | Organizing |
+ | Operations | | the Work |
+ +--------------+ +---------------+
+ \ /
+ \ /
+ \ /
+ \/
+ +-------------------------+
+ | Handling the Help |
+ +-------------------------+
+ |
+ |
+ +-----------------------------+
+ | Supervising and Conserving |
+ | the Business |
+ +-----------------------------+
+
+Now look at the chart. It pictures THE ANATOMY OF MANAGEMENT. The
+Chinese say a picture is worth ten thousand words. And it would take a
+heap of writing to tell the story more completely, more simply than this
+picture.
+
+Try hanging the "clothes" of your machine shop, your woodworking plant,
+your paper mill, on it. THEY FIT, don't they?
+
+True, the chart is drawn from one of the most primitive tasks of
+management--the simple delivery of a message. But suppose the boy
+doesn't deliver the message himself, but has an assistant. Won't it be
+necessary to go through exactly the same motions? Suppose, instead of
+one message, there are _fifty_. Fifty assistants will be necessary.
+Will the job of managing vary a jot--or even a tittle?
+
+Now substitute fifty _boxes_ for fifty _messages_. The boxes have to be
+shipped. The same processes of thought, the same principles of
+management, apply.
+
+If, instead of fifty boxes to be _shipped_, fifty machines are to be
+_manufactured_--or if instead of fifty machines it's fifty thousand, and
+a thousand men and a million dollars of capital are to be employed,
+every one of the five principles shown on the chart will be used. And
+every essential point in the management of the _business_ could be
+covered by those five fundamentals.
+
+Now substitute ships or shoes or breakfast food for the machines we have
+been talking about, and it becomes clearer than ever that this BUSINESS
+OF MANAGING recognizes no industrial fences. Learn to manage a peanut
+stand and, in principle, you are well on the road to knowing how to
+handle the affairs of the U. S. Steel Corporation.
+
+Five steps there are: (1) Analyze; (2) Plan; (3) Organize; (4) Handle;
+(5) Supervise. Tackle any job on this basis and follow through. The
+chances that success will crown your efforts far outweigh the
+possibilities of failure. At least, approaching a job from these five
+successive angles should limit the causes of failure to circumstances
+quite beyond your control.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FIVE PRINCIPLES OF MANAGEMENT, then. Their skillful application to a
+business or to a job is the KNACK OF MANAGING.
+
+To do a real bang-up job of managing, whether carrying a message or
+directing a million-dollar business, the first step is: _Don't make a
+single move until you've found out exactly what needs to be done._
+
+But our first Do turned out to be a Don't. So let's restate it. _Find
+out exactly what has to be done before you make a single move._
+
+You've heard that before? And it doesn't mean a thing?
+
+Neither did it mean a thing to a bright young man who was taken on as
+production manager in a shoe factory. The shoes were good. Prices were
+right. Business was booming. The factory was full of orders.
+
+But somehow or other shoes weren't getting shipped on time--or anything
+like on time. Three to four weeks late came to be the customary thing.
+And customers were, needless to say, kicking like steers.
+
+So the bright young man was taken on to get things ironed out.
+
+He pitched in with vim and vigor.
+
+The first morning's mail brought a dozen complaints of slow deliveries.
+People were practically barefoot out in Kansas and Ohio. They were
+waiting for those shoes.
+
+"Ha!" said the new production manager, "_Nous verrons._" Which means,
+even in English, "Now, for what we are about to see, make us truly
+thankful." And he went away from there to see why those orders weren't
+out the door.
+
+He was out to prove something. And Providence--Rhode Island--had
+supplied him with enough ammunition to shoot a manufacturing
+organization full of holes.
+
+Each order was traced. One was in the shipping room.
+
+"What's holding this up?" he asked the shipping clerk.
+
+"Haven't had time to ship it. And we got other shoes that have been
+waiting longer than those. It's a feast or a famine down here. Some days
+we just can't get 'em out."
+
+"You're working short-handed. Get a couple more packers. You've got to
+get those shoes out. The customers are hollering like hell. Get 'em
+out!"
+
+He found another order up in the cutting room. But why report the
+conversation? It varied only in the number of cusswords used. It was
+always the old story.
+
+"Can't be done."
+
+"Put more people on then. Will two be enough? Or had we better make it
+three?"
+
+All down the line it went. More people. Costs went up. And did orders
+get out? Oh, yes, some did. But they got out at the expense of others.
+There was more congestion than ever. Complaints increased.
+
+Then the big boss called him in--and down--pointed out the increasing
+costs and asked how come. So the new production manager went back over
+his trail demanding retrenchment.
+
+"Put 'em on" was changed to "take 'em off."
+
+The big boss tells the rest of the story.
+
+"He had simply jumped in without finding out what it was he had to do.
+Maybe it was my fault for giving him too much rope.
+
+"Anyway, he hanged himself--or rather we had to fire him. Then we
+took on a quiet lad who had served his apprenticeship with a large
+electrical supply house.
+
+"He didn't know a twelve-iron sole from a three-quarter foxing. But he
+knew plenty about managing, as it turned out.
+
+"I watched him. Things were in a bad way, you see, and getting no better
+fast. He did nothing much for several days but read his mail. Sat around
+his office. Didn't make a move to boss anyone. Stuck his nose in here
+and there to find out what this clerk or that clerk was up to.
+
+"But no action. No tearing his shirt. No nothing. And the complaints
+were coming in with every mail. They never fazed him. One day I ran
+across him up in the fitting room. Another time I bumped into him he was
+picking lasts out of the bins. Again I saw him pushing empty racks into
+the heeling room elevator.
+
+"Apparently I had picked another lemon. Looked like the best thing he
+did was sit around and tap his teeth with a pencil.
+
+"He fooled me, though. One afternoon he dropped into my office with a
+map. He'd drawn it between taps. It was a good map with dotted lines to
+show just exactly what happened to an order--any order--every order.
+That map showed when it went into the works, where it went from there.
+And so on until it went out the shipping room door. That's what he'd
+been up to the day I saw him picking out lasts. And I tell you I never
+had any idea how many things could happen to an order. I never realized
+how shoes halted and stumbled and staggered around that factory of ours.
+
+"There were red lines, too. They showed the changes he proposed making.
+Here he would stop backtracking. Here was unnecessary travel. Here was
+an old bottle neck and here was how he was going to crack it open. And
+look at those lasts lying idle with shoes upstairs waiting to be made on
+them!
+
+"That wasn't half. It was actually taking four days to get orders
+through the office routine. He showed me how certain necessary records
+that took time to make could be made after the shoes were in work. Other
+short cuts would wipe whole days off our schedules.
+
+"There was nothing to it--when you saw it in red ink. In fact there's
+nothing half so convincing as red ink. There's been none on our books
+for the past five years--and during that time the shoe business has been
+no bed of roses.
+
+"What he proposed was simple as pie--if only someone had stopped to
+think. We'd simply got into bad habits. We were handling the work the
+same way we'd handled it back in the days when grandfather started the
+business. And this fellow had been smart enough to wait and wonder why.
+Not wonder why either. _He went and found out how come._
+
+"In thirty days we were back on earth. We were getting shoes out on
+time--many many days sooner than we'd even been able to before. And all
+because a smart young man, who didn't know a thing about shoes but a
+whole lot about managing, sat and tapped his teeth and drew a few
+pictures.--All because he had been in no hurry to act until he had found
+out just what had to be done."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is so easy to jump to conclusions! If you look about a bit, you will
+see plenty of men who don't stop to find out what needs to be done
+before they start trying to do it. They're like the shortstop who
+hurries his play and tries to throw the runner out at first before he
+really gets his hands on the ball. An error is more often than not the
+result.
+
+MANAGING, such men will tell you, is putting "pep" and "punch" into your
+work. Pep and punch were once good words. But their good qualities have
+been so often extolled that most of us have lost sight of the fact that
+all the "drive" in the world is so much wasted energy when it isn't
+directed along the right lines. And when it isn't so directed, it comes
+pretty close to being the lowest form of human endeavor. Witness the
+"go-getter" who really doesn't know what it's all about, but often
+succeeds in covering up a world of defects under a cloak of ill-directed
+energy.
+
+Other men think they are finding out what needs to be done when actually
+they aren't even getting close to the root of the matter. With the best
+intentions in the world, they are grasping at the first straw the wind
+blows their way. Eureka! they shout when they haven't found it at all,
+but are merely jumping all the way over the facts to conclusions!
+Actually to know your business or your job demands ANALYSIS.
+
+You have a right to duck. It's another of those words that work overtime
+and have suffered as a result. A certain type of superficial business
+executive has done analysis no good. To him the impressiveness of the
+word suffices--to the complete exclusion of the simplicity of the act
+itself. And so analysis to you and _you_ and YOU has come to mean
+involved, complex research--running around a lot in circles and getting
+exactly nowhere. Analysis has become for you an A1 example of the
+phrase-maker's art.
+
+REAL ANALYSIS of any problem in business can, however, be simple--in
+fact, _it can be nothing else but simple_.
+
+Analysis, says Noah Webster, is "a resolution of anything, whether an
+object of the senses or the intellect, into constituent parts or
+elements; an examination of component parts, separately or in their
+relation to the whole."
+
+Whooee! all that when he might have said "TAKING TO PIECES." For
+analysis is literally that--taking a thing to pieces to see what makes
+the wheels go round. Not, however, with the destructive intent of the
+small boy who strews his watch all over the floor, but with the avowed
+purpose of getting right down to the sort of brass tacks which make it
+possible to see the composition of the whole clearly and plainly.
+
+Analysis which befogs the issue is not analysis at all. It's--in the
+vernacular--a lot of "hooey."
+
+But the RIGHT KIND OF ANALYSIS "breaks down" the problem into its
+component parts--without losing sight of each part's relation to the
+whole. There may be only two parts to a job of managing. The messenger
+who analyzes his business correctly will find exactly two: where to go
+and what to do after he gets there--the simplest kind of problem and the
+simplest type of business analysis. But if the analysis consisted of
+twenty pieces instead of two, it would be no harder; it would only be
+longer.
+
+The production manager in the shoe factory analyzed his job correctly
+when he mapped out the route of an order. All he did was take the
+manufacturing process to pieces so that he could put the pieces
+together again to form a more efficient whole.
+
+So whether there are two or twenty or two hundred pieces, the act of
+ANALYZING--of TAKING TO PIECES--differs only in the amount of territory
+it covers. Naturally it will be a somewhat more lengthy process to
+analyze the job of managing a steel mill than to separate a peanut stand
+and its operation into a few component parts. But the approach is always
+the same.
+
+And no matter how good you may be with the woods, how the approach does
+affect the final score!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Consider for the moment that you have a house built of blocks and want
+to take it to pieces. A quick and easy way of separating it into its
+component parts would be a swift kick aimed down around the foundations.
+
+A quick method. But comes nothing. There are all your blocks lying on
+the floor, but so far as knowing what they're all about, you're worse
+off than ever you were before you kicked your house down.
+
+The other way of taking your house of blocks to pieces is to start with
+the roof and WORK BACKWARDS. The very thought, then, of "taking to
+pieces" suggests the correct way to undertake the analysis of a business
+or of a job.
+
+And a study of the methods of successful managers will convince the
+doubtingest Thomas that starting at the top and working down to the
+cellar is the method they follow in the analysis of any business problem
+they have to tackle.
+
+Once a busy ceramic manufacturer found himself in the restaurant
+business. He knew about all there was to know about dinnerware up to the
+point where it left his customers' counters. What went on after that was
+pretty much Greek to him if you know what we mean.
+
+And then he became a restaurateur. All because his brother-in-law got
+into him for several thousand dollars and then couldn't quite seem to
+make the darned thing pay a profit.
+
+Brother-in-law knew the game. Oh, yes. He had worked for a number of
+years as assistant manager in a similar enterprise. With his "knowledge
+of the business," he should have made a success of this cafeteria of
+his.
+
+He knew how to handle the help, how to buy, how to run the kitchen, and
+so on. The operating details were as an open book to him. Judged from
+every outward appearance, the cafeteria was up to standard. It should
+have climbed out of the red in short order.
+
+He had been taught to buy carefully and to manage economically. "Well
+bought," he announced, "is half sold." He'd read it in a book and he
+thought he was being a good salesman. Still the business stayed in the
+red.
+
+Our ceramic friend was faced with kissing his investment goodbye--and
+probably with making a job in the pottery for a good restaurant
+man--with throwing good money after bad, or with getting into the
+cafeteria business.
+
+He figured this business ought to pay. Somewhere, he knew, his
+brother-in-law had gone wrong. Just where, he believed he could find
+out.
+
+So he took over the business. Brother-in-law stayed on, leaving the new
+owner free to observe.
+
+And he did nothing but observe for a solid week.
+
+Each night he made a list of the points in managing which had come up in
+the course of the day's work.
+
+In a week's time he had an accurate list of all the actual jobs of
+managing, as all bills except for gas and light and rent were paid and a
+profit and loss statement was taken each week.
+
+Then he arranged the list in order of natural importance.
+
+It began with marketing and checking bills with deliveries, and ended
+with counting the money and depositing it in the bank.
+
+"Hold on," he thought, "this isn't such a long way from running a
+pottery. What am I in this business for?"
+
+"Because," he answered, "I want to leave as much of that money in the
+bank as possible, and mark it down as profit."
+
+So right away he started to draw pictures. The chart on this page is the
+result after he had worked it over and polished it up.
+
+ +---------------------------------------+
+ | +-----------+ |
+ | | Making | +--------+ |
+ | |the Service| | Keeping| |
+ | | Pleasing | /| Down |\|
+ | +-----------+ / |Expenses| \
+ | / \ / +--------+ |\
+ +-----------+ | / +----------+ | \
+ |Building up| | +---------+ | Fixing | +--------+ | +-------+
+ | and | | | Getting | | Prices |__|Guarding|_|_| Net |
+ |Maintaining|_|_| More | | to Be | |Against | | | Cash |
+ | the | | |Customers| | Fair and | | Waste | | |Profits|
+ | Run-Down | | | In | |Attractive| +--------+ | +-------+
+ | Cafeteria | | +---------+ +----------+ | /
+ +-----------+ | \ / \ +---------+ |/
+ | \ / \| Buying | /
+ | +----------+ |Supplies |/|
+ | | Making | |Carefully| |
+ | |the Foods | +---------+ |
+ | |Attractive| |
+ | +----------+ |
+ +---------------------------------------+
+
+Note how it works backward from his final objective--"Net Profits."
+
+"Now," questioned his _alter ego_, "how do I determine how much of that
+money stays in the bank as profit, and how much has to be checked out
+right away for expenses?"
+
+And from his handy list of managerial functions it was plain that it
+depended on three things--buying right, selling with as little waste as
+possible, and keeping expenses down.
+
+"Now we're getting somewhere," he said to himself. "Those things lead me
+right into my next job--which is to fix prices fairly. For what's the
+use of buying right, handling supplies carefully and keeping expenses
+right down to the bone unless my selling prices cover costs, yield a
+profit, and still look reasonable to the public?"
+
+Yes, and the most attractive prices, backed up by careful buying and all
+the rest, wouldn't keep the dollars clinking merrily over the counter
+unless the food was so good and the service so excellent that customers
+bought liberally and came back for more.
+
+By this time, you'll note, on taking another peek at the chart, he had
+worked right back to his "Number 1" job--getting more customers in.
+
+Thus, by ANALYSIS, he found out definitely what had to be done--and what
+had to be done first. Brother-in-law thought he knew, but he had begun
+at the wrong end. He had been looking after expenditures first and
+receipts last. He was trying to squeeze a little margin out of his
+receipts before he did anything about getting the receipts.
+
+How different the new owner's viewpoint! His brother-in-law, he found,
+was thoroughly competent. He'd simply got off on the wrong foot. In the
+kitchen and the storeroom, he was a good operator. But the new owner's
+place was "out front."
+
+His job was to "get more customers, get them to spend more--and to give
+them such good food and service that they would come back and bring
+their friends."
+
+He began by spending money. Took out the gas pipe at the entrance.
+Replaced it with a brass rail. Provided a small lounging room where
+customers could wait for their friends. Put in upholstered chairs so
+they could be comfortable while waiting. Put attractive uniforms on
+attractive serving girls.
+
+There was an air of good taste about the place when he got through.
+
+Then he changed the arrangement of the counters. But you know all about
+that--how the desserts came first so they would catch your eye before
+your tray was too heavily loaded with the heavier part of the meal.
+Staples which offered a small margin of profit were relegated to places
+in the rear. Dishes that made the best profit got the positions up
+front. Each day he offered a low-priced "special." Thus he planned to
+increase customers' purchases.
+
+And the business began to grow.
+
+That's all there is. There isn't any more. Today he doesn't own a chain
+of cafeterias extending into many cities and feeding many thousands of
+people every day at a good profit.
+
+He's still a very successful ceramic manufacturer--and a cafeteria
+proprietor.
+
+"I flew in the face of tradition," he says. "'First watch your kitchen'
+is the cry of the restaurant man. But I started with what I wanted--net
+profits--and WORKED BACKWARD to make conditions that would provide net
+profits.
+
+"VOLUME OF BUSINESS had to come first. I had to get it before I could
+get a margin of profit.
+
+"No doubt I could go out in the kitchen today and save some money. If I
+went to market myself, maybe I could save a cent a pound on my meats.
+But I can't give up my attention to the 'front' in order to watch the
+'back.' As soon as I do that I'm going to be right back where I
+started."
+
+It would sound like heresy, wouldn't it, if we hadn't sat in and
+watched him begin with his final objective and work back through the
+means which make the objective possible. Only by careful analysis would
+he have had courage enough to FOLLOW HIS PLAN THROUGH to its successful
+conclusion.
+
+And here's the amusing sequel. Today, as he still dabbles at feeding
+people, he will admit that he's a better ceramic manufacturer as a
+result of his cafeteria experience. His pottery had always yielded a
+nice profit. When he sat down with his sheet of coordinate paper and
+analyzed it, he found his job of management differed not at all in its
+fundamentals.
+
+His first job he found was "out front" getting more customers in. A
+better knowledge of markets, a better job of selling, a better
+product--those were the ways to get the customers in and make them come
+back for more.
+
+And his need for a better product led him out into the plant where he
+found that tunnel kilns with exact temperature control would more than
+treble the production of the old periodic kilns--and would produce
+better ware.
+
+But that's another story. The important thing, anyway, is not what he
+found had to be done in the cafeteria and in the pottery, but HOW he
+found it.
+
+He took his business to pieces--BACKWARDS.
+
+He began with the objective he wanted to get--MONEY. It was a simple
+matter to find that to get money from the business he had to get
+customers to come in and spend money; that to get customers to come in
+he must make his place look like a good place to come to; that to make
+his place look attractive he must spend money on equipment and thought
+on the arrangement and display of food.
+
+And there he had his big job cut out for him, with the other jobs
+following along in natural sequence. It altered the whole METHOD OF
+MANAGEMENT.
+
+How this METHOD OF MANAGEMENT is applied to your job is shown in the
+chart which follows. It's a skeleton of what the cafeteria man did.
+
+Indeed, it's more than that. For it shows what every manager--whether he
+manages a steel mill, a punch-press department or a time-study job--must
+do if he is to get an honest-to-goodness PERSPECTIVE OF HIS WORK.
+
+ +----------------------+
+ +------------+ +----------------------+ +-----------+
+ | The Work |__| The Means |__| The Final |
+ | to Be Done | | for Accomplishing It | | Objective |
+ +------------+ +----------------------+ +-----------+
+ +----------------------+
+
+It can be done very simply. Just a sheet of paper ruled in small
+squares--you can buy it at any stationer's--on which to fill in the
+steps you must take in between what you have to do and what you seek to
+accomplish by it--and some careful thought as to just what your job is
+and why it is to be done, will develop a true ANALYSIS of your problems
+which will beat reams and reams of typewritten words.
+
+Remember the words of the Chinese philosopher: "A picture is worth ten
+thousand words"--and reflect how clever these Chinese are!
+
+The MEANS FOR ACCOMPLISHING the final objective may be many or few. You
+have seen the cafeteria-manager's problems on the chart on page 24. Now
+turn to page 35 and see what a file clerk does beside powder her nose
+from nine to five.
+
+A bright young lady fresh out of high school went to work in an
+editorial office. There wasn't enough filing to do to keep her happy
+from nine to five, so she filled in with a bit of typing here and a
+trifle of routine clerical work there. Thursdays she hopped over to the
+neighboring bookstore and collected _Saturday Posts_ for the
+editors--now she'll have to do that on Tuesday. And Fridays she
+distributed _The New Yorkers_ to avid readers.
+
+Filing, though, was her main job. When she first came, the managing
+editor said "Here it is" or words to that effect, and she went to work.
+
+Those files had always been more or less of a sore point. An editor's
+mail is nothing if not voluminous. And every day Flossie the fascinating
+file clerk got a mass of data which she had to stick away. Her great
+trouble was finding it again after she'd stuck it away.
+
+Often she couldn't find it. And pretty soon she discovered that she got
+the blame no matter what was missing--whether an important inquiry from
+Peter B. Stilb or the editor's pipe cleaners.
+
+She couldn't do a thing about the pipe cleaners, but she made up her
+mind that since she was held responsible when a letter got lost, she
+would also have the responsibility of changing the filing system. The
+system, she felt sure, was to blame.
+
+One day when she was "on her lunch" and the editors didn't need
+cigarettes from the corner drugstore, she sat down and made an ANALYSIS
+of her problem. Curiously enough, she started at the end and WORKED
+BACKWARDS.
+
+She WORKED BACKWARDS, not because someone told her that was the right
+way to analyze her job, but probably because she was only a file clerk
+and no one ever told her anything.
+
+"Why," she asked herself, "do I file these old papers anyway?"
+
+"So I can find them again, quickly and surely, when they're wanted,"
+seemed to be the only answer to that.
+
+"What's the right way to file these letters and papers and data so I can
+find them quickly?" was her next question.
+
+"Arrange them like words in the dictionary--ONE PLACE, and ONLY ONE
+PLACE, where each can be," was only common sense.
+
+In the filing system which she had inherited, there were a dozen places
+for each set of data. There was a file on "Industries" with sub-files
+for "Automobiles" and all the rest; a file for data on "Railroads," with
+two or three sub-files. The file clerk had to use judgment and
+discretion in selecting the heading under which each letter or piece of
+data was filed. And she wasn't hired for judgment and discretion.
+Sometimes, too, the editors erred in their descriptions of the material
+they wanted.
+
+ +-----------------+
+ | Arrangement |\
+ | of File So That | \
+ | Title of Data | \
+ | Wanted Will Show| \
+ +----------------+ | Exact Spot to | +------------+
+ +----------+ | Only ONE Place | /| Look for It | | To Produce |
+ | Filing |__| to File |/ | +----------------+ |Any Desired |
+ | All Data | | Regardless | +-| Cross-Index of | |Data Without|
+ +----------+ | of Nature | | CLASSES | | Delay |
+ | of Thing Filed | |Showing for Each| +------------+
+ +----------------+ |Class the Title |
+ |of Each Piece In|
+ | That Class |
+ +----------------+
+
+One file, arranged alphabetically--ONE PLACE TO LOOK, regardless of the
+thing looked for--was the logical conclusion, viewed from the standpoint
+of _finding_.
+
+The managing editor was horrified. Mix "railroads" with "public
+service," and "manufacturing" with "agriculture"?
+
+"Why," asked the file clerk, looking back at her analysis, "why care how
+things are _kept_ so long as they can be _found_ quickly? When you send
+me for Camels, do you care, so long as you get them quickly, whether
+they're kept next to Chesterfields, or right beside the chewing gum?
+When the chief asks for data on 'C.P.R.' does he care, if he gets it
+right away, whether it was filed next to data on 'Coal' or beside facts
+about other railroads?"
+
+"All right," objected the managing editor, "suppose someone asks for all
+the data we have on railroads?"
+
+Not a bad question. It was from a _finding_ standpoint.
+
+"Have a separate cross-index by classes," was the answer. "That is,
+under 'Railroads' have a card showing the name of every----"
+
+"But look at the extra work."
+
+Back to her ANALYSIS went the file clerk. "Why file at all, except to
+make it easy to find what we file? If we were to set up a system for
+_easiest filing_, we'd simply put everything in boxes just as it comes
+to us. Our main objective is to make information easy to _find_, and
+anything that increases the work of filing but lessens the work of
+finding, is profitable."
+
+The result was a filing system that has made a great mass of data as
+accessible as the words in the dictionary. And it has taken the human
+equation out of the job. No longer does the file clerk have to stop and
+use her judgment as to where she shall file Mr. Stilb's letter. There is
+ONE PLACE AND JUST ONE PLACE.
+
+And the basis of the plan was the simple process of ANALYZING--of
+starting with the final objective and WORKING BACKWARD--not forward
+from the work to be done.
+
+In hundreds of business offices--in countless industrial plants--time,
+labor and money are being wasted today in outmoded methods which, like
+Topsy, "just grew." The manager who started them didn't stop to reason
+out first exactly what had to be done--or if he did, he failed to WORK
+BACKWARD from the final objective.
+
+One way is as bad as the other.
+
+In fact, it may even be better not to reason at all than fail to get to
+the very bottom and reason out the absolute right of what has to be
+done. At least it takes less time.
+
+A sure way, incidentally, to avoid making mistakes in your analysis is
+to do it on paper. A professor of mathematics in one of the large
+universities always tells his students that no problem should be
+performed in the head that can be done on paper. "Make pencil and paper
+do as much as you can, for your brain has enough to do to supervise the
+work."
+
+Until your mind is trained to the habit of QUICK, ACCURATE ANALYSIS,
+you'll find it helps to do the work on paper. Keep on hand a small
+supply of blank charts like the one on page 31, on which to sketch an
+analysis of new work or of important decisions. The constant performance
+of this detail will of itself train your mind to look at problems more
+analytically, and automatically to sift and classify them more
+logically.
+
+Perhaps you can improve on the chart shown on page 31. Surely you can
+adapt it better to your own needs. But force yourself to some such
+method. It will help you to cultivate the instinct of SHREWD, RAPID
+ANALYSIS--and at the same time it cannot help giving you a KEENER, SURER
+INSIGHT into the particular problem, no matter how complex or how simple
+it may be.
+
+Sometimes it is the apparently simple problems that need analysis most.
+For example----
+
+Did you ever hear of a sales organization that didn't have a
+stenographic problem?
+
+The New York office of a Western factory was no exception. The manager
+was broadminded--even liberal--with his salesmen. But when it came to
+stenographers, he was decidedly Scotch. Valuable men sat around the
+office mornings and evenings waiting for a chance to dictate to a staff
+of girls which was measured to fit the average load of the day, but not
+the rush load of the two hours a day when the salesmen were inside.
+
+Dictating machines seemed to be the answer. The sales manager figured
+they would not only solve the dictation problem, but would further
+reduce stenographic costs.
+
+They were installed. At the same time the stenographic force was cut to
+insure keeping all the girls busy all the day.
+
+Good. The salesmen were able to dictate when they felt like it. But
+often the letters dictated were a day or two late in being transcribed.
+
+Complaints increased. And the manager lost his temper: "What's the
+matter with this cursed letter-writing business?" he demanded. "Why the
+Sam Hill do we have typists and stenographers?"
+
+Well, why? He calmed down a bit, seized a sheet of paper and mapped out
+his problem.
+
+This is what he wrote:
+
+1. Salesmen's letters are to save salesmen's time and to give prompt
+service to customers.
+
+2. I don't begrudge half a day's time of a $20-a-day salesman to call on
+a customer. Then it's still profitable to waste half of the time of a
+$4-a-day stenographer in order to save a long trip for a salesman, or to
+get a quick answer to a question.
+
+3. What we need is enough typists to transcribe every letter of every
+salesman promptly, even if part of them have to be idle half the day.
+
+The increased use of sales letters, the greater freedom salesmen feel in
+their dictation, the number of selling details now promptly handled by
+mail without an expensive call--all are directly traceable to the
+manager's ANALYSIS which he made by using the final objective as a
+starting point.
+
+He's a convert to the pencil and paper method. Sales problems are part
+of his daily exercise. He goes to the bottom of them instinctively. But
+any problems that arise concerning office work, he settles only after
+analyzing from front to back--on paper.
+
+His method of charting his ANALYSIS differs in appearance from the chart
+on page 31, but it is identical in PRINCIPLE AND EFFECT. It works from
+final objective BACKWARD.
+
+One more application of the same KNACK OF ANALYSIS--and we are done. It
+is that of an Ohio manufacturer who recently put up a new building.
+
+Plans prepared by the architect called for four stories and a basement.
+When it came time to discuss arrangement of space, it was found that one
+department would have to go in the basement. There were objections from
+all sides.
+
+The manufacturer ended up by taking the problem home with him to TAKE TO
+PIECES and put together again.
+
+He began--fortunately--with the final objective. "What's this new
+building for?" Obviously, to provide more space for enlarged operations.
+
+"How much space is needed?"
+
+He went over the figures and plans and found the four main floors
+weren't enough.
+
+"Then why not a fifth floor?"
+
+As long as a bigger building was to be built, why not make it big
+enough? Why not another full story instead of a basement?
+
+Why not, indeed! Come to find out, no one knew just why a basement had
+been considered. The old building had one, and apparently that was the
+only reason for proposing one for the new building. A full story would
+give all the general storage space of a basement and also give regular
+working quarters for the department crowded out of the four upper
+floors.
+
+And when the architect was consulted, it was found that with the extras
+for excavation, waterproofing and the like, the cost of a basement was
+considerably more than the cost of another full story.
+
+Yet, but for the manufacturer's analysis of the building problem from
+the point of final objective, the basement would have gone in--simply
+because NO ONE HAD STOPPED TO THINK, and think clearly and logically.
+
+Logical thinking is a trait that can be cultivated. Every problem
+thought through by means of some such simple help as we have suggested,
+makes the mind more ready to tackle the next problem.
+
+Some men's minds grow so keen by practising that sort of thinking that
+they AUTOMATICALLY TAKE THINGS TO PIECES as they listen. Before you
+finish talking to them, they have already analyzed your statement and
+are planning on its execution--or are ready to reject it. Sometimes it's
+intuition. But rarely. Usually, it is nothing more than cultivated
+KNACK.
+
+Cultivate ACCURACY first. SPEED OF ANALYSIS will come of itself.
+
+_Don't start until you know exactly where you're going._
+
+There is no task so trifling, no business so large, that its management
+does not need to ANALYZE EXACTLY WHAT THERE IS TO DO.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+Planning
+
+
+In the preceding chapter we have been busily engaged in taking things to
+pieces. Now we've got to put them together again. Our house of blocks
+has been resolved into its component parts, not by aiming a swift kick
+at its midriff, but by starting at the top and working backwards. Now to
+REBUILD.
+
+Our first care, at this stage of the game, is to remember that ANALYSIS
+IS NEVER AN END but simply the MEANS TO AN END.
+
+The immediate end, this time, is to rearrange the pieces so that the job
+to be done can be done in the most effective way--the way that saves the
+most effort, the most time, the most money--the way which, in your
+business--and in _yours_ and YOURS--leads to NET PROFITS.
+
+Again it should be emphasized that NET PROFIT, in any job of managing,
+is the ultimate goal.
+
+Our danger, then, is that we may find ourselves down on the floor
+surrounded by our blocks--and with never a trace of a PLAN for
+rebuilding the house, and rebuilding it in the simplest, most economical
+way.
+
+In short, we must be sure we are taking things to pieces, not for the
+sake of taking them to pieces, but purely and simply _to find out what
+has to be done_.
+
+Like the golfer who played golf so much in order to keep fit for golf,
+we have here a good old-fashioned beneficent circle. ANALYSIS without a
+PLAN isn't worth a whoop in Hades. It's time kissed goodbye. Wasted
+effort. And, in like manner, a PLAN without an ANALYSIS isn't worth the
+paper it's typed on.
+
+Psmith in your office is a great "planner". He always has something on
+the fire. But somehow or other he never quite puts things over. His
+plans don't get across. Why not? Oh, just because he doesn't bother to
+analyze his problem--because he sets out to _do_ what has to be done
+even before he _knows_ what has to be done. He doesn't base his plan
+upon an actual need.
+
+Pbrown, on the other hand, is a keen analytical thinker. A student. He's
+a shark at taking things to pieces and finding out what has to be done.
+But when he's done that, he's all done. He lacks the initiative that
+starts things moving. He hasn't that divine spark of something or other
+that gets things done. A stick of dynamite wouldn't do a bit of good. He
+simply hasn't the knack of building a plan. He knows what has to be
+done. He doesn't know how to do it.
+
+Psmith and Pbrown--or Pbrown and Psmith--would make a fast team. But
+Psmith without Pbrown's analytical ability, or Pbrown without Psmith's
+capacity for planning how to get things done, isn't worth his weight in
+gold to _any_ business enterprise.
+
+A manufacturer friend tells an amusing yarn about a Pbrown he hired as
+sales manager.
+
+"He went around analyzing everything from soup to nuts--the gadgets in
+our line, our markets, our competition, our salesmen.
+
+"He was an analyzer _de luxe_. And all I ever got out of all his
+analyses was a distinct feeling that something was wrong with every
+gadget we made, that our markets were saturated, that our competitors
+had us backed off the map, and that our salesmen were a bunch of ribbon
+clerks.
+
+"So," he continues, "I did a little analyzing all my own. And analyzed
+him out of his job. Today he's managing a filling station where they
+drive in for the most part and take it away from him. But in his place I
+got a man who found out what was wrong with gadgets, markets,
+salesmen--and right away he built a plan which sold goods."
+
+Thus the futility of ANALYSIS without PLANNING.
+
+There's the danger, too, of getting away from the SIMPLICITY OF TRUE
+ANALYSIS.
+
+A job undertaken by an advertising agency for a rubber manufacturer
+supplies a case in point. Stripped of all the details, the task was to
+find out whether or not the manufacturer might profitably engage in the
+making of hard rubber tires for industrial trucks and trailers. If names
+are changed and products substituted, think nothing of it. The
+principle's the thing.
+
+The agency began by analyzing the business to a fare-you-well. Everyone
+and everything got cross-examined.
+
+It took three months. And when the analysis was done it told the
+manufacturer everything from where the rubber grew to where the money
+went to and came from. The trouble was, he knew all that before--or as
+much of it as he wanted to know. The report, in the words of a Chicago
+columnist, was just "64 dam pages." It didn't tell him one blessed thing
+he wanted to know. Or rather it was so full of plunder that he couldn't
+make head nor tail of it.
+
+It wasn't SIMPLE. And because it wasn't SIMPLE, it was a far, far cry
+from TRUE ANALYSIS.
+
+Well, well, the rubber manufacturer went out in the byways and got him a
+young man who was told to find out, if he could, whether or not there
+was any market for hard rubber tires on gas and electric industrial
+trucks, tractors and trailers, and allied equipment.
+
+He found, for example, that there were 40,000 trucks and tractors in
+service; that annual sales were about 3,200 units. He discovered that,
+of trailers and hand lift trucks, 125,000 each were in service; annual
+sales were 12,000 and 10,000 units respectively. But when he came to
+floor and hand trucks, conservative estimates showed 8,000,000 in use,
+while annual sales were in the neighborhood of 250,000!
+
+Next he found out, as accurately as possible, how many hard rubber tires
+were sold as original equipment. The 3,200 trucks and tractors had
+12,300 wheels. But 95 per cent of them were equipped with rubber tires
+at the factory. On the other hand, only 7 per cent of the floor and hand
+trucks were thus equipped!
+
+Outside of the truck and tractor people, he found the equipment makers
+opposed to hard rubber tires. Let's not go into the reasons. Yet
+representative manufacturers in a dozen different lines stated, when he
+asked them: "All future equipment purchased by us will be equipped with
+rubber tires."
+
+The whole report wasn't twelve pages long. And three tables, carefully
+compiled from available facts and figures, told the manufacturer
+everything he wanted to know.
+
+In short, upon this SIMPLE ANALYSIS, he was able to build a plan for
+manufacturing and merchandising solid rubber tires. Much good, though,
+it would have done him had he done his planning first and then found out
+there weren't enough wheels to wear the tires after he had made them!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So much for our "beneficent circle." Let us look into this thing called
+PLANNING and find out if there isn't some way of developing a knack of
+planning which will help us over the second major hurdle in our road to
+managing.
+
+There is, we shall find, a single problem with which the planner, the
+constructive manager, deals. Again, it doesn't make a particle of
+difference whether it's Mr. Schwab and Bethlehem Steel or Tonio and his
+peanut stand. No business is so "different" that the principles of
+management fail to apply.
+
+All right, then. The problem of every planner is first to determine what
+is the PRIMARY MOVING FORCE--the "initiative"--behind his job, and then
+to find the EASIEST PLACE TO APPLY THAT FORCE in order to set up the
+required MOTION or ACTIVITY with the LEAST AMOUNT OF EFFORT THAT WILL
+GET THE BEST RESULTS.
+
+A long sentence. Go over it again and you will find it is divided into
+four distinct parts:
+
+1. Deciding on the PRIMARY MOVING FORCE with which to set the wheels in
+motion.
+
+2. Applying this FORCE at the PROPER PLACE TO GET EASIEST ACTION.
+
+3. Directing this action along lines which either offer LEAST RESISTANCE
+or assure GREATEST ACCOMPLISHMENT.
+
+4. Bringing the activities to a focus at the place or time that will
+best carry the work to a SUCCESSFUL CONCLUSION.
+
+The PRIMARY MOVING FORCE may be the selection of media in an advertising
+plan; it may be the pushing of a button in the White House which opens a
+dam in Arizona, a Century of Progress in Chicago, or the Annual
+Convention of Whammit Manufacturers at Atlantic City; or it may be the
+memo from the big boss which gives the research department _carte
+blanche_ on a development project.
+
+To apply this initiative to a place where it will get QUICK ACTION may
+be to suggest an idea in the headline of an advertisement that will set
+the reader to thinking of salmon fishing at Mooselookmeguntic, or of the
+time the ice cubes gave out just when they shouldn't. Or it may be to
+classify the output of a factory before shipping so that freight cars
+can be packed to best advantage or so that lowest freight rates may be
+secured. Or it may be a simple method of sorting mail so that
+subordinates get the jobs they can handle and only the important
+business is brought to the president's attention.
+
+Directing this ACTIVITY along the lines that ASSURE GREATEST
+ACCOMPLISHMENT may be--in the advertisement--the presentation of facts
+or advantages which will persuade the reader that the fishing tackle you
+manufacture is desirable. Again, it may be the dovetailing of a thousand
+elements in a huge project like the Russian Five-Year Plan so that an
+adequate supply of ore will be available when the blast furnaces roar
+into operation; so that the steel will be on hand when production in the
+Cheliabinsk tractor works is stepped up to meet the requirements of the
+new agricultural regime. Or it may involve the simple sweeping of a
+floor in a manner which raises a minimum of dust.
+
+And bringing the activities to a SUCCESSFUL CONCLUSION may mean working
+up the arguments of the advertisement to the psychological closing of a
+sale--to the point where the ardent member of the Isaak Walton League
+figures he can live no longer without your fishing tackle and sets out
+gaily in the general direction of Abercrombie and Fitch's. Or it may be
+coordinating the entire production of a factory so that the Diesel
+generator set ordered by the Santa Fé can be delivered at the exact date
+specified in the original order. Or it may be handling the day's
+correspondence on the credit man's desk so that letters which must "make
+the Century" are ready to go at 11:45--so that the rest of the day's
+work is ready to sign, stamp and mail before the 5 o'clock whistle
+blows.
+
+FOUR ELEMENTS, then, in any job which is to be PLANNED. Every plan, if
+practicable, will follow them.
+
+There is, by way of further illustration, the story of the factory
+manager of a food manufacturing plant who laid out a PLAN for an
+operation no more intricate than the scrubbing of the floors at night.
+Now it can be told.
+
+And for two good reasons. First, because it was a practical plan which,
+even on such a lowly operation, saved quite a bit of money. Second,
+because in its construction the plan is, from the point of view of our
+four elements, what has sometimes been called a "natural."
+
+One night, it seems, the manager and his wife went to the movies. The
+town didn't have daylight time, so it was quite dark. They passed the
+plant, a large six-story building.
+
+"Why, Ed!" exclaimed the wife, "you didn't tell me the factory was
+working nights."
+
+Ed, like most husbands, was in the habit of telling friend wife 'most
+everything. For once he was at a loss. Sure enough, the lights were
+going full tilt on all floors. Hitting on all six, you might say.
+
+Then he laughed. It all came to him--"It's just the scrubwomen at
+work."
+
+One feature picture, one newsreel and one animated cartoon later, they
+walked past the plant again.
+
+"Look, the factory's still lit up," remarked the wife who turned off the
+living room lights religiously when she went out to get supper ready.
+
+This time Ed didn't laugh.
+
+In days like these one doesn't. Not, at any rate, at the thought of
+mounting electricity bills.
+
+The very next evening he was on the job. Time somebody found out what
+was what. In came the cleaners. They switched on the office lights--all
+of them--and two of the crew went to work. A couple of others went up to
+the second floor, switched on all the lights and pitched in with a vim.
+And so _ad infinitum_--or at least to the sixth story.
+
+And all the while the electric meter went round and round!
+
+Twenty-four hours later the janitor had a new plan of work.
+
+First the manager thought he'd start the whole crew at the top and work
+down. On second thought, a better plan was born--like the goddess of
+wisdom who sprang full grown from her papa's forehead. If I must go at
+this cleaning job, he thought, I might just as well make a first-class
+job of it and save not only on light, but on cleaners, too.
+
+We shall pass lightly over that part of his plan which had to do with
+releasing scrubwomen for other productive work, for in days like
+these--or in any other day--we just can't figure out that sort of thing.
+But goodness gracious, sometimes it's necessary.
+
+The emphasis, then, shall be on the electric current saved. The plan
+called for the entire crew's working together on one floor at a time--on
+the well-founded theory, of course, that teamwork would accomplish more
+in less time. Besides, since it was necessary to turn on all the lights
+on the floor, why not get the full benefit from them by having the
+entire gang at work?
+
+So far, so good. The surprise comes when you learn that he didn't have
+them start at the top and work down. He started them at the bottom and
+worked them up.
+
+"And I'll tell you why," explained the manager, "they have to climb six
+floors anyway, so they might as well work up as walk up. Besides, by
+leaving the stairs till the last, they can work their way down as well
+as up."
+
+In other words, they went to work right where they came in. And when
+they had finished, they were right back where they started--back where
+they went out on their way home.
+
+Simple, isn't it? An immediate reduction in lighting bills was
+noticeable. Even the amateur mathematician among you can figure that
+with one floor out of six lighted at a time, five-sixths of the light
+was saved. Besides, the work was done in less time--it wasn't long
+before two cleaners were reading the want ads. But why go into that?
+
+We aren't, for that matter, interested so much in the savings made,
+because it is exceedingly doubtful if many of us pass our factories or
+our offices on the way to the movies. We may never have an opportunity
+to put this particular plan to work.
+
+What we are interested in, though, is the fact that this cleaning plan
+utilizes the four basic elements which we've said must be present in
+every job of PLANNING.
+
+Look at the chart. It shows the movement of energy in the manager's plan
+for handling his crew. Starting the scrubbers on the ground floor--they
+had to begin there anyway, no matter when they began to scrub--was
+nothing but applying the primary force at the best point to get the
+easiest action.
+
+Working them up floor by floor was simply directing the activity along
+both the lines of least resistance and greatest accomplishment. And
+doing the stairs on the way down was just focusing the activity at the
+right point for making a successful conclusion--that is, winding up the
+job at the exit.
+
+ +------------------------------------+ +---------+
+ | | | Stairs |
+ | 6th Floor ------------- |
+ | /|\ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | | | |
+ | 5th Floor | | | | |
+ | /|\ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | | | |
+ | 4th Floor | | | | |
+ | /|\ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | | | |
+ | 3rd Floor | | | | |
+ | /|\ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | | | |
+ | 2nd Floor | | | | |
+ | /|\ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | | | |
+ | Ground Floor | | | \|/ |
+ | /|\ | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ +---------+
+ |
+ +------------------------------+ |
+ | Application of Primary Force |--
+ +------------------------------+
+
+Turn back now to the FOUR ELEMENTS OF SUCCESSFUL PLANNING as we set them
+down on page 54. Try them out on any successful plan and assure yourself
+that not a point has been stretched. By using them we shall learn the
+constructive, creative KNACK OF PLANNING.
+
+Stripped of the "clothes" which every plan wears--it's only in the
+clothing that plans differ--this KNACK OF PLANNING may be quite simply
+visualized by some such chart as the one shown on the opposite page.
+
+There you see the PRIMARY FORCE--the INITIATIVE that sets the PLAN in
+action. Second, the POINT OF APPLICATION--where you must hit if you're
+going to win. Third, the various activities which bring about the
+SUCCESSFUL CONCLUSION. And fourth, all these activities headed up at
+the FOCUSING POINT.
+
+It's just like the sailor off the whaler who picks up the wooden mallet,
+hits the plunger a resounding crack, sends the weight hurtling up the
+pole, rings the bell--and gets a good 5-cent cigar. Or like the golfer
+who, putter in hand, strokes the ball firmly "in the direction of least
+resistance and greatest accomplishment," sees it hit the back of the cup
+and drop in for a par four.
+
+ |\
+ | \
+ | \
+ +--------------+ Various Activities | The \
+ | The "Primary | Point of Necessary to Bringing |"Focusing
+ | Moving Force"| Application about a Successful |Point"/
+ +--------------+ Conclusion | /
+ | /
+ |/
+
+Watch these four essentials. Knowing them and using them continually
+will enable you to break down every job of PLANNING into its component
+parts--will enable you to develop that important side of your managing
+faculties--whether your work is merely the carrying out of a job or
+shouldering the responsibilities of a huge business.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Remember the production manager in the shoe factory? Rather sketchy was
+the story of the ANALYSIS he made. Let's go a bit more into the details
+of the PLAN which was based on the ANALYSIS. And, at the same time,
+examine it to see if it checks with our FOUR ELEMENTS.
+
+You remember he was hired to find out why the so-and-so shoes didn't
+move out the door on time. And you'll remember that instead of clanking
+up and down from one department to another, he was seen one day picking
+out lasts from a bin in the assembly room. He had crept up quietly on
+the POINT OF APPLICATION. The INITIATIVE, you see, or the PRIMARY MOVING
+FORCE, was the boss's order to get shoes to moving.
+
+Here (in the lasting room) was his POINT OF APPLICATION. The biggest
+factor in slowing up shoes, he found, was failure to have lasts ready
+the instant the uppers came down cut and stitched from the fitting room.
+
+The shoes were entered into work with almost entire disregard of this
+vital point. Oh, yes, they knew they once bought so many pairs of lasts
+on this style or that in such and such sizes. And in a vague sort of way
+they tried to regulate the number of pairs sent to the cutting room with
+the number of lasts which they thought should be available the day the
+shoes reached the assembly department where uppers, insoles, bottoms and
+lasts met together--or should have.
+
+A single missing size could hold up a 36-pair lot which included a run
+of sizes all the way, say, from 7-1/2 to 12.
+
+Today it's all so different. A running inventory is kept of every active
+last. Each day the lasts which are released as shoes leave the finishing
+room are added to the supply on hand; at the same time, the lasts which
+are to be used that day in lasting incoming lots are subtracted.
+
+A job? No, a good girl of moderate intelligence simply added it to a
+dozen other office chores which she finds time to do daily.
+
+The running inventory, you see, is one of the various activities which,
+aimed at the focusing point--the moving of shoes out the door--are
+necessary to bring about a successful conclusion--the successful
+conclusion, in this particular instance, probably being the saving of
+the young man's scalp--for the boss was certainly out to get it the day
+he saw the young production manager pawing over the chunks of maple in
+the lasting room.
+
+Other activities might be mentioned. Plenty of them. An automatic
+conveyor which brought back empty racks to the point where they were
+needed. Semi-automatic elevators which made possible the rapid moving of
+shoes from floor to floor. Twelve-pair lots which simplified the
+handling problem, made the job of picking out lasts an easier one--and
+all in all did much to take the weight off management's shoulders. All
+these and more are the activities which were needed to bring about a
+successful conclusion. They were all part of the PLAN.
+
+Today, in that shoe factory, the production manager sits down for an
+hour in the forenoon and an hour in the afternoon and schedules the next
+half-day's work which will go to the cutting room. Two girls have been
+moderately busy getting him the information he needs. Sales have been
+brought up to date within half a day. He knows how many kid shoes he can
+cut, how many calf. He knows which patterns can be cut by machine,
+which must be cut by hand. He knows that certain patterns take longer to
+go through the fitting room. There's extra stitching or fancy
+perforations. He must lay off those. And last of all, he knows what he
+can count on in the way of lasts when the shoes hit the lasting room.
+
+With his two girls, the young production manager does all the work of
+scheduling.
+
+Actually, there isn't much work. Management, you see, has done an
+awfully nice job of PLANNING.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Picture now the manufacturer of small electrical appliances who sought
+to lay out new avenues of growth. His was pretty much a seasonal
+business. Electric fans constituted most of his bread-and-butter
+production. Early in the year and well on into the spring his plant ran
+full blast getting out merchandise for sale during the warm, muggy days
+when Sirius is in the ascendant.
+
+And then along in the summer and fall his production curves went into a
+serious decline.
+
+To level them out would have meant carrying a load of finished inventory
+which he could ill afford. Other appliances, such as hair curlers and
+driers which might conceivably find a ready sale during the holiday
+season, helped considerably--but not enough. The rough places were by no
+means made plane.
+
+Why not, thought he, a line of toys which would enable him to utilize
+his present production set-up profitably during the slack summer and
+fall? Why not, indeed?
+
+So he set out to chart a plan of action beginning, as you will see from
+the figure, with the furnishing of amusement as the PRIMARY FORCE. His
+POINT OF ATTACK was through the 15,000,000 American boys who love to
+build something. On he went to the various ways of getting parents
+interested as the ACTIVITIES WHICH SHOULD LEAD TO A SUCCESSFUL
+CONCLUSION--to the linking up of those activities with the retail store
+as the job of FOCUSING THEM on the final achievement--SALES.
+
+ +---------------------------------+
+ |Wholesome Amusement and Education|
+ +---------------------------------+
+ |
+ \|/
+ +---------------------------------+
+ | 15 Million Boys Who Want to Play|
+ | and Love to Build |
+ +---------------------------------+
+ |
+ \|/
+ +---------------------------------+
+ | Bought for by 7,500,000 Parents |
+ +---------------------------------+
+ |
+ \|/
+ +-------------------+
+ | Can be Reached by |
+ +-------------------+
+ |
+ \|/
+ +---------------+---------------+---------------+
+ | | | |
+ +---------+ +-----------+ +----------+ +-----------+
+ |Magazines| | Attention | | Window | | |
+ |They Read| | Caught in | | Displays | | The Boy |
+ +---------+ | Stores | +----------+ | Himself |
+ | +-----------+ | | |
+ +---------+ | | +-----------+
+ | List of | +--------------+ +--------------+ |
+ |Magazines| |Description of| |Description of| |
+ |Carrying | |Demonstration | | Window Advg. | |
+ |Our Advg.| | Offer | | Offer | |
+ +---------+ +--------------+ +--------------+ |
+ \ | | |
+ \ | | +-------------------+
+ \ | | | |
+ \ | | +-------------+ +--------------+
+ \ | | |List of Boys'| |Description of|
+ \ | | |Papers Advsd.| |Prize Contest |
+ \ | | | In | +--------------+
+ \ | | +-------------+ /
+ \ | | | /
+ \ | | | /
+ +-------------------------------------------+
+ | All Leading to |
+ +-------------------------------------------+
+ |
+ \|/
+ +-------------------------------------------+
+ | The Store That Sells Our Toys |
+ +-------------------------------------------+
+
+Only the bare headings on the plan are shown in the chart. Nevertheless
+it shows clearly the same knack of using the FOUR ELEMENTS which we have
+been at such pains to discuss.
+
+The chart proved helpful, not only in guiding the management in its
+efforts to enlarge the scope of manufacturing activities, but also in
+giving the office and the sales force a true picture of the business. So
+helpful, indeed, did it prove that it was blueprinted. And today every
+salesman has one pasted in his selling portfolio. It's the first thing
+the dealer sees. And it has gone far in arousing the latter's interest
+and confidence.
+
+If you were a dealer, would you buy from a factory that was run by
+guess and by gob when you could give your business to a concern which
+you knew was functioning in accordance with a sound, well-formulated
+plan?
+
+There, if you please, lies the answer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is not within the purpose of this chapter, incidentally, to play any
+favorites. Time must be taken out at this point, therefore, to return to
+the messenger boy who, when we left him, had just finished analyzing his
+job.
+
+Let's see now how his plan of action is based upon what the analysis
+taught him. Let's examine this elementary job of managing, not because
+it may make better messengers of us, but because the examination will
+show how universal this thing called management is--because it will
+afford one more proof of our general axiom that the principles of
+management are ever the same, no matter what particular paraphernalia
+of business may be used to cover up its old bones.
+
+Did, then, the messenger boy work out his plan in accordance with our
+FOUR BASIC ELEMENTS? He did, if he was really managing his job--and from
+the careful analysis he made, we may assume he was.
+
+If his trip meant riding a street car, then going to the cashier for
+carfare is his primary force. If he can walk, then the primary force is
+simply getting under way. Hastening as directly as possible to the car
+line is applying the force at the easiest place to get results. Perhaps
+he might have to choose between a slow street car which would carry him
+right to his destination for seven cents, and a fast elevated which, for
+a dime, would make better time but leave several blocks to walk at the
+other end. Deciding between the two is directing the activities along
+lines of greatest accomplishment. And getting his transfer, leaving the
+car, and going straight to the address on the message, are nothing more
+nor less than focusing his activities at the POINT OF ACHIEVEMENT.
+
+You see? The Colonel's lady in her Parisian peignoir and Judy O'Grady in
+her sleazy slip were sisters under the skin. So, if we may stretch a
+physiological point, are our messenger boy and the man who made the
+toys.
+
+The plans of both were built on the same foundation.
+
+Or take the plan by which the new general manager of a tap and die
+concern rehabilitated his company's business.
+
+"Why," he said, reaching for a pad of paper and roughly sketching
+something that looked like a funnel and must have been because he said
+it was, "our manufacturing plan looked about like this. Up here at the
+top we poured in a lot of orders and hoped to high heaven some of them
+would finally trickle through at the bottom.
+
+"Some of them did drop through. Others dropped because we poked sticks
+up the flue. That is to say, an army of stock chasers did their level
+best to keep everyone happy.
+
+"It was bedlam around the shop. It took three months on an average to
+complete an order.
+
+"I found much of the delay was due to certain Victorian notions about
+set-up time. The prevailing idea was to give an operator a good big job
+to minimize that item of expense.
+
+"Sometimes the job was so big it took 60 days to run it through a single
+operation.
+
+"Oh, me! oh, my! the inventories of finished goods that piled up. The
+tote boxes full of work in process that cluttered up the scenery.
+
+"And the complaints from customers who were waiting for orders!
+
+"Funny thing about our business, you can't get a customer to accept a
+couple of 1/4-in. taps in place of the 1/2-in. one he's ordered.
+
+"So I had to revamp the whole shooting match. First on the program was
+to find out what was made and what was making. Then we withdrew from the
+shop all work in process except what actually applied on orders in the
+house or what was needed to fill out our stock on an item on which we
+had no order, but on which past experience had taught us we'd get one in
+the course of the next 30 days.
+
+"You should have seen the pile of tote boxes we stuck under the boilers.
+
+"Well, the next job was to figure out the most economical lots to send
+through the works. That figure was arrived at simply by choosing such a
+size that no single operation could possibly take more than a day. In a
+word, I made sure that every single lot would move every single day.
+
+"Do you get the picture? A steady flow of manufacturing. No funnel. No
+poking around with sticks. Today there aren't any stock chasers. None is
+needed. Work reaches the stockroom on time. Orders are filled complete
+the same day they come in. Inventories are lower. Oh, heck, need I go
+on?"
+
+No, he needn't. For already he has shown us how the motive force was
+applied at the right point to get results. Take this plan apart--or any
+other plan that really works--and you will see that it is built upon the
+FOUR ELEMENTS OF PLANNING.
+
+They make the PLANNING wheels go round.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now it's time to take your own job of planning to pieces and see if it,
+too, does not meet the test.
+
+Here, again, as when the ANALYSIS was made, it helps to set things down
+on paper. In charting, you will find that by painstaking application of
+our four principles along the lines diagrammed in the figure on page 65,
+you can LAY OUT A WORKING PLAN depending for its approach to perfection
+only upon the amount of thought put into it, and upon the degree of
+accuracy with which the analysis of the job was made.
+
+The chart you make may be only a guide to the complete plan. Some plans
+require details which utterly preclude any form of expression so simple
+as a chart. Other plans can be laid out on the actual chart shown.
+
+In any event, the very attempt to put your plan into diagrammatic form
+will develop PRACTICABILITY AND ACCURACY OF ARRANGEMENT. The very
+necessity of having to indicate and to select the primary force back of
+your job or business; having to trace that force through the various
+activities necessary to completed work; and then having visibly and
+physically to concentrate all these activities at one point--those very
+acts which making a chart compels you to perform, enforce a mastery of
+the essential details of your business and a grasp of their relations
+which every manager should have.
+
+Perhaps the plan you have isn't as hot as you think it is.
+
+An office manager friend of ours was pretty proud of his system until
+one day he charted it.
+
+His company was famous for the quality of work turned out. But the
+service it gave was wretched. Special instructions were often ignored.
+Delivery dates were overlooked. All that sort of thing.
+
+The system looked good enough. The office manager said the mistakes were
+due to carelessness. And it looked as if he were right. So when
+something went wrong, the nearest employee got a handsome bawling out.
+
+At last the sales force jumped on him with both feet. Too many promises
+had been broken.
+
+So the office manager was forced to do something about it. And, quite by
+accident, made a chart of the ACTUAL PLAN OF WORK.
+
+Hello, what was this? Half a dozen responsibilities were standing
+around absolutely unchaperoned, you might say. Someone might come along
+and pick them up, or then again----
+
+For example, if a customer on the West Coast ordered a bill of goods,
+and then, while the order was in work, decided he wanted half the goods
+shipped by boat through the canal and the other half by fast freight,
+maybe he'd get his shipments that way and maybe he wouldn't. Under the
+prevailing "plan" that particular sort of job didn't fall inside any one
+man's bailiwick. No one man was responsible for seeing that such orders
+were executed. No "machinery" had therefore been provided for taking
+care of them.
+
+That's only a sample of some of the duties which landed--in his
+diagrammatic representation of the actual plan of work--somewhere off
+the map. For all the action they got, they might as well have been
+painted ships upon a painted ocean.
+
+Methods in general, you see, were pretty much all right. But there was
+no recognized initiative back of the plan. Activities were set in motion
+more or less spontaneously. As a result, certain parts of the business
+were left without managerial supervision.
+
+Nothing is surer to expose such a condition than actually to chart a
+plan. In this instance, it was simple to recognize "following customers'
+instructions"--no matter when, why, or how they came--as the logical
+primary force. Then the whole trouble was taken care of by centering the
+responsibility upon the chief of the order department. From then on, all
+instructions regarding any order cleared through him.
+
+Thus it will be seen that the idea back of charting a plan is not to get
+something you can work to as an ideal in carrying on a job, but rather
+to get a PRACTICAL FRAMEWORK on which the work can actually be done.
+Then it is at once evident whether the "clothes" of the business are
+hanging on the right limb or whether they have been hung up somewhere
+on the ground where, like as not, nobody will bother to pick them up.
+
+Too often the plan turns out to be a "sketch."
+
+The builder waits until the architect's first sketch has become a plan.
+
+In business it's like that, too.
+
+When finally you know, from ANALYSIS, _what you want to accomplish_, it
+is not difficult to plan the procedure if you start right and forget
+nothing. You start right if you take time to figure out the primary
+initiative. You forget nothing if you take the trouble to set things
+down in black and white.
+
+And finding the motive force and figuring out where to hit with it, is
+nothing more nor less than charting the moves of the game until you find
+a succession of activities moving along without back-tracking, without
+duplication, without wasted effort or supervision.
+
+Thus cultivating the KNACK OF PLANNING is a long step in the direction
+of becoming a good manager. If you were going to try to tell someone
+else how to cultivate the knack of planning, the story of the two men
+shaving in the Pullman washroom serves to illustrate the point.
+
+Both men seemed to be in a hurry. The first hustled over to one of the
+wash basins, scrubbed his face and hands, dried them on a towel. Then he
+began to shave. That finished, he washed the lather from his face, dried
+himself again on another towel, and put away his razor. Next came his
+teeth. He brushed them, washed away the traces of tooth paste, and dried
+himself on a third towel.
+
+All this time the other fellow was going through the same motions--but
+in a much different order.
+
+He began with his teeth. After he had brushed them, he lathered his
+face. After he had shaved, a single wash was enough and a single towel
+did the drying job. He had finished his canteloupe and was well along
+with his eggs before his companion reached the diner. Number two didn't
+do a better job of brushing his teeth, of shaving, of washing. But he
+_did_ do a better job of PLANNING.
+
+He started where each operation would lead directly and naturally into
+the next, performing each at the proper time.
+
+After all, isn't that precisely what you do in planning any part of your
+business?
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+Organizing the Work
+
+
+Remember Psmith and Pbrown? One could analyze, but didn't know what to
+do with his analysis after he got it. The other was an expert planner,
+but alas! his plans were never based upon the solid foundation of actual
+necessity. He planned to do something before he knew what had to be
+done.
+
+Psmith and Pbrown, together, looked like a grand pair when we introduced
+them in the chapter on PLANNING. Now, after taking particular pains to
+give that impression, we shall have to break right down and confess in
+open meeting that they are but two numbers of the MANAGEMENT TEAM.
+Probinson is the third.
+
+Probinson ORGANIZES THE WORK. Psmith may analyze to a fare-you-well;
+Pbrown may plan till he's blue in the face--their best efforts are as of
+nothing worth unless Probinson is on hand to organize the work of the
+business. For as surely as there is a knack of analyzing and a knack of
+planning, just so surely is there a knack of organizing the work.
+
+Thus we approach the third phase of the job of managing.
+
+So far we have seen how the successful manager starts from the top,
+working backward, to chart his job--and then, having found out what has
+to be done, builds his plan for doing it. Analysis and planning,
+however, will carry him just so far. Unless he acquires the knack of
+organization, he will never make a howling success of his job--he will
+fall just short of being an outstanding manager.
+
+The office manager for an Eastern concern affords the needed
+illustration.
+
+P. C.--those aren't his initials--knew office management from A to
+Izzard. First to arrive in the morning, last to leave at night, he had
+a tremendous capacity for hard labor. But he never seemed to make a hole
+in the pile of work on his desk. It grew no smaller fast. Why? Because
+he never, in all his years of managing, learned to arrange the division
+of his work. He never learned to deputize it. When his mind should have
+been free for the more or less important decisions which crop out now
+and then even in an office manager's life, it was all bound around in
+the necessity of performing some silly little routine job which any girl
+of moderate intelligence could have done.
+
+His idea of organizing his job was to try to do everything himself. And
+within his physical limitations he was a valuable man to the company.
+But how much more he'd have been worth had he, at some time in his
+career, acquired the KNACK OF ORGANIZATION!
+
+Don't jump to the conclusion, now, that the successful organizer is one
+who merely divides up his work and parcels it out among a flock of
+assistants. Don't think for a moment that it is nothing but
+deputization.
+
+Effective organization is far more than that.
+
+It is the distribution of work, according to its character or urgency,
+among the facilities at hand for doing it according to their capacities
+or cost. And it makes no difference whether those facilities happen to
+be men, money, or machines--or simply your own available time.
+
+You deputize work when you use an adding machine instead of your head to
+total last month's sales--when you turn the job of packaging breakfast
+food over to an automatic machine--when you jot down in your notebook
+information which would otherwise tax your memory--when you telephone
+the purchasing agent instead of making your legs take you to his
+office--when, instead of using your own funds, you do something on
+borrowed capital.
+
+Deputization may be any one of these just as easily as it may be asking
+your assistant to find out why So-and-so's order for boys' pants wasn't
+shipped on time, or making him responsible for working out a new
+prospect list.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The office manager of a shoe concern found, right after the war, that
+much of his day was spent telling dealers in Kalamazoo and Keokuk to be
+patient, please, and they'd get their shoes.
+
+Those were the halcyon days, you'll remember, when salesmen went out
+twice a year and told their customers how many shoes or ships or sewing
+machines they could have--and when they could have them.
+
+As a result, this particular shoe factory was loaded to the guards with
+orders. Orders were shipped when, as and if they struggled from cutting
+room to fitting room--and from then on down to the packing department.
+
+Complaints were numerous. They weren't exactly complaints, either.
+Queries, rather. Where are my shoes? Can't you ship March 15 instead of
+April 1? And so on--until, as we started to say, the sales manager was
+spending a great part of his time dictating replies to his stenographer.
+And she didn't have time for any of her other duties.
+
+Analysis proved that the letters were, in the main, of three types.
+Three letters were therefore prepared, and each day the sales manager
+went through the inquiries and indicated which letter should go to which
+customer. In that way the latter got a prompt and courteous reply, as
+well as certain vague information explaining why he'd have to wait
+another month for his shoes.
+
+And he was moderately happy. Personal attention from the sales manager
+could have accomplished no more. Thus a certain part of an executive's
+and his stenographer's time was deputized to a system.
+
+Could the sales manager have gone a step further and had his letter
+mimeographed, he would have been DEPUTIZING TO A MACHINE the same amount
+of his own and a much larger part of the stenographer's time. But, while
+the customers accepted plausible excuses in place of shoes, it is
+doubtful whether the cleverest imitation would have taken the place of a
+real typewritten letter.
+
+With the manufacturer of a proprietary medicine, however, things are
+different. Women from every part of the country write in describing
+their ailments. It is not difficult to classify these letters into a
+dozen groups. And form letters, done in skillful imitation of real
+typing, do the trick quite nicely.
+
+That is DEPUTIZING--just as it is DEPUTIZING when the "big boss" calls
+in his assistant and says: "You run this shebang from now on. I've got
+to see if I can't get the K. C. plant out of the red."
+
+And it's DEPUTIZING when a manufacturer, forced to increase the size of
+his plant, goes to a real estate operator and gets him to buy a piece of
+land, put up a building and rent it to him at a certain figure, while he
+uses his own capital to equip and operate the new plant, because he can
+make 15 per cent, say, on his capital himself, whereas he has to pay out
+as rent only an amount equal to 8 per cent of what land, building,
+insurance, and so on, would tie up.
+
+Fundamentally, then, DEPUTIZING is taking something away from the
+"principal" of the job or business and assigning it to a "deputy."
+Principal and deputy may be a manager and his stenographer, a department
+head and a filing system, or a corporation's capital and a bond issue.
+
+The first stumbling step toward organization, therefore, is to RECOGNIZE
+and DEFINE the PRINCIPAL and the DEPUTIES in a given task.
+
+A good manager, though, can't simply go and deputize every detail of his
+job. That might be nothing more than the trick of a lazy man.
+
+Yet a rising young executive (on our list of casual acquaintances) has
+done exactly that. He has carried it to such a fine point that he is
+able to spend three afternoons a week with Col. Bogie. He is still
+rising, although some of us have abiding faith in the old adage that
+what goes up must come down. In other words, he's rising to a fall.
+
+No, organizing is not deputizing in that sense of the word.
+
+In EFFECTIVE ORGANIZING, it will be noted from the examples cited, work
+is deputized _only when the "principal" is left free to do something
+else more important or more profitable_.
+
+The "big boss" didn't hand the plant over to his assistant until he knew
+his undivided attention was needed elsewhere--until he knew he could
+spend his time more profitably in another phase of the business.
+
+Analyze the conditions under which the sales manager delegated part of
+his dictation to a system, and part of his stenographer's typing to a
+duplicating machine. You will see that the work deputized fulfilled two
+conditions:
+
+It was work the system and the machine could do to advantage--
+
+And work which he and his stenographer could do only at the expense of
+more important work.
+
+Wherever there is delegation of responsibility in any true job of
+managing, the same two fundamentals will be seen.
+
+Too often a manager says: "Never do anything your subordinate can do for
+you." But it is not good management when turning a job over to a
+subordinate leaves the manager idle and unproductive--with nothing on
+his mind except his hat.
+
+The good manager, whatever may be his particular job of managing,
+follows two rules when he deputizes or distributes work to man, money
+or machine. Such work, he knows, should be:
+
+1. Work which that other person or other thing can do to good advantage.
+
+2. Work which the manager would do himself only at the expense of
+something more important.
+
+Deputizing your work so that your days are free for golfing or yachting
+is far from the spirit of true organization. When a Schwab deputizes,
+another job profits by the increased time he is able to give to it.
+Every time he passes on a bit more responsibility, the whole enterprise
+profits through his greater freedom for the big sweep of the business.
+And when a manager fails because he has never learned to share
+responsibilities, we shudder at his folly--never stopping to think that
+the sole reason it was folly was because there was a bigger job for him
+to do. Deputizing his work would have left him free to exercise big,
+broad judgment in a way that only leisure and calmness could afford.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A few years ago, two young men went into business in a small Illinois
+town. They were honest, industrious, well liked. Austin was a born
+salesman; Black was a shrewd buyer. It looked like a good combination
+and the local banker gave them a line of credit.
+
+One year went by. Two years. Austin and Black were just skinning by. A
+fair living was all they were getting out of the business. Volume--which
+was what they needed--was increasing, oh, so slowly.
+
+A salesman came along about that time and told them some things they
+didn't know. A little more skill in watching the stock; cutting out
+lines which weren't paying; trimming purchases on slow-moving stocks;
+pushing specialties before they went bad on their hands--those were some
+of the methods which meant added profits.
+
+It certainly looked like good business to hire another clerk so that the
+partners' time would be free for these new phases of the business.
+
+The clerk was taken on--and things began to hum. Soon Austin and Black
+saw other steps they ought to take. More attention must be given to
+advertising. That meant another clerk. Next came a bookkeeper, an
+assistant bookkeeper.
+
+Trade was increasing, you see, and net profits were increasing. Extra
+clerks were needed all right, but the proprietors went the whole hog and
+put on so many that they themselves no longer had to stand behind a
+counter. They were both badly bitten by the bug of supervision.
+
+Finally the tide turned. It usually does.
+
+And when Austin and Black went to the bank one day to get an extension
+of credit, the shrewd old retired farmer on the other side of the desk
+laid down the law.
+
+They got the extension--but only on certain conditions.
+
+The chief condition was that they do LESS MANAGING and MORE
+MERCHANDISING.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+And that's what they are doing today.
+
+There were two managers who organized their work, increased their
+profits. Up to a certain point, every time they deputized their work,
+it was an advantage, because it left them more time for better
+merchandising.
+
+But they weren't ORGANIZING according to our TWO FUNDAMENTALS.
+Literally, they were _deputizing all the work that others could do_--and
+not confining the work deputized to _work they themselves could do only
+at the expense of something more important_.
+
+How well the chart tells the story! The great big white piece of pie
+marked "IDLE" shows exactly where Austin and Black went wrong. The worst
+thing that ever happened to them was the day they went home from Chicago
+and tried to run their business the way they thought Mr. James W.
+Simpson runs his large retail emporium.
+
+Somewhere along the line they tripped over the point of vanishing
+returns and kept right on going.
+
+And thus we come to the Scylla and Charybdis of our job of ORGANIZING.
+Remember we are not interested in the mere knack of getting someone else
+to take over every last responsibility that can be borne by another.
+Perhaps that may be good management for a Schwab--in so far, at least,
+as it leaves his mind free for the exercise of the broad judgment we
+mentioned a while ago. Nor are we interested in the sheer industry and
+application involved in doing without assistance everything that can
+possibly be so done, although doing it may be equally good management
+for, say, a file clerk. Rather is our interest in the KNACK OF SENSING
+THE DIVIDING LINE between WORK to PERFORM and WORK to DEPUTIZE. It is
+that ability which is the mark of the successful manager.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Where is this DIVIDING LINE? How shall we know where to DEPUTIZE and
+when to PERFORM? What kind of work shall we turn over to subordinates?
+What shall we reserve for ourselves?
+
+Again, whatever the job or business we are engaged in organizing, there
+are simple rules to follow.
+
+But first an illustration which will help to make the point.
+
+Consider the credit man for a large concern which sold machines on a
+monthly payment plan.
+
+He was always in a jam with the sales department. It took too long,
+complained the sales manager, to get credit rulings. It was no fun to
+put a whole lot of work into selling the customer, only to have the
+order turned down by the house because of poor credit. Why couldn't the
+credit man give them a ruling before they attempted to close a sale?
+Sometimes it took so long to get an O.K. that the prospect got all cold
+and went somewhere else.
+
+The treasurer of the company was drawn into the picture when the sales
+manager openly declared he'd "get" the credit man.
+
+And it certainly looked as if the sales manager had a good case.
+
+"But," protested the credit man, "I've made mighty few mistakes. As for
+delays--well, I don't know how I could work any harder."
+
+"Maybe you work too hard," the treasurer ventured.
+
+"Hm, if I didn't do what I do, I don't know who would."
+
+"Hold on, now, let's get this thing straight. You're valuable to the
+company because of your long experience and good judgment on credits.
+When you have all the dope on a man, I'll bet my last dollar on your
+decision. The only mistakes you ever make are when you hurry your
+decisions.
+
+"But--and here's the point--you aren't any better at digging out the
+facts than either of your two assistants. Yet here's what you do. You
+divide salesmen's requests for credit rulings into two groups. You take
+those that run over $500; your assistants get the others. Each of you
+does his own investigating and digging--and except in puzzling cases,
+you practically let your two men make their own decisions.
+
+ Myself Assistants
+ $500 Up Under $500
+ Mercantile Reports
+ Bank References
+ Special Investigations
+ "Briefing" Data
+ Final Ruling
+ Correspondence
+
+ $500 Up Under $500
+ { Mercantile Reports
+ Assistants { Bank References
+ { Special Investigations
+ { "Briefing" Data
+
+ Myself { Final Ruling
+ { Correspondence
+
+"Why, listen. You, the best man we have on _decisions_, spend more than
+half your time _digging_, while your assistants spend much of their
+time making decisions. What's the result? Delay, the department in a
+jam, some decisions made in a hurry, some by your assistants.
+
+"The trouble with you is, you haven't organized your department right."
+And the treasurer sketched the diagram reproduced in the upper chart on
+page 105.
+
+"Why, man, your job is to keep _all_ bad credits off the books--not just
+the big ones. A bad risk--whether it's $5 or $5000--is a mistake. You're
+an expert credit man--but as a MANAGER, you're a WASHOUT.
+
+"This," he added, "is the way you ought to set up your department. Then
+you, the best man on decisions, will do all the deciding. Your two
+assistants, who are just as good as you are at digging, will spend all
+their time getting you the facts." And as he spoke he sketched in the
+lower chart.
+
+The credit man had erred in the other direction from the two retail
+merchants. He wasn't doing _enough_ managing. He was keeping too much
+work for himself. And he was _deputizing the wrong kind of work_.
+
+The merchants were deputizing work they should have done themselves--the
+general supervision of stocks, advertising and sales did not require
+their undivided attention--and the volume and profits of the business
+wouldn't stand so much unproductive expense.
+
+Our credit man, on the other hand, was doing work which others could
+very well do for him--the time he spent on such work should have been
+devoted to other and more important responsibilities.
+
+In the story of the credit man, however, another fundamental of good
+organization comes to light. Remember how the treasurer classified the
+character of the work to be done? Not only was the credit man trying to
+do too much work, but even when he _did_ assign work to his assistants,
+he assigned the wrong kind. He deputized, true enough--but he erred in
+regard to the KIND OF WORK HE DEPUTIZED. He thought he could deputize
+small credits. It didn't take the treasurer long to show him that the
+amount made no difference--it was the character of the work that
+required consideration.
+
+Plenty of managers make that same mistake. They judge the importance of
+the task by its physical bigness--or by the amount of money
+involved--instead of deciding according to the character of the work.
+
+Before work can be safely deputized, then, it must be MORE INTELLIGENTLY
+CLASSIFIED. And the key to better classification is found by dividing
+the job or business into two elements.
+
+One is ENTERPRISE. The other is ROUTINE.
+
+_Enterprise_ is an arbitrary term which we shall choose to indicate
+those factors of work which involve the use of judgment, initiative,
+experiment or speculation.
+
+_Routine_ we shall apply to those factors which follow settled
+precedents or rules or come within the range of known ability to
+perform.
+
+Analyze your own job with these two terms in mind. The various duties
+you perform will fall readily into one or the other of the two
+classifications.
+
+The things which come under the head of routine you have a right to
+deputize if, when you chart both classifications--in as accurate a
+proportion as possible to the capacities of the "principal" and the
+"deputies"--you find you are not overloading the business with
+unproductive management. A simple rule of thumb works here about as well
+as anything: Base the division of work on how much or how little of the
+routine the _principal_ can afford to carry.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You may safely deputize only so long as, by so doing, you leave yourself
+free for the more important, more profitable decisions.
+
+Don't forget for a moment, then--if you would organize
+effectively--that there is a tremendous difference between enterprise
+and routine work. Don't waste energy on the one. DON'T DEPUTIZE THE
+OTHER--unless you can effectively organize a deputy's capacity for doing
+it, and then only if it pays.
+
+Don't be like the manager who got a taste of the savings to be made
+through the application of mechanical handling equipment. He bought
+conveyors--and more conveyors. He was DEPUTIZING the handling job to
+machines. So far, so good. But the first thing you know he had a 50-ft.
+conveyor connecting two points in his shipping room. It took one man to
+load it, another to unload it. Previously one man with a hand truck had
+moved the packages very nicely, and had a lot of time left over for
+other duties. And here he needed an extra man--and owned a costly piece
+of equipment to boot. Under such circumstances the conveyor became very
+expensive scenery--not nearly so nice to look at as Yellowstone Park or
+the Riviera--and the money invested in it would have bought a trip to
+either.
+
+Thus all savings through deputization don't pay. Many a machine will
+save time and labor, but the interest on the investment, and upkeep and
+the depreciation will more than eat up the saving--UNLESS THE TIME AND
+LABOR SAVED CAN BE PROFITABLY TURNED TO SOMETHING ELSE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No attempted exposition of the KNACK OF ORGANIZING can be complete
+without something more than passing mention of a phase which may be all
+too easily slid over or completed.
+
+When work is deputized, the responsibility of the manager does not end
+with the act of deputization. It is the manager's responsibility to see
+that the work is done in the simplest and most effective manner.
+
+A sales executive had allowed a bunch of call reports to accumulate.
+There were several hundred of them. So he called in a stenographer whose
+time was hanging fairly heavily on her hands, and asked her to put them
+into alphabetical order preparatory to filing.
+
+Fifteen minutes later he happened by and was startled to see that she
+had covered two desks with the call reports and seemed to be making
+haste very slowly indeed.
+
+She had made a pile for every last letter in the alphabet. And every
+time she picked up a report, she had to hunt for the proper pile to put
+it in.
+
+So he showed her how to sort first in five major piles--A, B, C, D in
+one pile and so on. And then to sort each pile again into five piles,
+one for each letter--and finally to sort each individual pile
+alphabetically.
+
+It sounded like more handling. And perhaps it was. But the job of
+classification was greatly simplified. There was no more hunting for
+the missing pile. The work proceeded quickly and accurately.
+
+A rough illustration. He might have gone a step further and deputized
+part of the girl's task to a machine instead of to the primitive system
+described. That is to say, he might have seen that she was provided with
+one of the preliminary filing baskets which file clerks often use. Then
+the task of sorting alphabetically could have been done in a single
+handling of each report.
+
+But whatever the method he made available for the girl's use, the
+illustration still serves to indicate that the manager's responsibility
+does not end when he turns a job over to a subordinate. It remains his
+care to see that the job is done by the most effective method--not
+necessarily the speediest, but the one which gets the best results for
+the effort involved.
+
+To find this "one best" method, industry has evolved a complete
+technique of time and motion study. And merely to hint at what may be
+accomplished by breaking down an operation into its elementary
+operations and observing the time required to perform them, becomes part
+of our task in setting down the ways and means of organizing.
+
+First we shall find that any job, simple or complex, may be divided into
+three parts: make ready, do and put away.
+
+Shaving, for example. First we get everything ready--razor, brush,
+shaving cream, hot water. Then comes the actual operation of shaving.
+And last, cleaning up--rinsing the brush, wiping the razor, and putting
+things back where they belong.
+
+Perhaps you're in the same boat as the old farmer who, approached by the
+subscription salesman of an agricultural magazine, allowed he wa'nt
+farmin' now half as good as he knew how.
+
+Or perhaps you already hold speed records at giving your face the
+once-over. But, you see, the whole point in studying the job is not
+aimed at faster shaving, but at simplifying the "make ready" and "put
+away" phases of the operation.
+
+For example, the next time you shave, try picking up the tube of shaving
+cream with one hand and unscrewing the cap while you're wetting your
+brush with the other. It will be awkward as the dickens the first time
+you try it. But try it again and again and again. It won't be long
+before you'll be an expert at doing the job that way. Finish up that
+part of the operation by screwing the cap back on while you are
+lathering your face with the right hand. Does it require a stop watch to
+point out the saving in time that you've made? Oh, it won't be easy the
+first few times, but before you know it, you'll have taught yourself
+good work habits.
+
+Take a simple job like the assembly of a license bracket in an
+automobile factory. An analysis of this operation (see "Micromotion
+Technique," by F. J. Van Poppelen, _Factory and Industrial Management_,
+Nov., 1930) showed that the right hand was busy all the time, while the
+left did nothing most of the time except hold the piece.
+
+At the risk of getting too technical--for after all we are interested,
+not so much in the details, as in certain broad principles of organizing
+the work--let us see how the operation was performed.
+
+First the operator assembled a number of screws and leather washers by
+picking up a screw with the left hand, a washer with the right, putting
+them together and laying the assembly aside. Then he picked up a bracket
+with the left hand and a screw and washer assembly with the right,
+placing the screw through a slot in the bracket--continuing to hold
+assembled pieces in his left hand while the right was picking up a flat
+washer and assembling it to the screw; picking up lock washer,
+assembling it to the screw; picking up acorn nut and starting it on the
+screw; and finally picking up an open-end wrench and tightening the nut.
+Then he assembled screw, washers and nut to the other side of the
+bracket, whereupon wrench and bracket were laid aside, completing the
+cycle.
+
+An analysis of these motions, by right and left hands, is given in the
+table on page 120. It illustrates the important point that the right
+hand was busy all the time, but for a considerable part of the time the
+left was doing nothing but holding the piece.
+
+On pages 118 and 119 are shown drawings of the old and the new assembly
+methods. Likewise, the lower table on page 120 analyzes, by right and
+left hands, the motions required by the new method. Note first that
+fewer elements--17 as against 26--are required. And note that both hands
+are productively employed with shorter distances to travel for stock and
+with decreased effort.
+
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ Analysis of this assembly job shows ...
+
+ ... that the right hand was busy all the time....]
+
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ Comparison with the old method
+
+ ... shows both hands productively employed....]
+
+
+TABLE 1
+
+ LEFT HAND RIGHT HAND
+
+ 1. Pick up screw Pick up leather washer
+ 2. Assemble Assemble
+ 3. Idle Lay aside
+ 4. Pick up bracket Pick up screw and washer assembled
+ 5. Hold bracket Assemble
+ 6. " " Pick up flat washer
+ 7. " " Assemble
+ 8. " " Pick up lock washer
+ 9. " " Assemble
+ 10. " " Pick up nut
+ 11. " " Start on thread
+ 12. " " Pick up wrench
+ 13. " " Tighten nut
+ 14. " " Lay wrench aside
+ 15. " " Pick up screw and washer assembled
+ 16. " " Assemble to other side of bracket
+ 17. " " Pick up flat washer
+ 18. " " Assemble
+ 19. " " Pick up lock washer
+ 20. " " Assemble
+ 21. " " Pick up nut
+ 22. " " Start on thread
+ 23. " " Pick up wrench
+ 24. " " Tighten nut
+ 25. " " Lay wrench aside
+ 26. Idle Lay bracket aside
+
+
+TABLE 2
+
+ LEFT HAND RIGHT HAND
+
+ 1. Pick up screw and transport Same
+ 2. Position on block Same
+ 3. Pick up leather washer and transport Same
+ 4. Position on screw Same
+ 5. Pick up new bracket and transport Pick up assembled
+ bracket; lay aside
+ 6. Position bracket on block Same
+ 7. Pick up flat washer and transport Same
+ 8. Position on screw Same
+ 9. Pick up lock washer and transport Same
+ 10. Position on screw Same
+ 11. Pick up nut and transport Same
+ 12. Start nut on screw Same
+ 13. Position driver Same
+ 14. Tighten nut Same
+ 15. Position driver to 2nd nut Same
+ 16. Tighten nut Same
+ 17. Release driver and move assembled
+ bracket 2 in. forward on block Same
+
+The new set-up consists of a hardwood block, shaped to fit one side of
+the bracket when assembled, and nailed to the bench. The open-end wrench
+was replaced by a screw-driver with a socket wrench to fit the acorn
+nut, suspended on a spring in front of the operator. The miscellaneous
+containers for holding the small parts were replaced by a supply of
+sheet-metal duplicate trays, so that the various parts could be located
+in the most convenient position. (This arrangement was not used in the
+accompanying illustrations because it obscured the view.)
+
+In a word, then, the number of elements was decreased by one-third--and
+practically all of the elements in the new method require less time than
+the similar or corresponding element in the old method. The distance of
+travel for stock has been shortened, parts are grasped more easily,
+better and faster tools are provided, effort is decreased, and both
+hands are productively employed.
+
+Need the imagination be stretched to the breaking point to see how a job
+involving the work not of one man, but of several, may be similarly
+organized and similarly improved?
+
+A second illustration will serve to show the application to group work
+(see "Motion Study Applied to Group Work," by J. A. Piacitelli, _Factory
+and Industrial Management_, April, 1931, page 626).
+
+The operation studied here involved cycles of approximately eleven
+seconds' duration, performed by a group of seven men. The material
+handled consisted of rolls of roofing weighing about 50 lbs. each. Many
+of the elements in the cycle were obviously fatiguing. The rolls had to
+be lifted, during transfers from one worker to another, and rolled along
+a horizontal runway. The trucker lifted the completed roll and placed it
+on his truck. While the rate of production was limited by process and
+speed of equipment, the chance to cut cost and fatigue prompted the
+study.
+
+Examine the equipment layout before the study was made (it is shown on
+page 124), and follow the operation. A roll of roofing paper
+approximately 8 in. in diameter and 36 in. long was wound about the
+mandrel of a winding machine by one of the workers. The roll was taken
+off and passed to another worker who wrapped a sheet of paper about it
+and pasted it in place. When the roll was wrapped, he had to lift the
+roll, turn and deposit it on the runway. The next man inserted a bag of
+nails, a can of cement and an instruction sheet into the core of the
+roll. To do this, he was forced to turn and bend almost to floor level
+to get his supplies.
+
+Next the roll was passed along to two men who, from opposite sides of
+the runway, placed protectors and muslin caps on the ends of the roll.
+It was then rolled along to another man who placed gummed paper bands
+about the ends and pushed the roll to the end of the runway where the
+trucker placed it on a truck and wheeled it into storage.
+
+[Illustration: EQUIPMENT LAYOUT BEFORE STUDY]
+
+[Illustration: EQUIPMENT LAYOUT AFTER STUDY]
+
+The movie camera, which is gradually finding wider industrial use in the
+search for the "one best" method, was used to record the work of this
+group. It supplied not only a photographic record of the working place
+and surrounding conditions, but also a simultaneous record of time and
+method employed by each worker regardless of speed. It was then possible
+to study overlapping cycles and to analyze the methods to the desired
+degree of accuracy--and thus to transfer parts of the cycle of one
+operator to that of another, thus effecting a better distribution of
+work and shortening the cycle of the person on whom the production of
+the group depends--thereby increasing the productivity of the entire
+group.
+
+These analyses showed immediately an unequal distribution of work.
+Again, from the equipment layout made after the study, let us follow
+through and see what changes were effected.
+
+First the wrapper was freed from turning and lifting the roll from his
+table by the introduction of an elevator which lifted the roll to an
+inclined runway. The roll then moved from place to place by gravity
+when released by foot-operated trips. The pasting problem was solved by
+using a trough the length of the paper, open on the bottom and equipped
+with squeegee lips like the mucilage bottle on your desk. A pile of
+wrapping paper with the far edges of the sheets inserted under the
+trough supplied a pasted sheet every time one was drawn toward the
+operator. The trough was covered with a hinged plate which permitted the
+roll to pass over it to the elevator. It was found, by eliminating the
+fatiguing elements in this man's work and simplifying his cycle of
+motions, that the time would be so reduced that he could easily take
+over the work of the man who placed the cement and nails in the core of
+the roll. The instruction sheet was placed in the roll by the winder,
+who had ample time for this additional task. The pile of sheets was
+placed at his right under a date stamp so that he could date each sheet
+and slip it into the roll just before it stopped.
+
+Simplifying the cycle of the men who placed the caps on the ends of the
+roll enabled them to take over with ease the work of the man who had
+placed the gummed-paper bands around the ends. Thus each man capped and
+banded his own end, whereas formerly the bander had had to assume an
+awkward and fatiguing position to reach the far end. And last, by
+placing a redesigned truck at the end of the incline, the completed
+rolls landed in the truck, and the trucker was able to care for two
+machines.
+
+The method finally established was recorded on instruction sheets, and
+the existing premium was modified to provide additional incentive.
+Although, as stated at the outset, the rate of production was limited by
+the machine, substantial savings resulted from the study. Production has
+been maintained with 4-1/2 men instead of 7; fatigue has been greatly
+lessened; cost has been reduced about 26 per cent; average earnings of
+the group have increased about 19 per cent.
+
+Thus the search for the "one best" method becomes an important factor in
+organizing the work.
+
+We might go on and show how this group work was organized in accordance
+with our two fundamentals, but the purpose of introducing this
+illustration and the one preceding it was, after all, to show that the
+_principal's_ responsibility, after deputizing work, ends only when he
+has shown the _deputy_ the most effective method of doing it.
+
+Besides, we must hasten on to the task of handling the "help." We have
+seen that the entire FABRIC OF MANAGING rests upon the knack of
+ORGANIZING; that organizing the work must be preceded by PLANNING; and
+that planning must be based upon ANALYSIS. And now, having organized, we
+must learn how to handle the "help"--which is a task met in every job
+involving managing.
+
+And what job, big or small, does not involve MANAGING?
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+Handling the "Help"
+
+
+There used to be a good old golden rule of thumb that was plenty good
+enough for the good old rule-of-thumb days. It was: _If you would be
+fair, treat all your men alike_.
+
+As a matter of fact it wasn't a bad rule in those halcyon days for man
+wanted then but little here below.
+
+And he got it.
+
+Those were the days when a certain plant of a certain electrical concern
+was known affectionately among the employees as "Siberia."
+
+With good reason, too, for it was the dreariest, bleakest place in
+winter you can imagine. And a transfer to it was like nothing so much as
+a sentence to Siberia.
+
+Well, well, their plant today is as comfortable a place to work in as
+you'll find anywhere in the country; that concern today sets a high
+standard of employer-employee relationships; those same workers who,
+thirty years ago, shivered at the bare thought of pulling on their pants
+and trekking over the barren wastes to "Siberia," are today comfortably
+retired on modest pensions which don't do a thing but help keep the wolf
+from the door.
+
+Yet the management, in those days beyond recall, would have shown you
+that _all men were treated alike_.
+
+Perhaps that was the trouble. Anyway, if you asked the management today
+how to handle "help," dollars to doughnuts the answer would come closer
+to being: To be fair, TREAT EVERY MAN DIFFERENTLY.
+
+A suggestive statement--significant because it is indicative of
+tremendous change in the relationships of capital and labor, of employer
+and employee.
+
+Fifteen years ago a lad graduated from an Eastern university. His folks
+were poor but proud--as Mr. Alger used to say--but managed to see Phil
+through. Phil had made a good record in school--and some good friends.
+Through one of them he got a letter to Mr. H--, the head of an old
+established firm of stockbrokers--and the letter got him a job.
+
+The job paid $5 a week. Even in those days there wasn't much left over
+after carfare and lunches had been deducted.
+
+But Phil was "learning the bond business." He wouldn't be worth even $5
+a week the first six months. After that, maybe.
+
+He stuck. Graduated from "running the street" to a stool in the stock
+clerk's cage. Came the New Year and Phil found an extra dollar in his
+pay envelope. He asked the cashier if there wasn't some mistake. There
+wasn't.
+
+Two days later he got a job in a factory near his home at $12 a week.
+Told Mr. H-- he was leaving. Was offered $15 to stay. Wouldn't.
+
+Mr. H-- confessed later that he had let the most promising prospect in
+years slip through his fingers. All--if you ask us--because it was a
+fixed policy of the house to treat all alike.
+
+For years it had been doing just exactly that. Each June it took on a
+new crop of young men to "learn the business." Each young man got $5 a
+week. No favorites. But nine out of every ten came from prosperous, even
+wealthy families. That $5 bill was nothing in their young lives. Their
+families were glad to have them work for nothing, for they were getting
+an insight into the investment business--and some day, whether they
+became bond salesmen or just plain manufacturers and solid bankers, that
+knowledge would be worth its weight in gold.
+
+Phil was the tenth man. Mr. H-- knew well enough that he couldn't get by
+on $5 a week. _But there was the rule._ It couldn't be broken.
+
+No, we can't wind up by telling how Phil did well in the pants factory,
+married the boss's daughter and owns the business today. That would be
+wandering far from the truth. He couldn't "see" the boss' daughter for
+one thing--and besides the pants factory wasn't such a much.
+
+No, you'll find Phil today doing a bang-up job in an Ohio plant. It says
+"General Manager" on his door. And as far as he is concerned, it was the
+best thing that ever happened when Mr. H-- treated him like all the
+rest.
+
+Mr. H--, though, is still taking them on, still paying them $5 a
+week--or maybe it's $10--still treating them all alike. He gets a lot of
+bright young fellows into the business. But every so often he passes up
+a chance to get an exceptionally promising boy--because he is fair and
+treats them all alike. What's a rule for, anyway, except to break?
+Mr. H-- will never know that it's the _exception_ that proves the
+rule--particularly when you are dealing with human values.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But more later of the newer viewpoint. For the moment we are talking
+about handling the "help"--and making it sound as though it were solely
+the problem of the big employer.
+
+Not so. It is a problem with every one of you in business--unless you do
+nothing but sit in one spot and do one job from nine to five, five
+days--we hope--a week.
+
+The editor who wants a manuscript typed; the salesman who must get long
+distance; the man at the machine who has to get tools from the toolroom;
+the errand boy with his bundle to carry--all have the same problem. To
+all of them it is just as important in relation to their own scale of
+things as it is to the manager of a business with ten or a hundred or a
+thousand employees. It is the eternal problem of GETTING OTHERS TO
+COOPERATE.
+
+Some men are good at it; others are total failures.
+
+Many a man on the bench or at the machine has the ability, knowledge
+and experience which qualify him for a job as foreman or even
+superintendent. But he can't hold down a foreman's job because he hasn't
+the knack of getting hearty, whole-souled cooperation from others.
+
+Foremen, too, have changed, you see. Today the successful foreman is
+less often the hard-boiled driver, more often the student of his job, of
+his men, of himself. He has learned that, _to be fair, he must treat
+every man differently_.
+
+Often we hear of Bill's losing his job as a mechanic, not because he
+didn't know his job, not because he couldn't run every lathe in the
+shop, but because he "couldn't get along" with the other men. And we
+think, Poor Bill! it's too bad he's so quick-tempered.
+
+Generally we blame it on "temperament." Yet some of the very best
+handlers of men are the crabbiest, crankiest gents in seven states.
+Others are as cold as steel. And like as not the warm-hearted, generous
+man is a monumental failure at handling his "help."
+
+No, when you check specific methods of handling people--methods which
+are successful for the most part--something much more fundamental than
+temperament will be found.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mrs. Thompson was in charge of the information desk and switchboard in a
+medium-sized New England factory. A well-bred Englishwoman in her late
+thirties, the boss liked her for her pleasant voice over the phone, for
+her unfailingly courteous treatment of visitors.
+
+But if the boss liked her, almost no one else did. Salesmen particularly
+complained of her crankiness and of the unsatisfactory service they
+got. Young Bacon was an exception, though. He always got what he wanted.
+
+One day the office manager asked him how on earth he did it.
+
+Bacon thought he was being taken for a ride, but finally answered: "Why,
+that's a cinch. I take Mrs. Thompson's job seriously."
+
+Pressed for details, he supplied them.
+
+"I never try to kid her. I never bawl her out. When I want a number I
+treat her as though the switchboard were her own particular business and
+I a customer. Just as if she had something to sell, and I something to
+buy. When I ask for some special service, she gives it to me. Or she
+tells me why she can't."
+
+Afterwards the office manager took the trouble to look into the
+situation. The switchboard job was a life saver to that woman of 38. She
+needed the money in the first place. And besides the job gave her a
+sense of responsibility. She was proud of her job, proud to know that
+the men in the business depended upon her for certain important
+services. She couldn't understand, then, when a salesman picked up his
+telephone and barked a command at her as though she were a piece of
+office furniture, or patronized her as if she were a child, or kidded
+her as if she were a 20-year-old flapper. It made her cranky to be
+treated like that. And when someone like Bacon came along with his
+method of treating her work as a responsible piece of business, it put
+her on her mettle.
+
+The solution was obvious. The office manager talked Mrs. Thompson and
+Mrs. Thompson's job over with the salesmen. It wasn't long before they
+changed their tactics, with resultant improvement in the quality of the
+telephone service they got.
+
+Sounds like a case of knowing the foibles of the person involved,
+doesn't it?
+
+It's more than that.
+
+Edna is a switchboard operator, too. She is pretty and agreeable. And
+you couldn't blame the boys for liking to hang around.
+
+No one thought much about that until some of the more serious-minded men
+discovered they couldn't get a thing out of Edna. She was too busy
+listening to Joe's latest exploit with one hand, and plugging Jack in
+with the other. She played favorites in putting through long distance
+calls, took advantage of the friendly feeling everyone had toward her.
+The telephone service in that office just folded up and died. There
+wasn't any.
+
+The obvious remedy was to fire Edna. But the manager was a cagey old
+codger. Beneath a rough exterior beat a heart of gold, and somehow he
+felt that maybe it wasn't all Edna's fault. Why, blast it, she'd been
+treated like a pretty, petulant girl. Why shouldn't she act like one?
+
+A memo was the result. It announced the creation of a new department.
+"Telephone Service" was its name--and Edna Blank was its head. It was
+just as much a part of the business as the accounting department, or
+any other.
+
+He had sense enough to PUT DEFINITE RESPONSIBILITIES UPON EDNA'S
+SHOULDERS. He did it not only to instill in her a sense of duty, but
+also to impress her with his confidence in her ability to perform those
+duties. Then, under the rose, he instructed the men to treat her just as
+they treated the capable woman in charge of the accounting end of the
+business. They did. And Edna rose to the occasion, took pride in her
+work, discouraged the hangers-on, played no favorites in putting through
+calls, and became as good an operator as ever you'd hope to see.
+
+Now, then, scratch the surface and what do you find? Not that it was
+simply a case of understanding Mrs. Thompson's and Edna's foibles. Not
+at all. Mrs. Thompson stopped being cranky and became accommodating,
+Edna dropped her irresponsible ways and became an alert, attentive
+operator WHEN THEY GOT THE FEELING OUT OF THEIR WORK THAT THEY WERE
+TRANSACTING BUSINESS FOR THEMSELVES.
+
+And need we look for further proof of our postulate that TO BE FAIR, YOU
+MUST TREAT ALL YOUR ASSISTANTS DIFFERENTLY? You must know them, know
+yourself, if you would get whole-hearted cooperation. That is
+fundamental in any attempt to acquire the KNACK OF HANDLING THE "HELP."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For there _is_ a KNACK of handling the help. It _can_ be acquired. This
+we say despite the difficulty of analyzing the relations of one person
+to another, despite the seeming impossibility of setting down a rule
+which will work universally.
+
+Take a man running a peanut stand, a hosiery mill, or a steel plant.
+There are three things he wants for himself: (1) to build up and hold a
+good trade; (2) to please his customers; (3) to get a fair profit.
+
+Remember these three wants when you're dealing with your help.
+
+Get your "help"--it may be the switchboard operator or it may be a
+thousand automobile workmen--in the position of wanting those same three
+things. The help's job is his "trade," you are his customer; and his
+compensation is his profit.
+
+When you do that, you have an employee or helper who is going to give
+you the hearty cooperation you're looking for--just so long as you are a
+good customer, and his compensation for helping you is a fair profit.
+
+Next time you go into a store, try to keep that thought fixed in your
+mind. Everyone working in a business, you see, is selling his
+services--and when you use those services you are the buyer. Perhaps you
+pay in money for the services rendered--perhaps you simply repay him by
+making his day's work easier. In either event, treat your requests for
+service as though you and he were transacting a business that is
+mutually, but individually, profitable, and the cooperation which is
+otherwise usually begrudged will be automatically forthcoming.
+
+But that, you say, is PERSONALITY. Then how do you account for this?
+
+A. is a big, breezy salesman. He busts into a hotel, calls the "greeter"
+behind the desk by name, asks for 1209 "same as last time"--and gets all
+kinds of real service from porters, bell-hops and waiters.
+
+It looks as though it might be personality.
+
+Yet right behind him walks B. He's a horse-faced bird who never
+smiles--wiry, monosyllabic--asks brusquely for a $4 room--gets it. And
+gets everything else he asks for--just as promptly as A. does.
+
+No, it can't be personality. For there's C. and there's D. C. is A's
+twin--and B. and D. were cast in the same mold. Their tips are no
+smaller; their demands no more unreasonable. Yet C. gets the poorest
+sample room in the house. And D's trunk is always the last one the
+porter brings up.
+
+These aren't exaggerated cases. Hotel men will tell you they happen
+every day.
+
+Why, then, did A. and B. rate such good service while their fellow
+knights of the road got none? Because when A. and B. asked for
+something, there was about the transaction a well-defined air of "you've
+something you can do for me--I've something I want done--what say we
+trade?" Whereas, when C. and D. came along, regardless of the personal
+manners involved, there was created the atmosphere of a one-sided
+business deal. C's breeziness had in it a touch of condescension, or D's
+brusqueness was the brusqueness of assumed superiority.
+
+Thus is it seen, when we forget all about personality and study effects,
+that cooperation is gained by trading with the "help" according to the
+"help's" business.
+
+Trade with an elevator man as though running an elevator were his own
+business--trade with the chief chemist as though the laboratory were his
+store--and they'll trade with you and be eager to make a satisfactory
+deal of it.
+
+Under this fixed policy--or rule--the proper attitude to take towards
+this or that class of "help" becomes a matter of automatic selection.
+
+And that is how we begin to acquire the KNACK OF HANDLING THE HELP. Thus
+do we step high, wide and handsome on our road to the KNACK OF MANAGING.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now enters the business of COMPENSATION. There must be compensation in a
+trade if all hands are to be satisfied.
+
+Everyone is in business because he wants something. Everything that
+will help him to get what he wants, he will like to do; everything that
+hinders him, he will dislike to do.
+
+When you get ready to "trade" with someone, therefore, consider what the
+other man wants--that is, if you want to get the most help or
+cooperation out of the transaction. Then consider what you can give in
+return--balancing his wants.
+
+ +----------------------------------------------------------+
+ | +-------------+ +--------------+ |
+ | |What YOU Want| | What YOUR | |
+ | +-------------+ | "HELP" Wants | |
+ | \ /+--------------+ |
+ | +---------------------+ |
+ | |What You Can Give and| |
+ | |He Can Take That Will| |
+ | | Leave Both Parties | |
+ | | Satisfied | |
+ | +---------------------+ |
+ +----------------------------------------------------------+
+
+There must be that balance in every satisfactory deal.
+
+Examine the chart on this page. It will save a lot of paper and ink
+because it shows diagrammatically what must happen if there are to be
+satisfactory arrangements between you and your "help".
+
+A word or two by way of interpretation may serve to show how it works
+out.
+
+When the "help" is in your employ, the compensation--what you can give
+and he can take, leaving both parties satisfied--is his monthly pay
+check or his weekly envelope. Or it is the rate of commission. And
+bearing upon it are such things as local living conditions, and so on.
+When the "help" is someone not in your direct employ, then the
+compensation is regulated by the effect which performing the service you
+require, has on the success of the "help's" regular day's work.
+
+For the moment, let's us return to the messenger boy whom we left in
+Chapter III just as he was about to deliver a message.
+
+Or, at least, let's talk about another messenger boy whose task of
+managing his job differs in no wise from the first's--or, for that
+matter, from any other job of management.
+
+This boy worked in a large Chicago building and his job was carting
+light but bulky packages back and forth between his company's quarters
+and its customers'. There were a dozen other boys, and most of them
+complained of having trouble getting up and down in the elevators. It
+seemed that the starter took delight in making the boys wait for the
+freight elevator--even when there was plenty of room in the others.
+
+But this particular boy--an impudent youngster with a "fresh" way about
+him--had no trouble at all. So the office manager was anxious to know
+"how come."
+
+He posted himself where he could observe without being seen. And sure
+enough, in came the fresh messenger boy with a bundle almost as big as
+himself. Down he set it, favored the starter with an impudent military
+salute and leaned nonchalantly up against the wall--well out of the
+way.
+
+"Hello, feller," said he breezily; "lemme know when there's room. And
+don't keep me waiting too long, or I'll be out on my ear."
+
+Picture the manager's astonishment when the starter replied:
+
+"Git in here, then, and git in quick," and let him in the first car
+going up.
+
+Somewhere, somehow, that impudent youngster had struck a responsive
+chord. Instinctively--or else because of past experience with elevator
+starters--he had put the problem of that particular starter's service on
+a business basis. He had put it in the starter's power to perform his
+own work without trouble, and to feel at the same time that he was "a
+man of affairs."
+
+He was able to show his authority without taking it out on the boy.
+
+Analyze this "trade" with the "compensation" chart in mind. Do you not
+see the "balance" of interests? Do you not see the starter's feeling
+that the service he rendered was his own business, that the boy was one
+of his customers, that the avoidance of trouble was his compensation or
+profit?
+
+Is there not in this very unimportant transaction the BALANCE OF
+INTERESTS suggested by our little chart?
+
+
+At this stage of our approach to the KNACK OF MANAGEMENT, a ready
+objection comes to mind. We are now dealing in human values and
+relationships--and you can't chart them. Analysis, planning,
+organization--certain rules may be set down which will enable one to
+attain some degree of effectiveness in carrying them out.
+
+But human nature? You can't deal with it by rule.
+
+The objection is well founded. You can't chart human nature--but you
+_can_ study the approaches to it and chart the laws that appeal to it.
+
+Our chart on page 146 is based upon what successful managers have
+learned about finding the wants of the human element when it works, and
+is constructed to supply a method of supplying those wants with as much
+productiveness and as little friction as possible.
+
+When you buy a new car and "put it to work," your first care is to find
+out its wants--how much you must give to get what it has to "sell"--what
+parts need oil and grease and so on.
+
+So, IF YOU WANT TO GET WORK OUT OF A HUMAN BEING, your best bet is to
+find out what that human being needs and must get in return for the work
+he performs or the service he gives.
+
+Some men seem to be born with an instinct for finding this out. But if
+you aren't built that way, there is no reason why you can't drill
+yourself to the same end by deliberately studying each case.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+See, for example, how a study of this sort gets the most out of men in a
+large New England plant where modern management methods are making
+serious inroads into the old rule-of-thumb ways of doing things.
+
+This concern was confronted with the very serious problem of maintaining
+a steady flow of product from one manufacturing department to another.
+Because of the nature of the product, skids and power trucks had been
+chosen as the equipment best suited for the job.
+
+Skids and lift trucks are effective handling units. No argument about
+that. Their introduction into any factory which has been using more
+primitive handling methods should automatically cut costs. But they save
+precious little time and money when they aren't working, or when they
+are being worked uneconomically.
+
+The problem, then, as this concern saw it, was how to be sure that Big
+Ed hadn't shipped off for a quiet smoke far from the maddening crowd--or
+that Little Joe wasn't arranging his work so that there'd be a handful
+of skids left over at closing time--moves that called for overtime pay.
+
+In other words, to get 100 per cent efficiency out of very efficient
+handling equipment, the management realized that it must take out some
+sort of insurance which would guarantee Little Joe's and Big Ed's and
+all the other truckers' being engaged in gainful occupation eight
+hours--count 'em--each and every day.
+
+The best insurance seemed to be a central dispatching system. No need to
+go into the details of its operation. Suffice it to say that it went a
+long way toward directing the efforts of the truckers along gainful
+lines. There came to be an orderliness which had never existed before.
+When a foreman put in a call for a trucker, he knew that the move would
+be made without unnecessary delay. In fact, orders were placed into the
+truckers' hands within three minutes of the time the foreman picked up
+his telephone to call the central dispatching department.
+
+BUT--no attempt had been made to sell this system to the truckers. It
+met with some little resistance, just as anything new does. And there
+are ways, as who does not know, of beating any "game" designed to get
+more work out of human beings.
+
+So the management--after many a huddle over this particular
+situation--decided upon a bonus plan.
+
+And they set about selling it to the truckers--somewhat in the fashion
+about to be narrated.
+
+"See here, men," said the manager in effect, "I'm going to put this plan
+right up to you and let you decide for yourselves. We've looked into it
+carefully. You men average 30 moves a day. So we've chosen 40 moves as
+the starting point. We're sure you can make 40 moves a day without
+tearing your shirts--and from there on, you begin to collect. For the
+next five trips you get a bonus of a nickel over and above your day
+rate; for the next five trips your bonus is 6 cents; and so on.
+
+"So, if a man makes 50 trips, his day's pay is not $4.50, but $5.05
+because he has earned 55 cents in bonus. Do you get it?"
+
+"Yeah, we get it all right, all right. We do twice as much work for 50
+or 60 cents more a day. How come? Why don't we get paid extra for _all_
+the moves we make over 30?"
+
+"Because we're just like you. The company wants to make more money.
+We've shown you how it can be done and we'll split pretty much 50-50.
+But we won't give you all the extra profit any more than we'd think of
+keeping it ourselves. Now think it over tonight and if you want to make
+$5 or $5.50 a day instead of $4.50, come 'round in the morning and we'll
+talk some more about it."
+
+Came only the dawn.
+
+The truckers were pretty sure that they were being had, although they
+couldn't figure out just how. 'Tis ever thus when the old order yields
+place to new.
+
+There was nothing left to do but try a new tack. So the manager talked
+to his fifteen or eighteen truckers again. And this time he proposed
+taking two of them and putting them on the new plan. After a little
+conversation to assure themselves that there was no skullduggery afoot,
+the truckers consented. And Little Ed and Big Joe (sic!) were nominated.
+
+Little Ed made 62 moves the very first day and was as fresh as a daisy
+when the 5 o'clock whistle blew. Big Joe made 56 trips and looked none
+the worse for it. Ed's bonus was $1.98; Joe's was $1.28. If you check
+up, we're sure you'll find those figures are wrong. But cheer up, we
+aren't nearly so much interested in the exact amounts of Ed's and Joe's
+earning as we are in the ultimate results and in the principles
+involved.
+
+We may pass quickly over the former. Of course the men were convinced.
+And Big Ed would have beaten any trucker to a gentle pulp who wouldn't
+have been convinced. In a week's time, those truckers were making nearly
+twice as many trips a day--and their earnings had increased by something
+like 35 per cent.
+
+If you don't believe it, look at the figure on page 158. See what
+happened to production? Yes, that pretty dotted line--the one with the
+big dip in it--marks labor costs per trip.
+
+The manager, you see--and now we come to the principle involved--had
+MADE HIS HELP SEE THAT THE BONUS PLAN AMOUNTED TO GIVING THEM WHAT THEY
+WANTED. And of course, that was more pay. At the same time it got the
+company what it wanted--more production.
+
+[Illustration: CHART OF RECORDS OF DISPATCHING ELECTRIC TRUCKS
+1922-1929]
+
+Fundamentally, the manager's system was precisely like the messenger
+boy's. And you can prove that in a trice by charting it on the same old
+basis.
+
+Try it. It won't take you more than a couple of minutes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This might go on for a long, long time. Innumerable examples might be
+introduced into this text to illustrate this balancing of wants and its
+importance to the successful conduct of this business of MANAGING--to
+illustrate that your own personal method of seeking cooperation or
+service is more a matter of reason than innate ability to "size up the
+other fellow."
+
+There is, in a word, method back of this "KNACK OF HANDLING THE HELP."
+
+The method is this. Ask yourself each time this simple question: What
+does your "helper" want?
+
+Does your stenographer want to leave promptly at five so she can get
+ready for an evening of whoopee? Or does she have to catch a particular
+train in order not to find a cold supper waiting for her at home? Then
+why not fix things so she can work during the hours she is paid to
+work--and so she can leave at the hour when pay stops?
+
+Can your truckers live in the style to which they are accustomed on
+$4.50 a day? Or will $5.50 enable them to put away a bit for a rainy
+season? Then why not arrange a wage payment method which will help them
+to do it?
+
+And above all, tell them WHY.
+
+To do such things is not philanthropy. Successful managers will tell you
+IT IS NOTHING MORE NOR LESS THAN GOOD BUSINESS. Strip from their methods
+the individual characteristics required by the individual conditions
+involved. What do you find? EVERY LAST ONE OF THEM IS BASED ON OUR
+PRIMARY RULE. That, you remember, is to find out what you want from your
+"help" and what your "help" wants from you; then a way to make the two
+meet on a ground of mutual satisfaction--the compensation you can give
+and the compensation they can take--and BOTH OF YOU GET WHAT YOU WANT.
+
+Don't you see, to grasp the real KNACK OF HANDLING "HELP," the necessity
+for making what you want from them balance with what they want from you?
+If there isn't that balance, there won't be whole-souled COOPERATION. To
+paraphrase what Henry Ford once said--or what one of his collaborators
+made him say: "See that each man in doing the best he can for you is
+also doing the best he can for himself."
+
+Thus, by digging in and finding out what everybody involved in the
+situation wants, it is possible to get the utmost in cooperation and
+loyalty. Where one man does so instinctively, another gets equally good
+results by making a deliberate study along the lines we have pointed
+out.
+
+Hundreds of jobs don't get done promptly and enthusiastically for no
+other reason than that they aren't interesting. They can be made
+interesting if you get the right line on what your work requires, what
+your "help" wants, and then make a common meeting ground.
+
+Mark Twain knew all about the KNACK OF MAKING WORK INTERESTING AND
+ATTRACTIVE.
+
+Remember his description of Tom Sawyer's whitewashing the fence? Even if
+you do, it won't hurt to read it again.
+
+Poor Tom. It was on a summer's morn just made for swimming or
+fishing--and he had to work.
+
+Along comes Ben, one of his cronies. Tom begins to do some tall
+thinking. But let's not try to improve the original:
+
+"He took up his brush and went tranquilly to work....
+
+"Ben said: 'Hello, old chap, you got to work, hey?'
+
+"Tom wheeled suddenly and said: 'Why, it's you, Ben! I warn't
+noticing.'
+
+"'Say--I'm going in a-swimming, I am. Don't you wish you could? But of
+course you'd ruther _work_--wouldn't you? Course you would!'
+
+"Tom contemplated the boy a bit, and said: 'What do you call work?'
+
+"'Why, ain't that work?'
+
+"Tom resumed his whitewashing, and answered carelessly: 'Well, maybe it
+is, and maybe it ain't. All I know is, it suits Tom Sawyer.'
+
+"'Oh come, now, you don't mean to let on you like it?'
+
+"The brush continued to move.
+
+"'Like it? Well, I don't see why I oughtn't to like it. Does a boy get a
+chance to whitewash a fence every day?'
+
+"That put the thing in a new light. Ben stopped nibbling his apple. Tom
+swept his brush daintily back and forth--stepped back to note the
+effect--added a touch here and there--criticized the effect again--Ben
+watching every move and getting more and more interested, more and more
+absorbed.
+
+"Presently he said: 'Say, Tom, let _me_ whitewash a little.'
+
+"Tom considered, was about to consent; but he altered his mind. 'No,
+no--I reckon it wouldn't hardly do, Ben. You see, Aunt Polly's awful
+particular about this fence--right here on the street--you know--but if
+it was the back fence I wouldn't mind and she wouldn't. Yes, she's awful
+particular about this fence; it's got to be done very careful; I reckon
+there ain't one boy in a thousand, mebbe two thousand, that can do it
+the way it's got to be done.'
+
+"'No--is that so? Oh, come now--lemme just try. Only just a little--I'd
+let you, if you was me, Tom.'
+
+"'Ben, I'd like to, honest Injun; but Aunt Polly--well, Jim wanted to do
+it, but she wouldn't let him; Sid wanted to do it, and she wouldn't let
+Sid. Now don't you see how I'm fixed? If you was to tackle this fence
+and anything was to happen to it----'
+
+"'Oh, shucks, I'll be just as careful. Now lemme try. Say--I'll give
+you the core of my apple.'
+
+"'Well, here--no, Ben, now don't. I'm afeard----'
+
+"'I'll give you all of it!'
+
+"Tom gave up the brush with reluctance in his face, but alacrity in his
+heart. And while the late Steamer Big Missouri worked and sweated in the
+sun, the retired artist sat on a barrel in the shade close by, dangled
+his legs, munched his apple, and planned the slaughter of more
+innocents. There was no lack of material; boys happened along every
+little while; they came to jeer, but remained to whitewash. By the time
+Ben was fagged out, Tom had traded the next chance to Billy Fisher for a
+kite, in good repair; and when he played out, Johnny Miller bought in
+for a dead rat and a string to swing it with--and so on, and so on, hour
+after hour. And when the middle of the afternoon came, from being a poor
+poverty-stricken boy in the morning, Tom was literally rolling in
+wealth. He had, besides the things before mentioned, twelve marbles,
+part of a jew's-harp, a piece of blue bottle glass to look through, a
+spool cannon, a key that wouldn't unlock anything, a fragment of chalk,
+a glass stopper of a decanter, a tin soldier, a couple of tadpoles, six
+firecrackers, a kitten with only one eye, a brass doorknob, a dog
+collar--but no dog--the handle of a knife, four pieces of orange peel
+and a dilapidated old window sash.
+
+"He had a nice, good, idle time all the while--plenty of company--and
+the fence had three coats of whitewash on it! If he hadn't run out of
+whitewash, he would have bankrupted every boy in the village."
+
+Mark Twain didn't have the worker on the modern assembly line in
+mind--nor the stenographer tapping her typewriter--but he _did_ see that
+THE WORK MEN CAN DO BEST IS THE WORK THAT IS MADE ATTRACTIVE TO
+THEM--either through the money in it or the sheer success in doing it.
+Find out what's wanted to make your work attractive, then find out what
+you can give that will meet those wants. Then you get not only good
+work, but loyalty in it and enthusiasm for it.
+
+But you can't fool your "help"--at least not for long. If you play upon
+the desire for responsibility, you must give it up to capacity. If it is
+promotion you hold out as a reward, you must give it when it is
+deserved. If you play upon the desire for good pay, you must give it as
+far as the job will allow.
+
+And the nearer you come to giving all you can afford for the service
+received, in as nearly as possible the form that is wanted, whether in
+courtesy or in coin, in reasonable hours or in rapid advancement, in
+self-respect or in reciprocal service, THE MORE COOPERATION YOU MAY
+EXPECT.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+Safeguarding the Business
+
+
+Now for the last lap. Our journey has run four-fifths of its course. We
+have passed through the successive stages of analysis, planning,
+organization and handling the "help." They have all been child's play
+compared with the most important part of the manager's work--the task of
+GUARDING THE WELFARE OF A BUSINESS OR A JOB. All other managerial cares
+fade into insignificance before the necessity of conserving the general
+good of the business.
+
+A business rises. A business falls. Its life must be protected. And, as
+has been said so often, "the bigger they are, the harder they fall."
+
+A certain concern in New York State had been enjoying prosperity for lo!
+these many years. Established 'way back in the "Roaring Forties," it
+had passed through three generations of the same family.
+
+Each morning at nine the president was at his desk opening the mail into
+three piles--taking great care that no checks fell into the waste
+basket--as might easily have happened had the task been delegated to the
+office manager or to his assistant.
+
+It was unfortunate, of course, that no orders reached the stockroom
+until ten o'clock. But a president must earn his salt. Besides, is there
+a better way to keep one's finger on the pulse of the business than to
+know what's in the mail?
+
+Let's take a look at those three piles, though. Here is the daily
+"take"--a fat pile of checks--with the big one from San Francisco laid
+carefully aside so that it can be admired a couple of extra times before
+being placed on the top of the heap.
+
+Reverently the president carries the receipts to his head bookkeeper.
+With slow and majestic tread, almost.
+
+And over here are the orders.
+
+It's a fat pile, too.
+
+The president casts one last lingering glance at the 1/2 doz. of
+something or other ordered by a famous name--and, secure in the
+knowledge that Fifth Avenue shoppers are still clamoring for his
+product, hands the sheaf to his office manager who has been pretty
+fidgety for the past hour and a half because he knows the stock
+department is going to have a heck of a time making the afternoon
+express.
+
+Ho, hum! It's a busy life, this being the president of a successful
+concern doing over a million a year. Why, when grandfather started in,
+he didn't have a----
+
+But that's another story, and there's that third pile.
+
+A slim little pile scarcely demanding a president's attention--or a
+sales manager's. A few complaints. A retailer out in Butte. That San
+Antonio jobber Winchester had such a hard time landing. What's this?
+Didn't get the buttons he ordered? Stuff and nonsense--well, Henry will
+write nice, consoling letters and those will be those.
+
+Now Henry is a good kid. Just out of school. Learning the business.
+Writes a bang-up letter.
+
+But the San Antonio jobber doesn't want nice, consoling letters. He
+wants to know how come his pants came without the special buttons he
+ordered. And those special buttons are so important in his life that he
+has written to the head of the firm--whom he'd met at the Atlantic City
+convention--and he expects the head of the firm to tell him what he
+wants to know.
+
+"Come, come," the president would have said to him, had he walked into
+the inner sanctum, "you know I can't give my time to such petty
+details--I've got department heads who attend to such matters. When you
+want an extra thirty days--or want to talk over handling our goods
+exclusively in the Southwest--why, those are the things for you and me
+to spend our time on."
+
+But the San Antonio jobber, had he been there, and had he been asked,
+would have rejoined:
+
+"I, too, have my department heads. I, too, leave many of the trivial
+details to them. But if a customer came to me with a complaint, I
+wouldn't care a rap what it was about. It wouldn't be that particular
+complaint which would interest me. It would be the mere fact that he had
+a complaint at all. A dissatisfied customer is a dissatisfied customer,
+and there isn't anything in my business that would get quicker and more
+personal attention from me."
+
+Well, well, businesses come and businesses go. Our imaginary
+conversation will never take place between the president and the San
+Antonio jobber. The San Antonio jobber took his business elsewhere some
+five years ago. The president still comes in at nine and opens the mail.
+He never drops a check in the wastebasket. There are still three piles
+in front of him. Three slim piles. Even the pile of complaints is slim.
+There isn't enough business left to produce many complaints.
+
+Henry? Oh, he got to writing letters to an heiress who was wintering on
+the Riviera. And when her daddy died, he wrote such a nice, consoling
+letter----
+
+But we wander far afield. We're out in the rough somewhere, and it's
+going to take a real recovery to get us back on the fairway if we don't
+watch out.
+
+For one thing and for instance: _Is_ the customer always right?
+
+A one-time shoe salesman reports the following incident in a Chicago
+department store. He was talking with the head buyer in the middle of
+the sales floor when up marched a thoroughly angry woman with the shoe
+adjuster tagging on behind.
+
+"These shoes," she pointed to a pair of satin pumps in the adjuster's
+hands, "are too small."
+
+"And she wants a new pair after having worn them half a dozen times,"
+added the adjuster.
+
+"Who sold them?" asked the buyer.
+
+"Jones."
+
+"Go get him."
+
+Came Jones. "But, madam," he protested, "don't you remember I warned you
+that you needed a 5-1/2? And don't you remember that I also suggested an
+A instead of a double A? And when you felt certain you wanted the 5AA,
+didn't I suggest that you try them again at home before having the
+cut-steel buckles sewn on?"
+
+Well, yes, that was all quite true. But it didn't offset the fact that
+the shoes were too small and she couldn't wear them.
+
+Two guesses as to what she got. And if each guess is a satin pump you
+may step quickly and quietly to the head of the class. She got a new
+pair of shoes.
+
+"Well," sighed the buyer, when peace and quiet had been once more
+restored, "they tell me upstairs the customer is always right. Certainly
+it's true that one dissatisfied woman has more effect on our business
+than four or five satisfied customers. Oh, no, she won't go and tell
+her friends about the fair treatment she got here, but oh, man, if we'd
+let her get away! What a story that would have been--in spite of
+admitting she was wrong!"
+
+Innumerable examples of that sort of thing might be introduced. There is
+the story of the North Shore matron who had an expensive rug sent out,
+kept it three months and then decided she didn't like the color. In its
+place she wanted a certain oriental, but oh, dear, it was just a bit too
+big for her purpose.
+
+Of course the rug was cut to fit. And when she decided a week later that
+it, too, wouldn't do and went and bought another rug somewhere else, the
+management thanked her kindly and credited her account with the full
+amount. It knew that the life of the business had to be protected, and
+every now and then found it distinctly worth while to take time out to
+LOOK AFTER THE WELFARE OF THE ENTERPRISE.
+
+And here we face another question: "Must the manager occupy his time
+with every minor complaint, just because it happens to be one which
+comes from a good customer?"
+
+To answer it, we must go back to our New York State manufacturer and
+strip the scenery from his particular enterprise.
+
+His is a business of few customers. Except for a half-dozen famous
+retailers whose accounts cost more than they earn, but to whose stores
+he may point the finger of gesticulating pride as being among his
+outlets (it would be better for him if they were among his souvenirs),
+his business is handled through thirty or forty jobbers. Naturally each
+of his customers is a very important unit in the business.
+
+The loss of one account is serious.
+
+So a customer to him is an outlet for business greater than the trade a
+big department store gets from a hundred good customers. One customer to
+him is as a score of customers to the manufacturer who sells to the
+retail trade.
+
+To him, then, a complaint from a San Antonio jobber that the buttons on
+his pants aren't right has all the importance that the same complaint,
+echoed by a hundred different customers, would have to the retail
+merchant. Looked at in this light, is it not logical that any
+complaint--no matter how trifling its nature--should have his prompt,
+personal attention? Had he but known it, the letters he turned over to
+Henry were danger signals. They warned of the need for GUARDING THE
+WELFARE OF THE BUSINESS--LOOKING AFTER ITS GENERAL GOOD HEALTH.
+
+And that task, as we have said, overshadows in importance every other
+task which the successful manager, in his daily business of managing,
+may have to perform.
+
+The maintenance foreman in a New England mill walked into the agent's
+office one day--why the manager of a mill is called an agent is just
+one of those things--and said:
+
+"Something's got to be done about that freight elevator over in Building
+C, Mr. Dearle. I've monkeyed with it and monkeyed with it. It's just
+worn out, and one of these fine days, it's going to drop a couple of
+floors and pile up in the basement."
+
+And one fine day it did. You see, the manager was all tied up in a labor
+controversy. Labor squabbles aren't any fun. And presumably their speedy
+settlement is far more important to the business than the matter of what
+to do about a tired freight elevator which has seen far better days.
+
+So Frank the maintenance man had to run along and sell his papers. And
+the elevator kept on working.
+
+The day it quit, Henry Fitts was aboard. And when the elevator man
+picked himself up off the cellar floor, Henry couldn't.
+
+But why go into that? Henry's broken leg and Henry's lost time cost the
+company more than a new elevator. And Henry was one of the company's
+best technical men. Lots of bum sheets and pillow cases got made and
+shipped and returned while Henry was laid up. The damage done by that
+falling elevator could hardly be measured in dollars.
+
+Now, then, settling the differences of capital and labor was a big job
+to the mill agent. Saying "No" to Frank was merely postponing a trifling
+detail. Yet what a heap of difference a "Yes" would have made. That
+defective elevator, because it endangered lives, overshadowed all else
+in importance, had the agent viewed his job from the standpoint of
+CARING FOR THE BUSINESS. THE KNACK OF SAFEGUARDING ITS WELFARE lies not
+merely in doing tasks that preserve the safety of the business or job,
+but also in the ability to discern when such tasks are really mere
+trifles, and when, because of their potential effect, they are details
+vital to the life of the business.
+
+How is a manager to know when he shall devote his entire attention to
+settling wage rates, and when listen to the maintenance man's song? How
+can the president of a million-dollar concern tell when it is good
+business to drop a tremendously important managerial task and listen to
+a customer's tale of woe about pants buttons--and personally set the
+complaint right?
+
+How, on the other hand, are you to know when to lay off such tasks?
+
+Some few men--seventh sons of seventh sons--may be born with that
+instinct or knowledge. The rest of us must cultivate a true knack of
+conserving the business--a knack which carries with it the finest sense
+of discrimination and the best of business judgment.
+
+And not until we have acquired this important knack and added to it all
+the other knacks we've been talking about, can we consider ourselves
+successful managers. Not until then shall we have acquired THE TRUE
+KNACK OF MANAGING.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I've learned how to pick out the tasks that are vital to the business
+and make them my own special responsibilities," a successful newspaper
+publisher once said, "by setting up a sort of yardstick to judge every
+job that comes along.
+
+"My paper was in the 'red' when I bought it. It was a weak sister. It
+carried the least advertising, had the least circulation and exercised
+the least influence. Today its lineage is nearly one-third more than its
+nearest competitor's--and circulation has more than doubled in four
+years, so now it tops all the rest.
+
+"I analyzed my job something like this: I bought the paper because I
+thought I could make money with it. To make money, I must carry a large
+volume of advertising. To get advertising, I must show results to
+advertisers. To show results, I must make my paper a real "home"
+paper--a paper really read and appreciated--not merely a paper with
+which people are only satisfied. To get that kind of circulation, I must
+put into the paper what people who read a paper at home wouldn't 'miss
+for anything.'
+
+"What did this analysis show me? Simply this: That while more
+advertising and more circulation meant more profits, the attitude of
+_my_ readers toward _their_ paper meant even more--it meant business
+life or death.
+
+"So my yardstick is never to let anything get by me that might change
+our standing with our readers. The toughest business problem is shoved
+aside when something comes up that means loss of respect among our
+public.
+
+"I made it my first business to get to know our type of reader. Never
+was a good hand at guessing. So had to learn about human nature.
+
+"After a lot of hiring and firing, picking and sorting, coaching and
+drilling, I got me four women who could go out and get exactly the kind
+of information I had to have.
+
+"Each of the four took a section of the city. Each section represented a
+distinct type of home-dweller--and it takes all kinds of people to run a
+world, you know--or to buy a newspaper.
+
+"Every week those four women canvassed close to a thousand homes between
+them. Their method was to tell the housewife that we were going to
+deliver our paper free for a week--and hoped they'd take it in and read
+it. A week later they went back over the same ground, soliciting
+subscriptions, of course, but also gathering information for me.
+
+"More important than getting a subscription was finding out why a woman
+subscribed--or why she wouldn't subscribe. They asked what the women
+thought about certain special features.
+
+"I got a lot of good pointers. For instance, I'd been a bitter opponent
+of the 'funnies.' But I put them back when I learned that people really
+wanted them. You see, I was getting a good cross section of the likes
+and dislikes of all my customers and my prospects.
+
+"After the 'funnies' were in--and after various other changes had been
+made--I sent my four scouts back once more to tell of the improvements.
+Then we checked the new reports with the old ones. There was plenty of
+deadwood. I knew there would be. But there was enough good live stuff to
+furnish food for thought.
+
+"Some needed changes couldn't be made right away. Many people preferred
+a competing paper because it carried more department store ads. Well, I
+couldn't do anything about that for the moment. But I could and did
+improve the sports page, put in more home-stuff for the women, more
+society news, funnier 'funnies' and so on. Those were things our readers
+wanted which I could gradually give them.
+
+"Then it was time to tackle the advertising problem. I had my
+ammunition. Carried a bunch of reports around with me. Told the
+merchants frankly what I was up to. Showed them the reports from women
+who said they'd subscribe if we had more advertising as well as the
+reports from those who did subscribe for certain good reasons.
+
+"And I quoted a rate on what we were worth at the time, not on what I
+knew we could do in the future. I didn't begrudge a full day spent in
+one small store, if that small store advertised the stuff I felt was
+wanted by the people I wanted for readers.
+
+"Well, they came 'round one by one--the stores and the people. And I
+think the results prove that I was keeping busy on the right tasks--the
+tasks on which the welfare of my business depends--and not on the tasks
+that mean only increased _volume_.
+
+"How does it affect my readers? That is my yardstick for measuring
+everything about my business. That is my guide to whether or not I
+should worry. If a little error in last night's paper has the power to
+affect my readers' opinion of the paper, then it's my job to run it down
+to earth, find out how it happened--and see that it never happens again.
+But if there's a big advertising contract in the offing which won't
+affect the permanent standing of the paper in any way whatsoever--except
+to increase the number of dollars that come clinking into the coffers--I
+don't give thirty seconds of my time to it. I hire a sales manager to do
+that. That's his job. The other's mine.
+
+"I'll spend a week with my managing editor trying to figure out a way to
+get our afternoon editions on the street a few minutes earlier. It may
+involve some minor change in the pressroom running into only a few
+hundred dollars--but it does affect our permanent place in the sun. On
+the other hand, the managing editor can go ahead and spend $5000 of my
+good money on something that has nothing to do with our readers'
+interest, and all I'll do is okay the expenditure. He'll do the worrying
+this time."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You and I aren't interested in the way this publisher went about
+building up his newspaper. That is to say, we don't care anything about
+his female quartette who went around and sang the paper's praises. His
+methods were sound, of course, and merit attention. But our interest
+right now is in his division between the tasks he watched personally and
+the tasks he left his business manager or his managing editor to work
+out for themselves.
+
+Strip off the publishing scenery--just as a moment ago we stripped off
+the individual characteristics of a totally different business--and you
+find that HIS DIVISION IS APPLICABLE NOT ONLY TO ANY BUSINESS, BUT TO
+ANY SINGLE JOB. Which means once more that that's the way the successful
+manager of a steel mill or of a peanut stand will divide the tasks
+which confront him from nine to five every day.
+
+Who are your "readers"?
+
+Every business, every job has its "readers"--some element which, once
+injured or neglected, affects the welfare, the health, the profits, or
+the ultimate success of the business or job.
+
+A file clerk may acquire tremendous speed in putting letters away in
+drawers, but if she can't get you the correspondence you need at a
+moment's notice, what good is all her speed? Your stenographer may keep
+up with you in your best and fastest moments of dictation, but if her
+finished letters don't say what you said, her facility isn't worth the
+proverbial thin dime. An accountant may work out a cost system that
+reflects conditions like a mirror, but what of it if his reports come
+out so late that they're ancient history by the time the plant manager
+gets them? A miller may produce a flour that contains more vitamins than
+any other flour on the market, but if the dough won't rise properly, it
+isn't much use. A small-town banker may have splendid reserves and a
+strong cash position, but he's going to lose your business if he asks
+6-1/2 per cent interest and 3 per cent commission to extend your
+mortgage when the big-city bank offers you the same loan at 6 per cent
+interest and 2-1/2 per cent commission. That messenger boy of ours--no
+chapter is complete without him--may run all the way from the Tribune
+Tower to State and Madison, but what if in his haste he loses the
+message?
+
+There is, then, in every business or job a VITAL ELEMENT. And no one can
+do a good job of managing unless he finds out definitely what that
+element is, and then proceeds to guard it through all the hustle and
+bustle of cost cutting, labor saving and so on.
+
+One manager put it pretty plainly to his billing clerk. The latter tried
+out some short cuts. They were splendid from the billers' point of
+view. Saved time and money. But the customers weren't used to any of
+this new-fangled stuff and kicked like steers. They couldn't check the
+invoices. Or wouldn't.
+
+"They just won't use their heads. It's all as simple as ABC," protested
+the billing clerk when the manager called him in on the carpet. "All
+they've got to do is check the numbers on the cartons against the
+numbers on the invoices. There's no need of all the description we've
+been giving them."
+
+"Right you are, Johnson," replied the manager. "But sometimes you bump
+up against a stone wall when you try to educate the trade. Oftentimes
+life's too short. Your system saves us money. It's good up to a certain
+point. That point is where your labor saving and cost cutting begin to
+have an adverse effect on sales or sales satisfaction.
+
+"I've seen you playing bridge at noon," he went on. "You score honors
+above the line, don't you? Below the line you keep your game score. If
+you hold 80 or 90 honors in your hand, it affects your play. But you
+can't give your entire attention to scoring above the line, for after
+all it's the score below which determines who wins games and rubbers.
+
+"You can score your job in pretty much the same way. All this work
+you're doing along cost-cutting lines is fine. Those things determine
+the size of your department's profits. Sketch them out on a card and
+check them over and add to them. But below the line put down the main
+object of your work--to have your invoices correct and to have them so
+plain that no customer can fail to understand them. Keep plugging away
+above the line. Don't let me discourage any effort that will reduce
+costs. They're all-important. But at the same time keep your eye below
+the line and make sure your game score is piling up. That sort of
+thinking and playing wins in business just as it does in bridge."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It's a long time since we've drawn any charts. Let's study the newspaper
+publisher's policy and see if he wasn't doing mentally just what the
+manager recommended that his billing clerk do on paper.
+
+You remember he made it his business to find out all about the error in
+last night's paper and to prevent its occurring again. That was
+something which, to his way of thinking, affected the permanent standing
+of his paper. When the department store stood ready to start a big
+institutional campaign which meant nothing more to his business than a
+big increase in volume, he left the job of closing the contract to his
+hired help. But when, in another newspaper, the same department store
+advertised a new type of radio which he thought his readers ought to
+know about, once more he made it his own business to go out and get a
+few lines for his own paper and his own readers.
+
+Then, if we keep tally--and consider whether they "score" above the line
+as increased profits, or below the line as permanent success, our card
+will look something like the chart on this page.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The handling of the error in last night's paper is something that will
+score down where the success of the business lies--and to lose on it
+means losing a vital point. In short, it affects the permanent standing
+of the business enterprise. So does the securing of the radio
+advertisement. It's business news and something his readers must know
+about. So after it he goes. On the other hand, the institutional
+advertising will add only to the revenue of the newspaper. Don't mistake
+the point. He wants that contract, too. It will add materially to his
+profits. But getting it or not getting it will in no way affect the
+standing of the paper with its customers. School will keep just the
+same. So that particular job is on the other side of the line. That's
+why he has a sales manager.
+
+To illustrate once more, let's attempt to "score" the work of a credit
+man. What is the "vital element" in his work? What determines whether
+his work is worth doing, or whether it's worthless? Offhand, you might
+say: "Preventing losses on bad debts." But is it that? Surely not, when
+we analyze the job. The final objective of the credit department is to
+enable the house to sell more goods by extending credit wherever it is
+justified. On that basis it is easy to see that the "vital element" in
+the credit man's job is "to not lose a good sale"--and we know we're
+splitting an infinitive to say it. If it weren't, why have a credit man
+at all? It would be far simpler not to extend credit to anyone who could
+not prove his worth.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Now look at the credit man's score card. Such a chart might not help an
+old, experienced hand, but would it not help a beginner to get a grip
+on what his job is all about? Would it not enable him to see his job
+from the angle of CONSERVING THE BUSINESS?
+
+Hold on, though. Lining up the various jobs according to whether they
+score "above or below the line"--that is, whether they affect the
+essential well-being of the business or simply swell its profit--does
+not mean that he shall neglect all tasks above the line any more than
+give his constant attention to those that score below the line. The
+chief value of such an outline of your job or business is to KEEP
+ACTIVELY IN MIND A SENSE OF THE VITAL SPOTS TO GUARD--the spots to keep
+an eye on--the tasks for which you are always ready to plunge in and
+defend, once they are threatened.
+
+Wherever you find a successful manager, whether running a big business
+or just handling a small job, you will see that he has a clear
+understanding of the elements that mean the life of his work. And
+further observation will show that he is always protecting them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The head miller in a small flour mill was smart and aggressive--a bit on
+the "go-getter" order, to be sure, but very, very competent none the
+less. It seems he had worked out some method of increasing the nutritive
+value of the mill's best grade of flour by adding something or other--it
+doesn't matter what.
+
+Naturally he was enthusiastic.
+
+Why not? He had persuaded the manager to have this new product analyzed
+by experts--and the analyses had proved extremely favorable.
+
+He wanted to go ahead.
+
+But the manager moved slowly. "It may make a good flour and the bread
+made from it may be good for the digestion," said he, "but will the
+bread taste as good?"
+
+Finally, after trying out the flour in his own home, he refused to go
+ahead with the project. The miller, knowing how good the bread would be
+for people, fired up his job, went into business for himself and put his
+trick flour on the market.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+It never sold.
+
+The bread baked from it didn't taste good.
+
+The mill owner, you see, had kept his eye on what the miller had
+neglected--the big, vital element of the business--that people bought
+flour to make bread, and that anything affecting the quality and taste
+of the bread must therefore be handled very carefully.
+
+What the miller needed, to take the place of the boss's years of
+experience, was a chart like the one on the opposite page--a graphic
+outline in skeleton form of his work's vital element.
+
+What a different aspect could be put on many an employee's work if the
+employer, instead of depending on the man's own-farsightedness in seeing
+the main items of value in his work, would graphically put them before
+him by some such chart as this one!
+
+Right here, however, we must guard against one important characteristic
+of this vital element.
+
+It CHANGES--or at least it _may_ change as the business develops.
+
+Ask the manager of the circularizing department of a certain mail-order
+house. He will tell you it's VOLUME. All his other problems have been
+stabilized except the single job of getting out enough circulars every
+day to keep the required volume of orders flowing in. Again, go to the
+circularizing room of an Eastern financial house and the manager will
+tell you that the vital element in his work is QUALITY--quality
+addressing, quality folding and so on. Here the whole success of the
+department depends upon reflecting the dignity and prestige of the
+house. The danger point with this manager is therefore touched by
+anything that might affect the quality of the work.
+
+Many a manufacturer starts with limited capital. For the first year or
+two the vital element in his business is finance. He may have to
+sacrifice attention to production and sales problems in order to guard
+the slender balance in the bank. Sometimes he may have to pay higher
+prices for materials because he must buy in small quantities; he may
+even have to check sales because he hasn't the capital with which to
+finance them. Later, though, as a reserve is built up, or when better
+credit is established, he will find the vital element has shifted to
+manufacturing, buying, or maybe sales.
+
+A certain shoe manufacturer--we seem to gravitate toward shoes every so
+often--found manufacturing the vital element of his business a scant
+dozen years ago. His big job was to see that shoes went out the door. He
+doubled the size of his plant. In the short space of three years his
+problem had shifted to one of sales--he was no longer getting enough
+volume to fill his plants. And today his greatest concern is his
+shrinking bank balance.
+
+The same tendency toward change will be found in individual jobs.
+
+The traffic manager of an electrical supply house deposes that the vital
+element in his department's work changed completely in less than two
+years.
+
+"When I first came here," he declares, "the business had grown faster
+than our manufacturing facilities. We were always working close up to
+the contract date for delivery. I was hired simply because I had a
+reputation for being able to speed up shipping, pick the shortest routes
+and rush things through at the last minute.
+
+"Later on, we got in better shape in the factory. The goods began to
+come through to us further in advance of the promised delivery dates. I
+noticed this and changed my methods. Where I had previously watched
+after speed alone, slapping things into any old case to get them packed,
+hustling them out by any route which would save a day, regardless of
+rates, I now began to pack more carefully, to sort mixed shipments in
+order to get the lowest classification in freight rates, to pick the
+cheapest routes, and so on.
+
+"One day the chief called me in and gave me a raise.
+
+"'Warren,' said he, 'I thought I'd have to fire you when we got past the
+rush stage. I had you down as just a speed demon. But you have been
+wise enough to change your methods as conditions changed. And I want you
+to know we appreciate it.'"
+
+A similar shift is noted by the managing editor of a well-known business
+paper.
+
+"When I took hold five years ago, it was a constant fight against time.
+We never had quite enough material on hand. There was always a mad
+scramble at the last moment to put the book to bed. Night after night I
+stuck around writing fillers--a column here, half a column there.
+
+"Today it's quite a different story. We have a carefully selected
+inventory from which we make up our schedules at least 60 days ahead of
+publication. We have figured out close production dates--and we stick to
+'em. There's no longer the problem of digging up enough eleventh-hour
+material to get out an issue. The job is one of selection. My biggest
+care is to find room for all the things I know our readers are
+interested in."
+
+A constant check is the safest way to note in time the conditions that
+govern the conservation of the welfare of your job or business. Check
+the POINTS ABOVE THE LINE and watch the POINTS BELOW THE LINE.
+
+That constant effort to measure the importance of all the things that
+come up before him by their effects above and below THE DANGER LINE will
+do much to keep a manager practical. For summed up, the "practical" man
+is the one who combines with his progressiveness and vision the knack of
+never letting his progressive ideas puncture the vital element of his
+business and bleed it to death.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Make your score in any form that fits your needs or your tastes, but
+MAKE IT--WATCH IT--ACT ON IT. Some men can do the scoring in their
+heads. Most of us, even in so simple a procedure as keeping our golf
+scores, find it's better to carry it on paper.
+
+On paper? Can a man with real work to do, spend his time plotting curves
+and making pie charts? Does the Knack of Managing depend upon a man's
+ability to draw pictures?
+
+Not at all. If that's the impression you have gained from reading this
+little book, go back to the beginning and start all over again.
+
+If, from time to time, charts and diagrams have been suggested, it is
+only because the successful manager has somehow or other to go through
+precisely those same motions. His job--if he is to understand it and
+manage it successfully--must be analyzed somehow, sometime. We have
+merely suggested ways in which the ANALYSIS can be made more easily and
+intelligently by means of charts.
+
+His operations must be planned--in his head or on paper--if he is to
+perform them with the least lost motion, lost time and lost money. The
+Knack of Managing has simply gathered from other men's methods a form
+of chart by which PLANNING can be done more accurately.
+
+Again, his work must be organized--if it is to be done in the simplest
+and best way. An attempt, then, has been made to sift the organization
+methods of successful managers and firms to develop a chart which at
+least indicates how to go about ORGANIZING THE WORK.
+
+"HELP" MUST BE HANDLED. So, from the experiences of shrewd managers, we
+have dug out the gist of their ideas and put it in the form of a chart
+that gives a basis on which to work.
+
+Above all, a business or job must be CONSERVED AND CARED FOR. The
+charting method suggested is but the method used by every successful
+manager--though he does not take the time to reduce his plans to paper.
+
+And last, in our search to acquire THE KNACK OF MANAGING, have we not
+learned that the fundamental principles of management are universally
+applicable?
+
+More than anything else we have seen why the manager who has made a
+success in one business can step right into another and make the same
+brilliant record. His business, after all, is not ships or shoes or
+sewing machines. It's MANAGING. And that job, in its fundamental
+principles, is the same, whether it's running the U. S. Steel
+Corporation or operating a peanut stand.
+
+That's our story--and we'll stick to it.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KNACK OF MANAGING***
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+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Knack of Managing, by Lewis K. Urquhart
+and Herbert Watson</h1>
+<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a
+href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></p>
+<p>Title: The Knack of Managing</p>
+<p>Author: Lewis K. Urquhart and Herbert Watson</p>
+<p>Release Date: May 22, 2012 [eBook #39761]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KNACK OF MANAGING***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland<br />
+ and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h1><small>THE</small><br />
+KNACK OF<br />
+MANAGING</h1>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h3><small>BY</small><br />
+LEWIS K. URQUHART<br />
+<small>AND</small><br />
+HERBERT WATSON</h3>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center">Published by<br />
+FACTORY MANAGEMENT AND MAINTENANCE<br />
+330 West 42nd Street<br />
+New York City, N. Y.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 448px;">
+<img src="images/illus002.jpg" width="448" height="168" alt="A McGRAW-HILL PUBLICATION" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="center">330 West 42nd Street<br />
+New York City, N. Y.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+<h2>I</h2>
+
+<h2>Analysis</h2>
+
+
+<p>Someone once said&mdash;probably it was
+Mr. Schwab&mdash;that given the right organization
+it was no harder to manage the
+U. S. Steel Corporation than to operate a
+peanut stand.</p>
+
+<p>And Mr. Schwab ought to know, although
+no life-sized portrait of him all dressed up
+like a peanut vendor has ever been brought
+to our attention.</p>
+
+<p>However that may be, his statement is
+interesting&mdash;especially interesting because
+his appraisal of the job of managing very
+nearly approaches ours. In "The Knack of
+Managing," you see, much of the emphasis
+will be on the fact that the fundamental
+PRINCIPLES OF MANAGEMENT apply
+to every business alike. And if we may
+start out with the premise that managing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
+Mr. Schwab's Bethlehem Steel Company
+is not such a far cry from operating a
+pretzel plant or a furniture factory, our
+battle is already half won.</p>
+
+<p>THE PRINCIPLES OF MANAGEMENT
+vary not at all, however different
+may be the MECHANICS OF APPLICATION.</p>
+
+<p>How often the editor, how often the
+equipment salesman, listens to that time-worn
+tale of woe: "My business is different.
+So-and-so can do that sort of thing. But
+I make gadgets&mdash;and your conveyors, your
+air conditioners or whatever it is you write
+about or sell, won't do me a bit of good."</p>
+
+<p><i>Of course</i> his business is different&mdash;different
+in its individual characteristics, its
+financial, sales, production, labor problems.
+But they are only the CLOTHES the business
+wears. They may differ from the
+clothes of another enterprise as widely as
+the frilly importation from the Rue de la
+Paix differs from the sleazy issue of the
+East Side sweat shop. But underneath the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
+clothes the artist knows there is the human
+body&mdash;and a study of anatomy is necessary
+before he can paint the picture. Beneath
+the "clothes" of the business are the principles
+of management&mdash;The ANATOMY
+OF MANAGEMENT&mdash;the framework
+upon which the completed structure is built.</p>
+
+<p>Doesn't it all boil down to something like
+the Colonel's lady and Judy O'Grady?
+One, presumably, wore a brief peignoir with
+a Paris label; the other, a substantial
+bungalow apron from a department store
+basement. But weren't they "sisters under
+the skin"?</p>
+
+<p>Stripped of all the furbelows&mdash;the details
+of operation, of tools, of materials&mdash;the
+objectives of our steel master, our
+peanut vendor, our pretzel maker, our furniture
+manufacturer, are one and the same
+thing. Their every-day job, in short, is to
+<i>get something well done with maximum dispatch
+and at minimum expense</i>.</p>
+
+<p>That's management's job. It goes for
+every type of enterprise; whether it in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>volves
+the use of a million dollars' capital,
+or only ten cents' carfare&mdash;or a few minutes
+of a man's time. The "clothes" matter not
+at all. Beneath them the fundamental
+steps in managing are identical. The basic
+KNACK OF MANAGING is the same.</p>
+
+<p>Consider one of the simplest forms of
+business enterprise&mdash;the delivery of a message.
+The errand boy&mdash;if he's worth his
+salt and is really <i>managing</i> his job&mdash;does in
+principle exactly what the general manager
+of the glass plant, the automobile factory,
+the textile mill, does when he comes face to
+face with <i>his</i> problems. <i>In principle</i>, mind
+you.</p>
+
+<p>FIRST&mdash;this is the errand boy managing
+his job&mdash;he settles in his mind exactly
+where he has to go. Not just over to Federal
+Street&mdash;but to 63 Federal. In a word,
+he ANALYZES THE BUSINESS or the
+job to be done. ANALYSIS, then, is the
+first step.</p>
+
+<p>SECOND&mdash;he figures out the shortest,
+most economical way to go there. In other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
+words, he PLANS THE DOING OF THE
+JOB for the least expenditure. PLANNING
+is the second step.</p>
+
+<p>THIRD&mdash;shall he walk or shall he ride?
+Shall he do the work himself? Or shall
+he hire someone else to do it for him? His
+third step, you see, is ORGANIZATION.
+He organizes the handling of his work.
+The "right organization," said Mr.
+Schwab&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>FOURTH&mdash;he must get service. There
+are other errand boys. There are elevator
+men, office boys to meet and get along with
+if he is to execute his errand with the greatest
+dispatch. Now, you see, he's HANDLING
+THE HELP. The manager of the
+piano plant, the agent of the cotton mill,
+would call that phase of his job INDUSTRIAL
+RELATIONS.</p>
+
+<p>FIFTH&mdash;All the time he's planning, going
+and doing, he never loses sight of the
+final object of his errand. He never forgets
+he has a message, perhaps a bunch of
+securities, to deliver. He keeps his eye on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+the parcel he's carrying. He gets a receipt
+before he lets go of it. In other words, he
+SUPERVISES AND CARES for his business.
+The manager of the shoe shop, of
+the furniture factory, never forgets the final
+objective. After all, it's PROFIT.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 320px;">
+<img src="images/illus008.jpg" width="320" height="640" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Now look at the chart. It pictures THE
+ANATOMY OF MANAGEMENT. The
+Chinese say a picture is worth ten thousand
+words. And it would take a heap of writing
+to tell the story more completely, more
+simply than this picture.</p>
+
+<p>Try hanging the "clothes" of your machine
+shop, your woodworking plant, your
+paper mill, on it. THEY FIT, don't they?</p>
+
+<p>True, the chart is drawn from one of the
+most primitive tasks of management&mdash;the
+simple delivery of a message. But suppose
+the boy doesn't deliver the message himself,
+but has an assistant. Won't it be necessary
+to go through exactly the same
+motions? Suppose, instead of one message,
+there are <i>fifty</i>. Fifty assistants will be nec<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>essary.
+Will the job of managing vary a
+jot&mdash;or even a tittle?</p>
+
+<p>Now substitute fifty <i>boxes</i> for fifty <i>messages</i>.
+The boxes have to be shipped. The
+same processes of thought, the same principles
+of management, apply.</p>
+
+<p>If, instead of fifty boxes to be <i>shipped</i>,
+fifty machines are to be <i>manufactured</i>&mdash;or
+if instead of fifty machines it's fifty
+thousand, and a thousand men and a million
+dollars of capital are to be employed,
+every one of the five principles shown on
+the chart will be used. And every essential
+point in the management of the <i>business</i>
+could be covered by those five fundamentals.</p>
+
+<p>Now substitute ships or shoes or breakfast
+food for the machines we have been
+talking about, and it becomes clearer than
+ever that this BUSINESS OF MANAGING
+recognizes no industrial fences.
+Learn to manage a peanut stand and, in
+principle, you are well on the road to know<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>ing
+how to handle the affairs of the U. S.
+Steel Corporation.</p>
+
+<p>Five steps there are: (1) Analyze; (2)
+Plan; (3) Organize; (4) Handle; (5) Supervise.
+Tackle any job on this basis and
+follow through. The chances that success
+will crown your efforts far outweigh the
+possibilities of failure. At least, approaching
+a job from these five successive angles
+should limit the causes of failure to circumstances
+quite beyond your control.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>FIVE PRINCIPLES OF MANAGEMENT,
+then. Their skillful application
+to a business or to a job is the KNACK OF
+MANAGING.</p>
+
+<p>To do a real bang-up job of managing,
+whether carrying a message or directing a
+million-dollar business, the first step is:
+<i>Don't make a single move until you've
+found out exactly what needs to be done.</i></p>
+
+<p>But our first Do turned out to be a
+Don't. So let's restate it. <i>Find out ex<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>actly
+what has to be done before you make
+a single move.</i></p>
+
+<p>You've heard that before? And it
+doesn't mean a thing?</p>
+
+<p>Neither did it mean a thing to a bright
+young man who was taken on as production
+manager in a shoe factory. The shoes
+were good. Prices were right. Business
+was booming. The factory was full of
+orders.</p>
+
+<p>But somehow or other shoes weren't getting
+shipped on time&mdash;or anything like on
+time. Three to four weeks late came to be
+the customary thing. And customers were,
+needless to say, kicking like steers.</p>
+
+<p>So the bright young man was taken on
+to get things ironed out.</p>
+
+<p>He pitched in with vim and vigor.</p>
+
+<p>The first morning's mail brought a dozen
+complaints of slow deliveries. People were
+practically barefoot out in Kansas and
+Ohio. They were waiting for those shoes.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha!" said the new production manager,
+"<i>Nous verrons.</i>" Which means, even in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+English, "Now, for what we are about to
+see, make us truly thankful." And he went
+away from there to see why those orders
+weren't out the door.</p>
+
+<p>He was out to prove something. And
+Providence&mdash;Rhode Island&mdash;had supplied
+him with enough ammunition to shoot a
+manufacturing organization full of holes.</p>
+
+<p>Each order was traced. One was in the
+shipping room.</p>
+
+<p>"What's holding this up?" he asked the
+shipping clerk.</p>
+
+<p>"Haven't had time to ship it. And we
+got other shoes that have been waiting
+longer than those. It's a feast or a famine
+down here. Some days we just can't get
+'em out."</p>
+
+<p>"You're working short-handed. Get a
+couple more packers. You've got to get
+those shoes out. The customers are hollering
+like hell. Get 'em out!"</p>
+
+<p>He found another order up in the cutting
+room. But why report the conversation?
+It varied only in the number of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
+cusswords used. It was always the old
+story.</p>
+
+<p>"Can't be done."</p>
+
+<p>"Put more people on then. Will two be
+enough? Or had we better make it three?"</p>
+
+<p>All down the line it went. More people.
+Costs went up. And did orders get out?
+Oh, yes, some did. But they got out at the
+expense of others. There was more congestion
+than ever. Complaints increased.</p>
+
+<p>Then the big boss called him in&mdash;and
+down&mdash;pointed out the increasing costs and
+asked how come. So the new production
+manager went back over his trail demanding
+retrenchment.</p>
+
+<p>"Put 'em on" was changed to "take 'em
+off."</p>
+
+<p>The big boss tells the rest of the story.</p>
+
+<p>"He had simply jumped in without finding
+out what it was he had to do. Maybe
+it was my fault for giving him too much
+rope.</p>
+
+<p>"Anyway, he hanged himself&mdash;or rather
+we had to fire him. Then we took on a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
+quiet lad who had served his apprenticeship
+with a large electrical supply house.</p>
+
+<p>"He didn't know a twelve-iron sole from
+a three-quarter foxing. But he knew
+plenty about managing, as it turned out.</p>
+
+<p>"I watched him. Things were in a bad
+way, you see, and getting no better fast.
+He did nothing much for several days but
+read his mail. Sat around his office.
+Didn't make a move to boss anyone. Stuck
+his nose in here and there to find out what
+this clerk or that clerk was up to.</p>
+
+<p>"But no action. No tearing his shirt.
+No nothing. And the complaints were
+coming in with every mail. They never
+fazed him. One day I ran across him up in
+the fitting room. Another time I bumped
+into him he was picking lasts out of the
+bins. Again I saw him pushing empty
+racks into the heeling room elevator.</p>
+
+<p>"Apparently I had picked another lemon.
+Looked like the best thing he did was sit
+around and tap his teeth with a pencil.</p>
+
+<p>"He fooled me, though. One afternoon<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+he dropped into my office with a map.
+He'd drawn it between taps. It was a good
+map with dotted lines to show just exactly
+what happened to an order&mdash;any order&mdash;every
+order. That map showed when it
+went into the works, where it went from
+there. And so on until it went out the
+shipping room door. That's what he'd
+been up to the day I saw him picking out
+lasts. And I tell you I never had any idea
+how many things could happen to an order.
+I never realized how shoes halted and stumbled
+and staggered around that factory of
+ours.</p>
+
+<p>"There were red lines, too. They
+showed the changes he proposed making.
+Here he would stop backtracking. Here
+was unnecessary travel. Here was an old
+bottle neck and here was how he was going
+to crack it open. And look at those lasts
+lying idle with shoes upstairs waiting to be
+made on them!</p>
+
+<p>"That wasn't half. It was actually taking
+four days to get orders through the of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>fice
+routine. He showed me how certain
+necessary records that took time to make
+could be made after the shoes were in
+work. Other short cuts would wipe whole
+days off our schedules.</p>
+
+<p>"There was nothing to it&mdash;when you saw
+it in red ink. In fact there's nothing half
+so convincing as red ink. There's been none
+on our books for the past five years&mdash;and
+during that time the shoe business has
+been no bed of roses.</p>
+
+<p>"What he proposed was simple as pie&mdash;if
+only someone had stopped to think.
+We'd simply got into bad habits. We were
+handling the work the same way we'd
+handled it back in the days when grandfather
+started the business. And this fellow
+had been smart enough to wait and
+wonder why. Not wonder why either. <i>He
+went and found out how come.</i></p>
+
+<p>"In thirty days we were back on earth.
+We were getting shoes out on time&mdash;many
+many days sooner than we'd even been able
+to before. And all because a smart young<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+man, who didn't know a thing about shoes
+but a whole lot about managing, sat and
+tapped his teeth and drew a few pictures.&mdash;All
+because he had been in no hurry to
+act until he had found out just what had to
+be done."</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>It is so easy to jump to conclusions! If
+you look about a bit, you will see plenty
+of men who don't stop to find out what
+needs to be done before they start trying
+to do it. They're like the shortstop who
+hurries his play and tries to throw the runner
+out at first before he really gets his
+hands on the ball. An error is more often
+than not the result.</p>
+
+<p>MANAGING, such men will tell you, is
+putting "pep" and "punch" into your work.
+Pep and punch were once good words. But
+their good qualities have been so often extolled
+that most of us have lost sight of
+the fact that all the "drive" in the world
+is so much wasted energy when it isn't di<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>rected
+along the right lines. And when it
+isn't so directed, it comes pretty close to
+being the lowest form of human endeavor.
+Witness the "go-getter" who really doesn't
+know what it's all about, but often succeeds
+in covering up a world of defects under a
+cloak of ill-directed energy.</p>
+
+<p>Other men think they are finding out
+what needs to be done when actually they
+aren't even getting close to the root of the
+matter. With the best intentions in the
+world, they are grasping at the first straw
+the wind blows their way. Eureka! they
+shout when they haven't found it at all,
+but are merely jumping all the way over
+the facts to conclusions! Actually to know
+your business or your job demands ANALYSIS.</p>
+
+<p>You have a right to duck. It's another
+of those words that work overtime and
+have suffered as a result. A certain type
+of superficial business executive has done
+analysis no good. To him the impressiveness
+of the word suffices&mdash;to the complete<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+exclusion of the simplicity of the act itself.
+And so analysis to you and <i>you</i> and YOU
+has come to mean involved, complex research&mdash;running
+around a lot in circles and
+getting exactly nowhere. Analysis has become
+for you an A1 example of the phrase-maker's
+art.</p>
+
+<p>REAL ANALYSIS of any problem in
+business can, however, be simple&mdash;in fact,
+<i>it can be nothing else but simple</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Analysis, says Noah Webster, is "a resolution
+of anything, whether an object of
+the senses or the intellect, into constituent
+parts or elements; an examination of component
+parts, separately or in their relation
+to the whole."</p>
+
+<p>Whooee! all that when he might have
+said "TAKING TO PIECES." For analysis
+is literally that&mdash;taking a thing to
+pieces to see what makes the wheels go
+round. Not, however, with the destructive
+intent of the small boy who strews his
+watch all over the floor, but with the
+avowed purpose of getting right down to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+the sort of brass tacks which make it possible
+to see the composition of the whole
+clearly and plainly.</p>
+
+<p>Analysis which befogs the issue is not
+analysis at all. It's&mdash;in the vernacular&mdash;a
+lot of "hooey."</p>
+
+<p>But the RIGHT KIND OF ANALYSIS
+"breaks down" the problem into its component
+parts&mdash;without losing sight of each
+part's relation to the whole. There may
+be only two parts to a job of managing.
+The messenger who analyzes his business
+correctly will find exactly two: where to
+go and what to do after he gets there&mdash;the
+simplest kind of problem and the simplest
+type of business analysis. But if the analysis
+consisted of twenty pieces instead of
+two, it would be no harder; it would only
+be longer.</p>
+
+<p>The production manager in the shoe factory
+analyzed his job correctly when he
+mapped out the route of an order. All he
+did was take the manufacturing process to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
+pieces so that he could put the pieces together
+again to form a more efficient whole.</p>
+
+<p>So whether there are two or twenty or
+two hundred pieces, the act of ANALYZING&mdash;of
+TAKING TO PIECES&mdash;differs
+only in the amount of territory it covers.
+Naturally it will be a somewhat more
+lengthy process to analyze the job of managing
+a steel mill than to separate a peanut
+stand and its operation into a few component
+parts. But the approach is always the
+same.</p>
+
+<p>And no matter how good you may be
+with the woods, how the approach does
+affect the final score!</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Consider for the moment that you
+have a house built of blocks and want
+to take it to pieces. A quick and easy way
+of separating it into its component parts
+would be a swift kick aimed down around
+the foundations.</p>
+
+<p>A quick method. But comes nothing.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
+There are all your blocks lying on the floor,
+but so far as knowing what they're all
+about, you're worse off than ever you were
+before you kicked your house down.</p>
+
+<p>The other way of taking your house of
+blocks to pieces is to start with the roof
+and WORK BACKWARDS. The very
+thought, then, of "taking to pieces" suggests
+the correct way to undertake the
+analysis of a business or of a job.</p>
+
+<p>And a study of the methods of successful
+managers will convince the doubtingest
+Thomas that starting at the top and working
+down to the cellar is the method they
+follow in the analysis of any business problem
+they have to tackle.</p>
+
+<p>Once a busy ceramic manufacturer found
+himself in the restaurant business. He
+knew about all there was to know about
+dinnerware up to the point where it left
+his customers' counters. What went on
+after that was pretty much Greek to him
+if you know what we mean.</p>
+
+<p>And then he became a restaurateur. All<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+because his brother-in-law got into him for
+several thousand dollars and then couldn't
+quite seem to make the darned thing pay
+a profit.</p>
+
+<p>Brother-in-law knew the game. Oh, yes.
+He had worked for a number of years as
+assistant manager in a similar enterprise.
+With his "knowledge of the business," he
+should have made a success of this cafeteria
+of his.</p>
+
+<p>He knew how to handle the help, how to
+buy, how to run the kitchen, and so on.
+The operating details were as an open book
+to him. Judged from every outward appearance,
+the cafeteria was up to standard.
+It should have climbed out of the red in
+short order.</p>
+
+<p>He had been taught to buy carefully and
+to manage economically. "Well bought,"
+he announced, "is half sold." He'd read it
+in a book and he thought he was being a
+good salesman. Still the business stayed in
+the red.</p>
+
+<p>Our ceramic friend was faced with kiss<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>ing
+his investment goodbye&mdash;and probably
+with making a job in the pottery for a
+good restaurant man&mdash;with throwing good
+money after bad, or with getting into the
+cafeteria business.</p>
+
+<p>He figured this business ought to pay.
+Somewhere, he knew, his brother-in-law
+had gone wrong. Just where, he believed
+he could find out.</p>
+
+<p>So he took over the business. Brother-in-law
+stayed on, leaving the new owner
+free to observe.</p>
+
+<p>And he did nothing but observe for a
+solid week.</p>
+
+<p>Each night he made a list of the points
+in managing which had come up in the
+course of the day's work.</p>
+
+<p>In a week's time he had an accurate list
+of all the actual jobs of managing, as all
+bills except for gas and light and rent were
+paid and a profit and loss statement was
+taken each week.</p>
+
+<p>Then he arranged the list in order of
+natural importance.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It began with marketing and checking
+bills with deliveries, and ended with counting
+the money and depositing it in the
+bank.</p>
+
+<p>"Hold on," he thought, "this isn't such
+a long way from running a pottery. What
+am I in this business for?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because," he answered, "I want to
+leave as much of that money in the bank
+as possible, and mark it down as profit."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px;">
+<img src="images/illus026.jpg" width="800" height="534" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>So right away he started to draw pictures.
+The chart on this page is the result
+after he had worked it over and polished
+it up.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Note how it works backward from his
+final objective&mdash;"Net Profits."</p>
+
+<p>"Now," questioned his <i>alter ego</i>, "how
+do I determine how much of that money
+stays in the bank as profit, and how much
+has to be checked out right away for expenses?"</p>
+
+<p>And from his handy list of managerial
+functions it was plain that it depended on
+three things&mdash;buying right, selling with as
+little waste as possible, and keeping expenses
+down.</p>
+
+<p>"Now we're getting somewhere," he said
+to himself. "Those things lead me right
+into my next job&mdash;which is to fix prices
+fairly. For what's the use of buying right,
+handling supplies carefully and keeping expenses
+right down to the bone unless my
+selling prices cover costs, yield a profit, and
+still look reasonable to the public?"</p>
+
+<p>Yes, and the most attractive prices,
+backed up by careful buying and all the
+rest, wouldn't keep the dollars clinking
+merrily over the counter unless the food<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
+was so good and the service so excellent
+that customers bought liberally and came
+back for more.</p>
+
+<p>By this time, you'll note, on taking another
+peek at the chart, he had worked
+right back to his "Number 1" job&mdash;getting
+more customers in.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, by ANALYSIS, he found out definitely
+what had to be done&mdash;and what had
+to be done first. Brother-in-law thought he
+knew, but he had begun at the wrong end.
+He had been looking after expenditures
+first and receipts last. He was trying to
+squeeze a little margin out of his receipts
+before he did anything about getting the
+receipts.</p>
+
+<p>How different the new owner's viewpoint!
+His brother-in-law, he found, was
+thoroughly competent. He'd simply got off
+on the wrong foot. In the kitchen and the
+storeroom, he was a good operator. But
+the new owner's place was "out front."</p>
+
+<p>His job was to "get more customers, get
+them to spend more&mdash;and to give them<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+such good food and service that they would
+come back and bring their friends."</p>
+
+<p>He began by spending money. Took out
+the gas pipe at the entrance. Replaced it
+with a brass rail. Provided a small lounging
+room where customers could wait for
+their friends. Put in upholstered chairs so
+they could be comfortable while waiting.
+Put attractive uniforms on attractive serving
+girls.</p>
+
+<p>There was an air of good taste about the
+place when he got through.</p>
+
+<p>Then he changed the arrangement of the
+counters. But you know all about that&mdash;how
+the desserts came first so they would
+catch your eye before your tray was too
+heavily loaded with the heavier part of the
+meal. Staples which offered a small margin
+of profit were relegated to places in the
+rear. Dishes that made the best profit got
+the positions up front. Each day he offered
+a low-priced "special." Thus he
+planned to increase customers' purchases.</p>
+
+<p>And the business began to grow.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>That's all there is. There isn't any more.
+Today he doesn't own a chain of cafeterias
+extending into many cities and feeding
+many thousands of people every day at a
+good profit.</p>
+
+<p>He's still a very successful ceramic manufacturer&mdash;and
+a cafeteria proprietor.</p>
+
+<p>"I flew in the face of tradition," he
+says. "'First watch your kitchen' is the
+cry of the restaurant man. But I started
+with what I wanted&mdash;net profits&mdash;and
+WORKED BACKWARD to make conditions
+that would provide net profits.</p>
+
+<p>"VOLUME OF BUSINESS had to come
+first. I had to get it before I could get a
+margin of profit.</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt I could go out in the kitchen
+today and save some money. If I went to
+market myself, maybe I could save a cent
+a pound on my meats. But I can't give up
+my attention to the 'front' in order to
+watch the 'back.' As soon as I do that I'm
+going to be right back where I started."</p>
+
+<p>It would sound like heresy, wouldn't it,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
+if we hadn't sat in and watched him begin
+with his final objective and work back
+through the means which make the objective
+possible. Only by careful analysis
+would he have had courage enough to FOLLOW
+HIS PLAN THROUGH to its successful
+conclusion.</p>
+
+<p>And here's the amusing sequel. Today,
+as he still dabbles at feeding people, he will
+admit that he's a better ceramic manufacturer
+as a result of his cafeteria experience.
+His pottery had always yielded a nice
+profit. When he sat down with his sheet
+of coordinate paper and analyzed it, he
+found his job of management differed not
+at all in its fundamentals.</p>
+
+<p>His first job he found was "out front"
+getting more customers in. A better
+knowledge of markets, a better job of selling,
+a better product&mdash;those were the ways
+to get the customers in and make them
+come back for more.</p>
+
+<p>And his need for a better product led
+him out into the plant where he found that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+tunnel kilns with exact temperature control
+would more than treble the production
+of the old periodic kilns&mdash;and would produce
+better ware.</p>
+
+<p>But that's another story. The important
+thing, anyway, is not what he found
+had to be done in the cafeteria and in the
+pottery, but HOW he found it.</p>
+
+<p>He took his business to pieces&mdash;BACKWARDS.</p>
+
+<p>He began with the objective he wanted
+to get&mdash;MONEY. It was a simple matter
+to find that to get money from the business
+he had to get customers to come in and
+spend money; that to get customers to
+come in he must make his place look like
+a good place to come to; that to make his
+place look attractive he must spend money
+on equipment and thought on the arrangement
+and display of food.</p>
+
+<p>And there he had his big job cut out for
+him, with the other jobs following along in
+natural sequence. It altered the whole
+METHOD OF MANAGEMENT.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>How this METHOD OF MANAGEMENT
+is applied to your job is shown in
+the chart which follows. It's a skeleton of
+what the cafeteria man did.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, it's more than that. For it
+shows what every manager&mdash;whether he
+manages a steel mill, a punch-press department
+or a time-study job&mdash;must do if he
+is to get an honest-to-goodness PERSPECTIVE
+OF HIS WORK.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 640px;">
+<img src="images/illus033.jpg" width="640" height="310" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>It can be done very simply. Just a sheet
+of paper ruled in small squares&mdash;you can
+buy it at any stationer's&mdash;on which to fill
+in the steps you must take in between what
+you have to do and what you seek to accomplish
+by it&mdash;and some careful thought<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+as to just what your job is and why it is
+to be done, will develop a true ANALYSIS
+of your problems which will beat reams and
+reams of typewritten words.</p>
+
+<p>Remember the words of the Chinese philosopher:
+"A picture is worth ten thousand
+words"&mdash;and reflect how clever these
+Chinese are!</p>
+
+<p>The MEANS FOR ACCOMPLISHING
+the final objective may be many or few.
+You have seen the cafeteria-manager's
+problems on the chart on <a href="#Page_24">page 24</a>. Now
+turn to <a href="#Page_35">page 35</a> and see what a file clerk
+does beside powder her nose from nine to
+five.</p>
+
+<p>A bright young lady fresh out of high
+school went to work in an editorial office.
+There wasn't enough filing to do to keep
+her happy from nine to five, so she filled
+in with a bit of typing here and a trifle of
+routine clerical work there. Thursdays she
+hopped over to the neighboring bookstore
+and collected <i>Saturday Posts</i> for the editors&mdash;now
+she'll have to do that on Tuesday.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
+And Fridays she distributed <i>The New
+Yorkers</i> to avid readers.</p>
+
+<p>Filing, though, was her main job. When
+she first came, the managing editor said
+"Here it is" or words to that effect, and
+she went to work.</p>
+
+<p>Those files had always been more or less
+of a sore point. An editor's mail is nothing
+if not voluminous. And every day Flossie
+the fascinating file clerk got a mass of data
+which she had to stick away. Her great
+trouble was finding it again after she'd
+stuck it away.</p>
+
+<p>Often she couldn't find it. And pretty
+soon she discovered that she got the blame
+no matter what was missing&mdash;whether an
+important inquiry from Peter B. Stilb or
+the editor's pipe cleaners.</p>
+
+<p>She couldn't do a thing about the pipe
+cleaners, but she made up her mind that
+since she was held responsible when a letter
+got lost, she would also have the responsibility
+of changing the filing system. The
+system, she felt sure, was to blame.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>One day when she was "on her lunch"
+and the editors didn't need cigarettes from
+the corner drugstore, she sat down and
+made an ANALYSIS of her problem. Curiously
+enough, she started at the end and
+WORKED BACKWARDS.</p>
+
+<p>She WORKED BACKWARDS, not because
+someone told her that was the right
+way to analyze her job, but probably because
+she was only a file clerk and no one
+ever told her anything.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," she asked herself, "do I file these
+old papers anyway?"</p>
+
+<p>"So I can find them again, quickly and
+surely, when they're wanted," seemed to
+be the only answer to that.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the right way to file these letters
+and papers and data so I can find them
+quickly?" was her next question.</p>
+
+<p>"Arrange them like words in the dictionary&mdash;ONE
+PLACE, and ONLY ONE
+PLACE, where each can be," was only
+common sense.</p>
+
+<p>In the filing system which she had in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>herited,
+there were a dozen places for each
+set of data. There was a file on "Industries"
+with sub-files for "Automobiles" and
+all the rest; a file for data on "Railroads,"
+with two or three sub-files. The file clerk
+had to use judgment and discretion in selecting
+the heading under which each letter
+or piece of data was filed. And she wasn't
+hired for judgment and discretion. Sometimes,
+too, the editors erred in their descriptions
+of the material they wanted.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px;">
+<img src="images/illus037.jpg" width="800" height="590" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>One file, arranged alphabetically&mdash;ONE<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+PLACE TO LOOK, regardless of the thing
+looked for&mdash;was the logical conclusion,
+viewed from the standpoint of <i>finding</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The managing editor was horrified. Mix
+"railroads" with "public service," and
+"manufacturing" with "agriculture"?</p>
+
+<p>"Why," asked the file clerk, looking back
+at her analysis, "why care how things are
+<i>kept</i> so long as they can be <i>found</i> quickly?
+When you send me for Camels, do you care,
+so long as you get them quickly, whether
+they're kept next to Chesterfields, or right
+beside the chewing gum? When the chief
+asks for data on 'C.P.R.' does he care, if
+he gets it right away, whether it was filed
+next to data on 'Coal' or beside facts about
+other railroads?"</p>
+
+<p>"All right," objected the managing editor,
+"suppose someone asks for all the data
+we have on railroads?"</p>
+
+<p>Not a bad question. It was from a <i>finding</i>
+standpoint.</p>
+
+<p>"Have a separate cross-index by classes,"
+was the answer. "That is, under 'Railroads'<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+have a card showing the name of every&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But look at the extra work."</p>
+
+<p>Back to her ANALYSIS went the file
+clerk. "Why file at all, except to make it
+easy to find what we file? If we were to
+set up a system for <i>easiest filing</i>, we'd simply
+put everything in boxes just as it comes
+to us. Our main objective is to make information
+easy to <i>find</i>, and anything that
+increases the work of filing but lessens the
+work of finding, is profitable."</p>
+
+<p>The result was a filing system that has
+made a great mass of data as accessible as
+the words in the dictionary. And it has
+taken the human equation out of the job.
+No longer does the file clerk have to stop
+and use her judgment as to where she shall
+file Mr. Stilb's letter. There is ONE
+PLACE AND JUST ONE PLACE.</p>
+
+<p>And the basis of the plan was the simple
+process of ANALYZING&mdash;of starting with
+the final objective and WORKING BACK<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>WARD&mdash;not
+forward from the work to be
+done.</p>
+
+<p>In hundreds of business offices&mdash;in
+countless industrial plants&mdash;time, labor and
+money are being wasted today in outmoded
+methods which, like Topsy, "just grew."
+The manager who started them didn't stop
+to reason out first exactly what had to be
+done&mdash;or if he did, he failed to WORK
+BACKWARD from the final objective.</p>
+
+<p>One way is as bad as the other.</p>
+
+<p>In fact, it may even be better not to reason
+at all than fail to get to the very bottom
+and reason out the absolute right of what
+has to be done. At least it takes less time.</p>
+
+<p>A sure way, incidentally, to avoid making
+mistakes in your analysis is to do it
+on paper. A professor of mathematics in
+one of the large universities always tells
+his students that no problem should be performed
+in the head that can be done on
+paper. "Make pencil and paper do as
+much as you can, for your brain has enough
+to do to supervise the work."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Until your mind is trained to the habit
+of QUICK, ACCURATE ANALYSIS,
+you'll find it helps to do the work on paper.
+Keep on hand a small supply of blank
+charts like the one on <a href="#Page_31">page 31</a>, on which
+to sketch an analysis of new work or of
+important decisions. The constant performance
+of this detail will of itself train
+your mind to look at problems more analytically,
+and automatically to sift and
+classify them more logically.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps you can improve on the chart
+shown on <a href="#Page_31">page 31</a>. Surely you can adapt
+it better to your own needs. But force
+yourself to some such method. It will help
+you to cultivate the instinct of SHREWD,
+RAPID ANALYSIS&mdash;and at the same time
+it cannot help giving you a KEENER,
+SURER INSIGHT into the particular
+problem, no matter how complex or how
+simple it may be.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes it is the apparently simple
+problems that need analysis most. For
+example&mdash;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Did you ever hear of a sales organization
+that didn't have a stenographic problem?</p>
+
+<p>The New York office of a Western factory
+was no exception. The manager was
+broadminded&mdash;even liberal&mdash;with his salesmen.
+But when it came to stenographers,
+he was decidedly Scotch. Valuable men
+sat around the office mornings and evenings
+waiting for a chance to dictate to a staff of
+girls which was measured to fit the average
+load of the day, but not the rush load of
+the two hours a day when the salesmen
+were inside.</p>
+
+<p>Dictating machines seemed to be the answer.
+The sales manager figured they
+would not only solve the dictation problem,
+but would further reduce stenographic
+costs.</p>
+
+<p>They were installed. At the same time
+the stenographic force was cut to insure
+keeping all the girls busy all the day.</p>
+
+<p>Good. The salesmen were able to dictate
+when they felt like it. But often the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
+letters dictated were a day or two late in
+being transcribed.</p>
+
+<p>Complaints increased. And the manager
+lost his temper: "What's the matter with
+this cursed letter-writing business?" he
+demanded. "Why the Sam Hill do we have
+typists and stenographers?"</p>
+
+<p>Well, why? He calmed down a bit, seized
+a sheet of paper and mapped out his problem.</p>
+
+<p>This is what he wrote:</p>
+
+<p>1. Salesmen's letters are to save salesmen's
+time and to give prompt service to
+customers.</p>
+
+<p>2. I don't begrudge half a day's time of
+a $20-a-day salesman to call on a customer.
+Then it's still profitable to waste half of
+the time of a $4-a-day stenographer in order
+to save a long trip for a salesman, or
+to get a quick answer to a question.</p>
+
+<p>3. What we need is enough typists to
+transcribe every letter of every salesman
+promptly, even if part of them have to be
+idle half the day.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The increased use of sales letters, the
+greater freedom salesmen feel in their dictation,
+the number of selling details now
+promptly handled by mail without an expensive
+call&mdash;all are directly traceable to
+the manager's ANALYSIS which he made
+by using the final objective as a starting
+point.</p>
+
+<p>He's a convert to the pencil and paper
+method. Sales problems are part of his
+daily exercise. He goes to the bottom of
+them instinctively. But any problems that
+arise concerning office work, he settles only
+after analyzing from front to back&mdash;on
+paper.</p>
+
+<p>His method of charting his ANALYSIS
+differs in appearance from the chart on
+<a href="#Page_31">page 31</a>, but it is identical in PRINCIPLE
+AND EFFECT. It works from final objective
+BACKWARD.</p>
+
+<p>One more application of the same
+KNACK OF ANALYSIS&mdash;and we are
+done. It is that of an Ohio manufacturer
+who recently put up a new building.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Plans prepared by the architect called
+for four stories and a basement. When it
+came time to discuss arrangement of space,
+it was found that one department would
+have to go in the basement. There were
+objections from all sides.</p>
+
+<p>The manufacturer ended up by taking
+the problem home with him to TAKE TO
+PIECES and put together again.</p>
+
+<p>He began&mdash;fortunately&mdash;with the final
+objective. "What's this new building for?"
+Obviously, to provide more space for enlarged
+operations.</p>
+
+<p>"How much space is needed?"</p>
+
+<p>He went over the figures and plans and
+found the four main floors weren't enough.</p>
+
+<p>"Then why not a fifth floor?"</p>
+
+<p>As long as a bigger building was to be
+built, why not make it big enough? Why
+not another full story instead of a basement?</p>
+
+<p>Why not, indeed! Come to find out, no
+one knew just why a basement had been
+considered. The old building had one, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+apparently that was the only reason for
+proposing one for the new building. A full
+story would give all the general storage
+space of a basement and also give regular
+working quarters for the department
+crowded out of the four upper floors.</p>
+
+<p>And when the architect was consulted,
+it was found that with the extras for excavation,
+waterproofing and the like, the cost
+of a basement was considerably more than
+the cost of another full story.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, but for the manufacturer's analysis
+of the building problem from the point of
+final objective, the basement would have
+gone in&mdash;simply because NO ONE HAD
+STOPPED TO THINK, and think clearly
+and logically.</p>
+
+<p>Logical thinking is a trait that can be cultivated.
+Every problem thought through
+by means of some such simple help as we
+have suggested, makes the mind more
+ready to tackle the next problem.</p>
+
+<p>Some men's minds grow so keen by practising
+that sort of thinking that they<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
+AUTOMATICALLY TAKE THINGS
+TO PIECES as they listen. Before you
+finish talking to them, they have already
+analyzed your statement and are planning
+on its execution&mdash;or are ready to reject it.
+Sometimes it's intuition. But rarely.
+Usually, it is nothing more than cultivated
+KNACK.</p>
+
+<p>Cultivate ACCURACY first. SPEED
+OF ANALYSIS will come of itself.</p>
+
+<p><i>Don't start until you know exactly where
+you're going.</i></p>
+
+<p>There is no task so trifling, no business so
+large, that its management does not need to
+ANALYZE EXACTLY WHAT THERE
+IS TO DO.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
+<h2>II</h2>
+
+<h2>Planning</h2>
+
+
+<p>In the preceding chapter we have been
+busily engaged in taking things to
+pieces. Now we've got to put them together
+again. Our house of blocks has
+been resolved into its component parts, not
+by aiming a swift kick at its midriff, but
+by starting at the top and working backwards.
+Now to REBUILD.</p>
+
+<p>Our first care, at this stage of the
+game, is to remember that ANALYSIS
+IS NEVER AN END but simply the
+MEANS TO AN END.</p>
+
+<p>The immediate end, this time, is to rearrange
+the pieces so that the job to be
+done can be done in the most effective way&mdash;the
+way that saves the most effort, the
+most time, the most money&mdash;the way<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
+which, in your business&mdash;and in <i>yours</i> and
+YOURS&mdash;leads to NET PROFITS.</p>
+
+<p>Again it should be emphasized that NET
+PROFIT, in any job of managing, is the
+ultimate goal.</p>
+
+<p>Our danger, then, is that we may find
+ourselves down on the floor surrounded by
+our blocks&mdash;and with never a trace of a
+PLAN for rebuilding the house, and rebuilding
+it in the simplest, most economical
+way.</p>
+
+<p>In short, we must be sure we are taking
+things to pieces, not for the sake of taking
+them to pieces, but purely and simply <i>to
+find out what has to be done</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Like the golfer who played golf so much
+in order to keep fit for golf, we have here
+a good old-fashioned beneficent circle.
+ANALYSIS without a PLAN isn't worth
+a whoop in Hades. It's time kissed goodbye.
+Wasted effort. And, in like manner,
+a PLAN without an ANALYSIS isn't worth
+the paper it's typed on.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>Psmith in your office is a great "planner".
+He always has something on the
+fire. But somehow or other he never quite
+puts things over. His plans don't get across.
+Why not? Oh, just because he doesn't
+bother to analyze his problem&mdash;because he
+sets out to <i>do</i> what has to be done even
+before he <i>knows</i> what has to be done. He
+doesn't base his plan upon an actual need.</p>
+
+<p>Pbrown, on the other hand, is a keen
+analytical thinker. A student. He's a
+shark at taking things to pieces and finding
+out what has to be done. But when he's
+done that, he's all done. He lacks the
+initiative that starts things moving. He
+hasn't that divine spark of something or
+other that gets things done. A stick of
+dynamite wouldn't do a bit of good. He
+simply hasn't the knack of building a plan.
+He knows what has to be done. He doesn't
+know how to do it.</p>
+
+<p>Psmith and Pbrown&mdash;or Pbrown and
+Psmith&mdash;would make a fast team. But
+Psmith without Pbrown's analytical ability,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+or Pbrown without Psmith's capacity for
+planning how to get things done, isn't
+worth his weight in gold to <i>any</i> business
+enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>A manufacturer friend tells an amusing
+yarn about a Pbrown he hired as sales
+manager.</p>
+
+<p>"He went around analyzing everything
+from soup to nuts&mdash;the gadgets in our line,
+our markets, our competition, our salesmen.</p>
+
+<p>"He was an analyzer <i>de luxe</i>. And all
+I ever got out of all his analyses was a distinct
+feeling that something was wrong with
+every gadget we made, that our markets
+were saturated, that our competitors had
+us backed off the map, and that our salesmen
+were a bunch of ribbon clerks.</p>
+
+<p>"So," he continues, "I did a little analyzing
+all my own. And analyzed him out of
+his job. Today he's managing a filling station
+where they drive in for the most part
+and take it away from him. But in his
+place I got a man who found out what was
+wrong with gadgets, markets, salesmen<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>&mdash;and
+right away he built a plan which sold
+goods."</p>
+
+<p>Thus the futility of ANALYSIS without
+PLANNING.</p>
+
+<p>There's the danger, too, of getting
+away from the SIMPLICITY OF TRUE
+ANALYSIS.</p>
+
+<p>A job undertaken by an advertising
+agency for a rubber manufacturer supplies
+a case in point. Stripped of all the details,
+the task was to find out whether or not the
+manufacturer might profitably engage in
+the making of hard rubber tires for industrial
+trucks and trailers. If names are
+changed and products substituted, think
+nothing of it. The principle's the thing.</p>
+
+<p>The agency began by analyzing the business
+to a fare-you-well. Everyone and
+everything got cross-examined.</p>
+
+<p>It took three months. And when the
+analysis was done it told the manufacturer
+everything from where the rubber grew to
+where the money went to and came from.
+The trouble was, he knew all that before<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>&mdash;or
+as much of it as he wanted to know.
+The report, in the words of a Chicago columnist,
+was just "64 dam pages." It
+didn't tell him one blessed thing he wanted
+to know. Or rather it was so full of plunder
+that he couldn't make head nor tail
+of it.</p>
+
+<p>It wasn't SIMPLE. And because it
+wasn't SIMPLE, it was a far, far cry from
+TRUE ANALYSIS.</p>
+
+<p>Well, well, the rubber manufacturer
+went out in the byways and got him a
+young man who was told to find out, if he
+could, whether or not there was any market
+for hard rubber tires on gas and electric
+industrial trucks, tractors and trailers, and
+allied equipment.</p>
+
+<p>He found, for example, that there were
+40,000 trucks and tractors in service; that
+annual sales were about 3,200 units. He
+discovered that, of trailers and hand lift
+trucks, 125,000 each were in service; annual
+sales were 12,000 and 10,000 units
+respectively. But when he came to floor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+and hand trucks, conservative estimates
+showed 8,000,000 in use, while annual sales
+were in the neighborhood of 250,000!</p>
+
+<p>Next he found out, as accurately as possible,
+how many hard rubber tires were sold
+as original equipment. The 3,200 trucks
+and tractors had 12,300 wheels. But 95
+per cent of them were equipped with rubber
+tires at the factory. On the other hand,
+only 7 per cent of the floor and hand trucks
+were thus equipped!</p>
+
+<p>Outside of the truck and tractor people,
+he found the equipment makers opposed
+to hard rubber tires. Let's not go into the
+reasons. Yet representative manufacturers
+in a dozen different lines stated, when he
+asked them: "All future equipment purchased
+by us will be equipped with rubber
+tires."</p>
+
+<p>The whole report wasn't twelve pages
+long. And three tables, carefully compiled
+from available facts and figures, told the
+manufacturer everything he wanted to
+know.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In short, upon this SIMPLE ANALYSIS,
+he was able to build a plan for manufacturing
+and merchandising solid rubber
+tires. Much good, though, it would have
+done him had he done his planning first
+and then found out there weren't enough
+wheels to wear the tires after he had made
+them!</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>So much for our "beneficent circle."
+Let us look into this thing called PLANNING
+and find out if there isn't some way
+of developing a knack of planning which
+will help us over the second major hurdle
+in our road to managing.</p>
+
+<p>There is, we shall find, a single problem
+with which the planner, the constructive
+manager, deals. Again, it doesn't make a
+particle of difference whether it's Mr.
+Schwab and Bethlehem Steel or Tonio and
+his peanut stand. No business is so "different"
+that the principles of management
+fail to apply.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All right, then. The problem of every
+planner is first to determine what is the
+PRIMARY MOVING FORCE&mdash;the "initiative"&mdash;behind
+his job, and then to find
+the EASIEST PLACE TO APPLY THAT
+FORCE in order to set up the required
+MOTION or ACTIVITY with the LEAST
+AMOUNT OF EFFORT THAT WILL
+GET THE BEST RESULTS.</p>
+
+<p>A long sentence. Go over it again and
+you will find it is divided into four distinct
+parts:</p>
+
+<p>1. Deciding on the PRIMARY MOVING
+FORCE with which to set the wheels
+in motion.</p>
+
+<p>2. Applying this FORCE at the PROPER
+PLACE TO GET EASIEST ACTION.</p>
+
+<p>3. Directing this action along lines
+which either offer LEAST RESISTANCE
+or assure GREATEST ACCOMPLISHMENT.</p>
+
+<p>4. Bringing the activities to a focus at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
+the place or time that will best carry the
+work to a SUCCESSFUL CONCLUSION.</p>
+
+<p>The PRIMARY MOVING FORCE may
+be the selection of media in an advertising
+plan; it may be the pushing of a button in
+the White House which opens a dam in
+Arizona, a Century of Progress in Chicago,
+or the Annual Convention of Whammit
+Manufacturers at Atlantic City; or it may
+be the memo from the big boss which gives
+the research department <i>carte blanche</i> on a
+development project.</p>
+
+<p>To apply this initiative to a place where
+it will get QUICK ACTION may be to
+suggest an idea in the headline of an advertisement
+that will set the reader to thinking
+of salmon fishing at Mooselookmeguntic,
+or of the time the ice cubes gave out just
+when they shouldn't. Or it may be to classify
+the output of a factory before shipping
+so that freight cars can be packed to best
+advantage or so that lowest freight rates
+may be secured. Or it may be a simple<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+method of sorting mail so that subordinates
+get the jobs they can handle and only the
+important business is brought to the president's
+attention.</p>
+
+<p>Directing this ACTIVITY along the
+lines that ASSURE GREATEST ACCOMPLISHMENT
+may be&mdash;in the advertisement&mdash;the
+presentation of facts or advantages
+which will persuade the reader that
+the fishing tackle you manufacture is desirable.
+Again, it may be the dovetailing
+of a thousand elements in a huge project
+like the Russian Five-Year Plan so that an
+adequate supply of ore will be available
+when the blast furnaces roar into operation;
+so that the steel will be on hand when
+production in the Cheliabinsk tractor works
+is stepped up to meet the requirements of
+the new agricultural regime. Or it may involve
+the simple sweeping of a floor in a
+manner which raises a minimum of dust.</p>
+
+<p>And bringing the activities to a SUCCESSFUL
+CONCLUSION may mean
+working up the arguments of the advertise<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>ment
+to the psychological closing of a sale&mdash;to
+the point where the ardent member of
+the Isaak Walton League figures he can
+live no longer without your fishing tackle
+and sets out gaily in the general direction
+of Abercrombie and Fitch's. Or it may be
+coordinating the entire production of a factory
+so that the Diesel generator set ordered
+by the Santa F&eacute; can be delivered at
+the exact date specified in the original order.
+Or it may be handling the day's
+correspondence on the credit man's desk so
+that letters which must "make the Century"
+are ready to go at 11:45&mdash;so that the
+rest of the day's work is ready to sign,
+stamp and mail before the 5 o'clock whistle
+blows.</p>
+
+<p>FOUR ELEMENTS, then, in any job
+which is to be PLANNED. Every plan, if
+practicable, will follow them.</p>
+
+<p>There is, by way of further illustration,
+the story of the factory manager of a food
+manufacturing plant who laid out a PLAN
+for an operation no more intricate than the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
+scrubbing of the floors at night. Now it can
+be told.</p>
+
+<p>And for two good reasons. First, because
+it was a practical plan which, even
+on such a lowly operation, saved quite a bit
+of money. Second, because in its construction
+the plan is, from the point of view of
+our four elements, what has sometimes been
+called a "natural."</p>
+
+<p>One night, it seems, the manager and his
+wife went to the movies. The town didn't
+have daylight time, so it was quite dark.
+They passed the plant, a large six-story
+building.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Ed!" exclaimed the wife, "you
+didn't tell me the factory was working
+nights."</p>
+
+<p>Ed, like most husbands, was in the habit
+of telling friend wife 'most everything. For
+once he was at a loss. Sure enough, the
+lights were going full tilt on all floors.
+Hitting on all six, you might say.</p>
+
+<p>Then he laughed. It all came to him&mdash;"It's
+just the scrubwomen at work."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>One feature picture, one newsreel and
+one animated cartoon later, they walked
+past the plant again.</p>
+
+<p>"Look, the factory's still lit up," remarked
+the wife who turned off the living
+room lights religiously when she went out
+to get supper ready.</p>
+
+<p>This time Ed didn't laugh.</p>
+
+<p>In days like these one doesn't. Not, at
+any rate, at the thought of mounting electricity
+bills.</p>
+
+<p>The very next evening he was on the job.
+Time somebody found out what was what.
+In came the cleaners. They switched on
+the office lights&mdash;all of them&mdash;and two of
+the crew went to work. A couple of others
+went up to the second floor, switched on
+all the lights and pitched in with a vim.
+And so <i>ad infinitum</i>&mdash;or at least to the
+sixth story.</p>
+
+<p>And all the while the electric meter went
+round and round!</p>
+
+<p>Twenty-four hours later the janitor had
+a new plan of work.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>First the manager thought he'd start the
+whole crew at the top and work down. On
+second thought, a better plan was born&mdash;like
+the goddess of wisdom who sprang full
+grown from her papa's forehead. If I must
+go at this cleaning job, he thought, I might
+just as well make a first-class job of it and
+save not only on light, but on cleaners, too.</p>
+
+<p>We shall pass lightly over that part of
+his plan which had to do with releasing
+scrubwomen for other productive work, for
+in days like these&mdash;or in any other day&mdash;we
+just can't figure out that sort of thing.
+But goodness gracious, sometimes it's
+necessary.</p>
+
+<p>The emphasis, then, shall be on the electric
+current saved. The plan called for the
+entire crew's working together on one floor
+at a time&mdash;on the well-founded theory, of
+course, that teamwork would accomplish
+more in less time. Besides, since it was
+necessary to turn on all the lights on the
+floor, why not get the full benefit from them
+by having the entire gang at work?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>So far, so good. The surprise comes
+when you learn that he didn't have them
+start at the top and work down. He started
+them at the bottom and worked them up.</p>
+
+<p>"And I'll tell you why," explained the
+manager, "they have to climb six floors
+anyway, so they might as well work up as
+walk up. Besides, by leaving the stairs till
+the last, they can work their way down as
+well as up."</p>
+
+<p>In other words, they went to work right
+where they came in. And when they had
+finished, they were right back where they
+started&mdash;back where they went out on their
+way home.</p>
+
+<p>Simple, isn't it? An immediate reduction
+in lighting bills was noticeable. Even the
+amateur mathematician among you can
+figure that with one floor out of six lighted
+at a time, five-sixths of the light was saved.
+Besides, the work was done in less time&mdash;it
+wasn't long before two cleaners were
+reading the want ads. But why go into
+that?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>We aren't, for that matter, interested so
+much in the savings made, because it is exceedingly
+doubtful if many of us pass our
+factories or our offices on the way to the
+movies. We may never have an opportunity
+to put this particular plan to work.</p>
+
+<p>What we are interested in, though, is the
+fact that this cleaning plan utilizes the four
+basic elements which we've said must be
+present in every job of PLANNING.</p>
+
+<p>Look at the chart. It shows the movement
+of energy in the manager's plan for
+handling his crew. Starting the scrubbers
+on the ground floor&mdash;they had to begin
+there anyway, no matter when they began
+to scrub&mdash;was nothing but applying the
+primary force at the best point to get the
+easiest action.</p>
+
+<p>Working them up floor by floor was simply
+directing the activity along both the
+lines of least resistance and greatest accomplishment.
+And doing the stairs on the
+way down was just focusing the activity at
+the right point for making a successful<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
+conclusion&mdash;that is, winding up the job at
+the exit.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 449px;">
+<img src="images/illus065.jpg" width="449" height="640" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Turn back now to the FOUR ELEMENTS
+OF SUCCESSFUL PLANNING
+as we set them down on <a href="#Page_54">page 54</a>. Try
+them out on any successful plan and assure
+yourself that not a point has been
+stretched. By using them we shall learn
+the constructive, creative KNACK OF
+PLANNING.</p>
+
+<p>Stripped of the "clothes" which every
+plan wears&mdash;it's only in the clothing that
+plans differ&mdash;this KNACK OF PLANNING
+may be quite simply visualized by
+some such chart as the one shown on
+the opposite page.</p>
+
+<p>There you see the PRIMARY FORCE&mdash;the
+INITIATIVE that sets the PLAN
+in action. Second, the POINT OF APPLICATION&mdash;where
+you must hit if
+you're going to win. Third, the various
+activities which bring about the SUCCESSFUL
+CONCLUSION. And fourth, all these<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+activities headed up at the FOCUSING
+POINT.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px;">
+<img src="images/illus067.jpg" width="800" height="481" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>It's just like the sailor off the whaler who
+picks up the wooden mallet, hits the
+plunger a resounding crack, sends the
+weight hurtling up the pole, rings the bell&mdash;and
+gets a good 5-cent cigar. Or like the
+golfer who, putter in hand, strokes the ball
+firmly "in the direction of least resistance
+and greatest accomplishment," sees it hit
+the back of the cup and drop in for a par
+four.</p>
+
+<p>Watch these four essentials. Knowing
+them and using them continually will en<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>able
+you to break down every job of
+PLANNING into its component parts&mdash;will
+enable you to develop that important
+side of your managing faculties&mdash;whether
+your work is merely the carrying out of a
+job or shouldering the responsibilities of a
+huge business.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Remember the production manager in
+the shoe factory? Rather sketchy was
+the story of the ANALYSIS he made. Let's
+go a bit more into the details of the PLAN
+which was based on the ANALYSIS. And,
+at the same time, examine it to see if it
+checks with our FOUR ELEMENTS.</p>
+
+<p>You remember he was hired to find out
+why the so-and-so shoes didn't move out
+the door on time. And you'll remember
+that instead of clanking up and down from
+one department to another, he was seen one
+day picking out lasts from a bin in the
+assembly room. He had crept up quietly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
+on the POINT OF APPLICATION. The
+INITIATIVE, you see, or the PRIMARY
+MOVING FORCE, was the boss's order to
+get shoes to moving.</p>
+
+<p>Here (in the lasting room) was his
+POINT OF APPLICATION. The biggest
+factor in slowing up shoes, he found, was
+failure to have lasts ready the instant the
+uppers came down cut and stitched from
+the fitting room.</p>
+
+<p>The shoes were entered into work with
+almost entire disregard of this vital point.
+Oh, yes, they knew they once bought so
+many pairs of lasts on this style or that in
+such and such sizes. And in a vague sort
+of way they tried to regulate the number of
+pairs sent to the cutting room with the
+number of lasts which they thought should
+be available the day the shoes reached the
+assembly department where uppers, insoles,
+bottoms and lasts met together&mdash;or should
+have.</p>
+
+<p>A single missing size could hold up a 36<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>-pair
+lot which included a run of sizes all
+the way, say, from 7&frac12; to 12.</p>
+
+<p>Today it's all so different. A running
+inventory is kept of every active last. Each
+day the lasts which are released as shoes
+leave the finishing room are added to the
+supply on hand; at the same time, the lasts
+which are to be used that day in lasting
+incoming lots are subtracted.</p>
+
+<p>A job? No, a good girl of moderate intelligence
+simply added it to a dozen other
+office chores which she finds time to do
+daily.</p>
+
+<p>The running inventory, you see, is one
+of the various activities which, aimed at the
+focusing point&mdash;the moving of shoes out
+the door&mdash;are necessary to bring about a
+successful conclusion&mdash;the successful conclusion,
+in this particular instance, probably
+being the saving of the young man's scalp&mdash;for
+the boss was certainly out to get it
+the day he saw the young production manager
+pawing over the chunks of maple in
+the lasting room.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Other activities might be mentioned.
+Plenty of them. An automatic conveyor
+which brought back empty racks to the
+point where they were needed. Semi-automatic
+elevators which made possible the
+rapid moving of shoes from floor to floor.
+Twelve-pair lots which simplified the handling
+problem, made the job of picking out
+lasts an easier one&mdash;and all in all did much
+to take the weight off management's
+shoulders. All these and more are the activities
+which were needed to bring about a
+successful conclusion. They were all part
+of the PLAN.</p>
+
+<p>Today, in that shoe factory, the production
+manager sits down for an hour in the
+forenoon and an hour in the afternoon and
+schedules the next half-day's work which
+will go to the cutting room. Two girls
+have been moderately busy getting him the
+information he needs. Sales have been
+brought up to date within half a day. He
+knows how many kid shoes he can cut, how<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+many calf. He knows which patterns can
+be cut by machine, which must be cut by
+hand. He knows that certain patterns take
+longer to go through the fitting room.
+There's extra stitching or fancy perforations.
+He must lay off those. And last of
+all, he knows what he can count on in the
+way of lasts when the shoes hit the lasting
+room.</p>
+
+<p>With his two girls, the young production
+manager does all the work of scheduling.</p>
+
+<p>Actually, there isn't much work. Management,
+you see, has done an awfully nice
+job of PLANNING.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Picture now the manufacturer of
+small electrical appliances who sought to
+lay out new avenues of growth. His was
+pretty much a seasonal business. Electric
+fans constituted most of his bread-and-butter
+production. Early in the year and well
+on into the spring his plant ran full blast
+getting out merchandise for sale during the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
+warm, muggy days when Sirius is in the
+ascendant.</p>
+
+<p>And then along in the summer and fall
+his production curves went into a serious
+decline.</p>
+
+<p>To level them out would have meant
+carrying a load of finished inventory which
+he could ill afford. Other appliances, such
+as hair curlers and driers which might conceivably
+find a ready sale during the holiday
+season, helped considerably&mdash;but not
+enough. The rough places were by no
+means made plane.</p>
+
+<p>Why not, thought he, a line of toys which
+would enable him to utilize his present production
+set-up profitably during the slack
+summer and fall? Why not, indeed?</p>
+
+<p>So he set out to chart a plan of action
+beginning, as you will see from the figure,
+with the furnishing of amusement as the
+PRIMARY FORCE. His POINT OF
+ATTACK was through the 15,000,000
+American boys who love to build something.
+On he went to the various ways of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+getting parents interested as the ACTIVITIES
+WHICH SHOULD LEAD TO A
+SUCCESSFUL CONCLUSION&mdash;to the
+linking up of those activities with the retail
+store as the job of FOCUSING THEM on
+the final achievement&mdash;SALES.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
+<img src="images/illus074.jpg" width="550" height="800" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Only the bare headings on the plan are
+shown in the chart. Nevertheless it shows
+clearly the same knack of using the FOUR
+ELEMENTS which we have been at such
+pains to discuss.</p>
+
+<p>The chart proved helpful, not only in
+guiding the management in its efforts to
+enlarge the scope of manufacturing activities,
+but also in giving the office and the
+sales force a true picture of the business.
+So helpful, indeed, did it prove that it was
+blueprinted. And today every salesman
+has one pasted in his selling portfolio. It's
+the first thing the dealer sees. And it has
+gone far in arousing the latter's interest and
+confidence.</p>
+
+<p>If you were a dealer, would you buy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
+from a factory that was run by guess and
+by gob when you could give your business
+to a concern which you knew was functioning
+in accordance with a sound, well-formulated
+plan?</p>
+
+<p>There, if you please, lies the answer.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>It is not within the purpose of this chapter,
+incidentally, to play any favorites.
+Time must be taken out at this point, therefore,
+to return to the messenger boy who,
+when we left him, had just finished analyzing
+his job.</p>
+
+<p>Let's see now how his plan of action is
+based upon what the analysis taught him.
+Let's examine this elementary job of managing,
+not because it may make better messengers
+of us, but because the examination
+will show how universal this thing called
+management is&mdash;because it will afford one
+more proof of our general axiom that the
+principles of management are ever the
+same, no matter what particular parapher<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>nalia
+of business may be used to cover up
+its old bones.</p>
+
+<p>Did, then, the messenger boy work out
+his plan in accordance with our FOUR
+BASIC ELEMENTS? He did, if he was
+really managing his job&mdash;and from the
+careful analysis he made, we may assume
+he was.</p>
+
+<p>If his trip meant riding a street car, then
+going to the cashier for carfare is his primary
+force. If he can walk, then the
+primary force is simply getting under way.
+Hastening as directly as possible to the car
+line is applying the force at the easiest
+place to get results. Perhaps he might
+have to choose between a slow street car
+which would carry him right to his destination
+for seven cents, and a fast elevated
+which, for a dime, would make better time
+but leave several blocks to walk at the
+other end. Deciding between the two is
+directing the activities along lines of greatest
+accomplishment. And getting his transfer,
+leaving the car, and going straight to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+the address on the message, are nothing
+more nor less than focusing his activities at
+the POINT OF ACHIEVEMENT.</p>
+
+<p>You see? The Colonel's lady in her
+Parisian peignoir and Judy O'Grady in her
+sleazy slip were sisters under the skin. So,
+if we may stretch a physiological point, are
+our messenger boy and the man who made
+the toys.</p>
+
+<p>The plans of both were built on the same
+foundation.</p>
+
+<p>Or take the plan by which the new general
+manager of a tap and die concern rehabilitated
+his company's business.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," he said, reaching for a pad of
+paper and roughly sketching something that
+looked like a funnel and must have been
+because he said it was, "our manufacturing
+plan looked about like this. Up here at the
+top we poured in a lot of orders and hoped
+to high heaven some of them would finally
+trickle through at the bottom.</p>
+
+<p>"Some of them did drop through. Others
+dropped because we poked sticks up the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
+flue. That is to say, an army of stock
+chasers did their level best to keep everyone
+happy.</p>
+
+<p>"It was bedlam around the shop. It took
+three months on an average to complete an
+order.</p>
+
+<p>"I found much of the delay was due to
+certain Victorian notions about set-up time.
+The prevailing idea was to give an operator
+a good big job to minimize that item of
+expense.</p>
+
+<p>"Sometimes the job was so big it took 60
+days to run it through a single operation.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, me! oh, my! the inventories of finished
+goods that piled up. The tote boxes
+full of work in process that cluttered up
+the scenery.</p>
+
+<p>"And the complaints from customers who
+were waiting for orders!</p>
+
+<p>"Funny thing about our business, you
+can't get a customer to accept a couple of
+&frac14;-in. taps in place of the &frac12;-in. one he's
+ordered.</p>
+
+<p>"So I had to revamp the whole shooting<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
+match. First on the program was to find
+out what was made and what was making.
+Then we withdrew from the shop all work
+in process except what actually applied on
+orders in the house or what was needed to
+fill out our stock on an item on which we
+had no order, but on which past experience
+had taught us we'd get one in the course of
+the next 30 days.</p>
+
+<p>"You should have seen the pile of tote
+boxes we stuck under the boilers.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, the next job was to figure out the
+most economical lots to send through the
+works. That figure was arrived at simply
+by choosing such a size that no single
+operation could possibly take more than a
+day. In a word, I made sure that every
+single lot would move every single day.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you get the picture? A steady flow
+of manufacturing. No funnel. No poking
+around with sticks. Today there aren't
+any stock chasers. None is needed. Work
+reaches the stockroom on time. Orders are
+filled complete the same day they come in.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
+Inventories are lower. Oh, heck, need I
+go on?"</p>
+
+<p>No, he needn't. For already he has
+shown us how the motive force was applied
+at the right point to get results. Take this
+plan apart&mdash;or any other plan that really
+works&mdash;and you will see that it is built
+upon the FOUR ELEMENTS OF PLANNING.</p>
+
+<p>They make the PLANNING wheels go
+round.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Now it's time to take your own job of
+planning to pieces and see if it, too,
+does not meet the test.</p>
+
+<p>Here, again, as when the ANALYSIS was
+made, it helps to set things down on paper.
+In charting, you will find that by painstaking
+application of our four principles along
+the lines diagrammed in the figure on <a href="#Page_65">page 65</a>,
+you can LAY OUT A WORKING
+PLAN depending for its approach to perfection
+only upon the amount of thought<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+put into it, and upon the degree of accuracy
+with which the analysis of the job was
+made.</p>
+
+<p>The chart you make may be only a guide
+to the complete plan. Some plans require
+details which utterly preclude any form of
+expression so simple as a chart. Other
+plans can be laid out on the actual chart
+shown.</p>
+
+<p>In any event, the very attempt to put
+your plan into diagrammatic form will
+develop PRACTICABILITY AND ACCURACY
+OF ARRANGEMENT. The
+very necessity of having to indicate and to
+select the primary force back of your job
+or business; having to trace that force
+through the various activities necessary to
+completed work; and then having visibly
+and physically to concentrate all these activities
+at one point&mdash;those very acts which
+making a chart compels you to perform, enforce
+a mastery of the essential details of
+your business and a grasp of their relations
+which every manager should have.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the plan you have isn't as hot
+as you think it is.</p>
+
+<p>An office manager friend of ours was
+pretty proud of his system until one day
+he charted it.</p>
+
+<p>His company was famous for the quality
+of work turned out. But the service it
+gave was wretched. Special instructions
+were often ignored. Delivery dates were
+overlooked. All that sort of thing.</p>
+
+<p>The system looked good enough. The
+office manager said the mistakes were due
+to carelessness. And it looked as if he were
+right. So when something went wrong, the
+nearest employee got a handsome bawling
+out.</p>
+
+<p>At last the sales force jumped on him
+with both feet. Too many promises had
+been broken.</p>
+
+<p>So the office manager was forced to do
+something about it. And, quite by accident,
+made a chart of the ACTUAL PLAN
+OF WORK.</p>
+
+<p>Hello, what was this? Half a dozen<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
+responsibilities were standing around absolutely
+unchaperoned, you might say. Someone
+might come along and pick them up, or
+then again&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>For example, if a customer on the West
+Coast ordered a bill of goods, and then,
+while the order was in work, decided he
+wanted half the goods shipped by boat
+through the canal and the other half by fast
+freight, maybe he'd get his shipments that
+way and maybe he wouldn't. Under the
+prevailing "plan" that particular sort of
+job didn't fall inside any one man's bailiwick.
+No one man was responsible for
+seeing that such orders were executed. No
+"machinery" had therefore been provided
+for taking care of them.</p>
+
+<p>That's only a sample of some of the duties
+which landed&mdash;in his diagrammatic
+representation of the actual plan of work&mdash;somewhere
+off the map. For all the action
+they got, they might as well have been
+painted ships upon a painted ocean.</p>
+
+<p>Methods in general, you see, were pretty<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+much all right. But there was no recognized
+initiative back of the plan. Activities
+were set in motion more or less spontaneously.
+As a result, certain parts of the
+business were left without managerial supervision.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing is surer to expose such a condition
+than actually to chart a plan. In this
+instance, it was simple to recognize "following
+customers' instructions"&mdash;no matter
+when, why, or how they came&mdash;as the logical
+primary force. Then the whole trouble
+was taken care of by centering the responsibility
+upon the chief of the order department.
+From then on, all instructions regarding
+any order cleared through him.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it will be seen that the idea back
+of charting a plan is not to get something
+you can work to as an ideal in carrying on
+a job, but rather to get a PRACTICAL
+FRAMEWORK on which the work can
+actually be done. Then it is at once evident
+whether the "clothes" of the business
+are hanging on the right limb or whether<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
+they have been hung up somewhere on the
+ground where, like as not, nobody will
+bother to pick them up.</p>
+
+<p>Too often the plan turns out to be a
+"sketch."</p>
+
+<p>The builder waits until the architect's
+first sketch has become a plan.</p>
+
+<p>In business it's like that, too.</p>
+
+<p>When finally you know, from ANALYSIS,
+<i>what you want to accomplish</i>, it is not
+difficult to plan the procedure if you start
+right and forget nothing. You start right
+if you take time to figure out the primary
+initiative. You forget nothing if you take
+the trouble to set things down in black and
+white.</p>
+
+<p>And finding the motive force and figuring
+out where to hit with it, is nothing more
+nor less than charting the moves of the
+game until you find a succession of activities
+moving along without back-tracking,
+without duplication, without wasted effort
+or supervision.</p>
+
+<p>Thus cultivating the KNACK OF<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+PLANNING is a long step in the direction
+of becoming a good manager. If you were
+going to try to tell someone else how to
+cultivate the knack of planning, the story
+of the two men shaving in the Pullman
+washroom serves to illustrate the point.</p>
+
+<p>Both men seemed to be in a hurry. The
+first hustled over to one of the wash basins,
+scrubbed his face and hands, dried them on
+a towel. Then he began to shave. That
+finished, he washed the lather from his face,
+dried himself again on another towel, and
+put away his razor. Next came his teeth.
+He brushed them, washed away the traces
+of tooth paste, and dried himself on a third
+towel.</p>
+
+<p>All this time the other fellow was going
+through the same motions&mdash;but in a much
+different order.</p>
+
+<p>He began with his teeth. After he had
+brushed them, he lathered his face. After
+he had shaved, a single wash was enough
+and a single towel did the drying job. He
+had finished his canteloupe and was well<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
+along with his eggs before his companion
+reached the diner. Number two didn't do a
+better job of brushing his teeth, of shaving,
+of washing. But he <i>did</i> do a better job of
+PLANNING.</p>
+
+<p>He started where each operation would
+lead directly and naturally into the next,
+performing each at the proper time.</p>
+
+<p>After all, isn't that precisely what you
+do in planning any part of your business?</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
+<h2>III</h2>
+
+<h2>Organizing the Work</h2>
+
+
+<p>Remember Psmith and Pbrown?
+One could analyze, but didn't know
+what to do with his analysis after he got it.
+The other was an expert planner, but alas!
+his plans were never based upon the solid
+foundation of actual necessity. He planned
+to do something before he knew what had
+to be done.</p>
+
+<p>Psmith and Pbrown, together, looked
+like a grand pair when we introduced them
+in the chapter on PLANNING. Now, after
+taking particular pains to give that impression,
+we shall have to break right down and
+confess in open meeting that they are but
+two numbers of the MANAGEMENT
+TEAM. Probinson is the third.</p>
+
+<p>Probinson ORGANIZES THE WORK.
+Psmith may analyze to a fare-you-well;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
+Pbrown may plan till he's blue in the face&mdash;their
+best efforts are as of nothing worth
+unless Probinson is on hand to organize the
+work of the business. For as surely as
+there is a knack of analyzing and a knack
+of planning, just so surely is there a knack
+of organizing the work.</p>
+
+<p>Thus we approach the third phase of the
+job of managing.</p>
+
+<p>So far we have seen how the successful
+manager starts from the top, working backward,
+to chart his job&mdash;and then, having
+found out what has to be done, builds his
+plan for doing it. Analysis and planning,
+however, will carry him just so far. Unless
+he acquires the knack of organization, he
+will never make a howling success of his
+job&mdash;he will fall just short of being an outstanding
+manager.</p>
+
+<p>The office manager for an Eastern concern
+affords the needed illustration.</p>
+
+<p>P. C.&mdash;those aren't his initials&mdash;knew
+office management from A to Izzard. First
+to arrive in the morning, last to leave at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
+night, he had a tremendous capacity for
+hard labor. But he never seemed to make
+a hole in the pile of work on his desk. It
+grew no smaller fast. Why? Because he
+never, in all his years of managing, learned
+to arrange the division of his work. He
+never learned to deputize it. When his
+mind should have been free for the more or
+less important decisions which crop out now
+and then even in an office manager's life, it
+was all bound around in the necessity of
+performing some silly little routine job
+which any girl of moderate intelligence
+could have done.</p>
+
+<p>His idea of organizing his job was to try
+to do everything himself. And within his
+physical limitations he was a valuable man
+to the company. But how much more he'd
+have been worth had he, at some time in
+his career, acquired the KNACK OF ORGANIZATION!</p>
+
+<p>Don't jump to the conclusion, now, that
+the successful organizer is one who merely
+divides up his work and parcels it out<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
+among a flock of assistants. Don't think for
+a moment that it is nothing but deputization.</p>
+
+<p>Effective organization is far more than
+that.</p>
+
+<p>It is the distribution of work, according
+to its character or urgency, among the facilities
+at hand for doing it according to
+their capacities or cost. And it makes no
+difference whether those facilities happen
+to be men, money, or machines&mdash;or simply
+your own available time.</p>
+
+<p>You deputize work when you use an
+adding machine instead of your head to total
+last month's sales&mdash;when you turn the
+job of packaging breakfast food over to an
+automatic machine&mdash;when you jot down in
+your notebook information which would
+otherwise tax your memory&mdash;when you
+telephone the purchasing agent instead of
+making your legs take you to his office&mdash;when,
+instead of using your own funds, you
+do something on borrowed capital.</p>
+
+<p>Deputization may be any one of these<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
+just as easily as it may be asking your
+assistant to find out why So-and-so's order
+for boys' pants wasn't shipped on time, or
+making him responsible for working out a
+new prospect list.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The office manager of a shoe concern
+found, right after the war, that much of
+his day was spent telling dealers in Kalamazoo
+and Keokuk to be patient, please,
+and they'd get their shoes.</p>
+
+<p>Those were the halcyon days, you'll remember,
+when salesmen went out twice a
+year and told their customers how many
+shoes or ships or sewing machines they
+could have&mdash;and when they could have
+them.</p>
+
+<p>As a result, this particular shoe factory
+was loaded to the guards with orders. Orders
+were shipped when, as and if they
+struggled from cutting room to fitting room&mdash;and
+from then on down to the packing
+department.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Complaints were numerous. They
+weren't exactly complaints, either. Queries,
+rather. Where are my shoes? Can't you
+ship March 15 instead of April 1? And so
+on&mdash;until, as we started to say, the sales
+manager was spending a great part of his
+time dictating replies to his stenographer.
+And she didn't have time for any of her
+other duties.</p>
+
+<p>Analysis proved that the letters were, in
+the main, of three types. Three letters
+were therefore prepared, and each day the
+sales manager went through the inquiries
+and indicated which letter should go to
+which customer. In that way the latter got
+a prompt and courteous reply, as well as
+certain vague information explaining why
+he'd have to wait another month for his
+shoes.</p>
+
+<p>And he was moderately happy. Personal
+attention from the sales manager
+could have accomplished no more. Thus a
+certain part of an executive's and his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
+stenographer's time was deputized to a
+system.</p>
+
+<p>Could the sales manager have gone a step
+further and had his letter mimeographed,
+he would have been DEPUTIZING TO A
+MACHINE the same amount of his own
+and a much larger part of the stenographer's
+time. But, while the customers accepted
+plausible excuses in place of shoes,
+it is doubtful whether the cleverest imitation
+would have taken the place of a real
+typewritten letter.</p>
+
+<p>With the manufacturer of a proprietary
+medicine, however, things are different.
+Women from every part of the country
+write in describing their ailments. It is not
+difficult to classify these letters into a dozen
+groups. And form letters, done in skillful
+imitation of real typing, do the trick quite
+nicely.</p>
+
+<p>That is DEPUTIZING&mdash;just as it is
+DEPUTIZING when the "big boss" calls
+in his assistant and says: "You run this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
+shebang from now on. I've got to see if I
+can't get the K. C. plant out of the red."</p>
+
+<p>And it's DEPUTIZING when a manufacturer,
+forced to increase the size of his
+plant, goes to a real estate operator and
+gets him to buy a piece of land, put up a
+building and rent it to him at a certain
+figure, while he uses his own capital to
+equip and operate the new plant, because
+he can make 15 per cent, say, on his capital
+himself, whereas he has to pay out as rent
+only an amount equal to 8 per cent of what
+land, building, insurance, and so on, would
+tie up.</p>
+
+<p>Fundamentally, then, DEPUTIZING is
+taking something away from the "principal"
+of the job or business and assigning it
+to a "deputy." Principal and deputy may
+be a manager and his stenographer, a department
+head and a filing system, or a corporation's
+capital and a bond issue.</p>
+
+<p>The first stumbling step toward organization,
+therefore, is to RECOGNIZE and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
+DEFINE the PRINCIPAL and the DEPUTIES
+in a given task.</p>
+
+<p>A good manager, though, can't simply go
+and deputize every detail of his job. That
+might be nothing more than the trick of a
+lazy man.</p>
+
+<p>Yet a rising young executive (on our list
+of casual acquaintances) has done exactly
+that. He has carried it to such a fine point
+that he is able to spend three afternoons a
+week with Col. Bogie. He is still rising,
+although some of us have abiding faith in
+the old adage that what goes up must come
+down. In other words, he's rising to a fall.</p>
+
+<p>No, organizing is not deputizing in that
+sense of the word.</p>
+
+<p>In EFFECTIVE ORGANIZING, it will
+be noted from the examples cited, work is
+deputized <i>only when the "principal" is left
+free to do something else more important or
+more profitable</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The "big boss" didn't hand the plant
+over to his assistant until he knew his undivided
+attention was needed elsewhere<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>&mdash;until
+he knew he could spend his time more
+profitably in another phase of the business.</p>
+
+<p>Analyze the conditions under which the
+sales manager delegated part of his dictation
+to a system, and part of his stenographer's
+typing to a duplicating machine.
+You will see that the work deputized fulfilled
+two conditions:</p>
+
+<p>It was work the system and the machine
+could do to advantage&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>And work which he and his stenographer
+could do only at the expense of more important
+work.</p>
+
+<p>Wherever there is delegation of responsibility
+in any true job of managing, the same
+two fundamentals will be seen.</p>
+
+<p>Too often a manager says: "Never do
+anything your subordinate can do for you."
+But it is not good management when turning
+a job over to a subordinate leaves the
+manager idle and unproductive&mdash;with nothing
+on his mind except his hat.</p>
+
+<p>The good manager, whatever may be his
+particular job of managing, follows two<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
+rules when he deputizes or distributes work
+to man, money or machine. Such work, he
+knows, should be:</p>
+
+<p>1. Work which that other person or
+other thing can do to good advantage.</p>
+
+<p>2. Work which the manager would do
+himself only at the expense of something
+more important.</p>
+
+<p>Deputizing your work so that your days
+are free for golfing or yachting is far from
+the spirit of true organization. When a
+Schwab deputizes, another job profits by
+the increased time he is able to give to it.
+Every time he passes on a bit more responsibility,
+the whole enterprise profits through
+his greater freedom for the big sweep of
+the business. And when a manager fails
+because he has never learned to share responsibilities,
+we shudder at his folly&mdash;never
+stopping to think that the sole reason
+it was folly was because there was a bigger
+job for him to do. Deputizing his
+work would have left him free to exercise<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
+big, broad judgment in a way that only
+leisure and calmness could afford.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>A few years ago, two young men went
+into business in a small Illinois town.
+They were honest, industrious, well liked.
+Austin was a born salesman; Black was a
+shrewd buyer. It looked like a good combination
+and the local banker gave them a
+line of credit.</p>
+
+<p>One year went by. Two years. Austin
+and Black were just skinning by. A fair
+living was all they were getting out of the
+business. Volume&mdash;which was what they
+needed&mdash;was increasing, oh, so slowly.</p>
+
+<p>A salesman came along about that time
+and told them some things they didn't
+know. A little more skill in watching the
+stock; cutting out lines which weren't paying;
+trimming purchases on slow-moving
+stocks; pushing specialties before they went
+bad on their hands&mdash;those were some of the
+methods which meant added profits.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It certainly looked like good business to
+hire another clerk so that the partners' time
+would be free for these new phases of the
+business.</p>
+
+<p>The clerk was taken on&mdash;and things began
+to hum. Soon Austin and Black saw
+other steps they ought to take. More attention
+must be given to advertising. That
+meant another clerk. Next came a bookkeeper,
+an assistant bookkeeper.</p>
+
+<p>Trade was increasing, you see, and net
+profits were increasing. Extra clerks were
+needed all right, but the proprietors went
+the whole hog and put on so many that
+they themselves no longer had to stand behind
+a counter. They were both badly
+bitten by the bug of supervision.</p>
+
+<p>Finally the tide turned. It usually does.</p>
+
+<p>And when Austin and Black went to the
+bank one day to get an extension of credit,
+the shrewd old retired farmer on the other
+side of the desk laid down the law.</p>
+
+<p>They got the extension&mdash;but only on certain
+conditions.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The chief condition was that they do
+LESS MANAGING and MORE MERCHANDISING.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 606px;">
+<img src="images/illus102.jpg" width="606" height="600" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>And that's what they are doing today.</p>
+
+<p>There were two managers who organized
+their work, increased their profits. Up to
+a certain point, every time they deputized<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
+their work, it was an advantage, because it
+left them more time for better merchandising.</p>
+
+<p>But they weren't ORGANIZING according
+to our TWO FUNDAMENTALS.
+Literally, they were <i>deputizing all the work
+that others could do</i>&mdash;and not confining the
+work deputized to <i>work they themselves
+could do only at the expense of something
+more important</i>.</p>
+
+<p>How well the chart tells the story! The
+great big white piece of pie marked
+"IDLE" shows exactly where Austin and
+Black went wrong. The worst thing that
+ever happened to them was the day they
+went home from Chicago and tried to run
+their business the way they thought Mr.
+James W. Simpson runs his large retail
+emporium.</p>
+
+<p>Somewhere along the line they tripped
+over the point of vanishing returns and
+kept right on going.</p>
+
+<p>And thus we come to the Scylla and
+Charybdis of our job of ORGANIZING.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
+Remember we are not interested in the
+mere knack of getting someone else to take
+over every last responsibility that can be
+borne by another. Perhaps that may be
+good management for a Schwab&mdash;in so far,
+at least, as it leaves his mind free for the
+exercise of the broad judgment we mentioned
+a while ago. Nor are we interested
+in the sheer industry and application involved
+in doing without assistance everything
+that can possibly be so done, although
+doing it may be equally good management
+for, say, a file clerk. Rather is our interest
+in the KNACK OF SENSING THE DIVIDING
+LINE between WORK to PERFORM
+and WORK to DEPUTIZE. It is
+that ability which is the mark of the successful
+manager.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Where is this DIVIDING LINE?
+How shall we know where to DEPUTIZE
+and when to PERFORM? What
+kind of work shall we turn over to subor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>dinates?
+What shall we reserve for ourselves?</p>
+
+<p>Again, whatever the job or business we
+are engaged in organizing, there are simple
+rules to follow.</p>
+
+<p>But first an illustration which will help
+to make the point.</p>
+
+<p>Consider the credit man for a large concern
+which sold machines on a monthly
+payment plan.</p>
+
+<p>He was always in a jam with the sales
+department. It took too long, complained
+the sales manager, to get credit rulings. It
+was no fun to put a whole lot of work into
+selling the customer, only to have the order
+turned down by the house because of poor
+credit. Why couldn't the credit man give
+them a ruling before they attempted to
+close a sale? Sometimes it took so long to
+get an O.K. that the prospect got all cold
+and went somewhere else.</p>
+
+<p>The treasurer of the company was drawn
+into the picture when the sales manager
+openly declared he'd "get" the credit man.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And it certainly looked as if the sales
+manager had a good case.</p>
+
+<p>"But," protested the credit man, "I've
+made mighty few mistakes. As for delays&mdash;well,
+I don't know how I could work any
+harder."</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe you work too hard," the treasurer
+ventured.</p>
+
+<p>"Hm, if I didn't do what I do, I don't
+know who would."</p>
+
+<p>"Hold on, now, let's get this thing
+straight. You're valuable to the company
+because of your long experience and good
+judgment on credits. When you have all
+the dope on a man, I'll bet my last dollar
+on your decision. The only mistakes you
+ever make are when you hurry your decisions.</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;and here's the point&mdash;you aren't
+any better at digging out the facts than
+either of your two assistants. Yet here's
+what you do. You divide salesmen's requests
+for credit rulings into two groups.
+You take those that run over $500; your<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
+assistants get the others. Each of you does
+his own investigating and digging&mdash;and except
+in puzzling cases, you practically let
+your two men make their own decisions.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illus107.jpg" width="600" height="604" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>"Why, listen. You, the best man we
+have on <i>decisions</i>, spend more than half
+your time <i>digging</i>, while your assistants<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
+spend much of their time making decisions.
+What's the result? Delay, the department
+in a jam, some decisions made in a hurry,
+some by your assistants.</p>
+
+<p>"The trouble with you is, you haven't
+organized your department right." And
+the treasurer sketched the diagram reproduced
+in the upper chart on <a href="#Page_105">page 105</a>.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, man, your job is to keep <i>all</i> bad
+credits off the books&mdash;not just the big ones.
+A bad risk&mdash;whether it's $5 or $5000&mdash;is a
+mistake. You're an expert credit man&mdash;but
+as a MANAGER, you're a WASHOUT.</p>
+
+<p>"This," he added, "is the way you ought
+to set up your department. Then you, the
+best man on decisions, will do all the deciding.
+Your two assistants, who are just
+as good as you are at digging, will spend
+all their time getting you the facts." And
+as he spoke he sketched in the lower chart.</p>
+
+<p>The credit man had erred in the other
+direction from the two retail merchants.
+He wasn't doing <i>enough</i> managing. He was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
+keeping too much work for himself. And
+he was <i>deputizing the wrong kind of work</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The merchants were deputizing work
+they should have done themselves&mdash;the
+general supervision of stocks, advertising
+and sales did not require their undivided
+attention&mdash;and the volume and profits of
+the business wouldn't stand so much unproductive
+expense.</p>
+
+<p>Our credit man, on the other hand, was
+doing work which others could very well do
+for him&mdash;the time he spent on such work
+should have been devoted to other and
+more important responsibilities.</p>
+
+<p>In the story of the credit man, however,
+another fundamental of good organization
+comes to light. Remember how the treasurer
+classified the character of the work to
+be done? Not only was the credit man trying
+to do too much work, but even when he
+<i>did</i> assign work to his assistants, he assigned
+the wrong kind. He deputized, true
+enough&mdash;but he erred in regard to the
+KIND OF WORK HE DEPUTIZED. He<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
+thought he could deputize small credits. It
+didn't take the treasurer long to show him
+that the amount made no difference&mdash;it was
+the character of the work that required
+consideration.</p>
+
+<p>Plenty of managers make that same mistake.
+They judge the importance of the
+task by its physical bigness&mdash;or by the
+amount of money involved&mdash;instead of deciding
+according to the character of the
+work.</p>
+
+<p>Before work can be safely deputized,
+then, it must be MORE INTELLIGENTLY
+CLASSIFIED. And the key to
+better classification is found by dividing the
+job or business into two elements.</p>
+
+<p>One is ENTERPRISE. The other is
+ROUTINE.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enterprise</i> is an arbitrary term which we
+shall choose to indicate those factors of
+work which involve the use of judgment,
+initiative, experiment or speculation.</p>
+
+<p><i>Routine</i> we shall apply to those factors
+which follow settled precedents or rules or<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+come within the range of known ability to
+perform.</p>
+
+<p>Analyze your own job with these two
+terms in mind. The various duties you perform
+will fall readily into one or the other
+of the two classifications.</p>
+
+<p>The things which come under the head
+of routine you have a right to deputize if,
+when you chart both classifications&mdash;in as
+accurate a proportion as possible to the
+capacities of the "principal" and the "deputies"&mdash;you
+find you are not overloading
+the business with unproductive management.
+A simple rule of thumb works here
+about as well as anything: Base the division
+of work on how much or how little of the
+routine the <i>principal</i> can afford to carry.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>You may safely deputize only so long
+as, by so doing, you leave yourself free
+for the more important, more profitable decisions.</p>
+
+<p>Don't forget for a moment, then&mdash;if you<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
+would organize effectively&mdash;that there is a
+tremendous difference between enterprise
+and routine work. Don't waste energy on
+the one. DON'T DEPUTIZE THE
+OTHER&mdash;unless you can effectively organize
+a deputy's capacity for doing it, and
+then only if it pays.</p>
+
+<p>Don't be like the manager who got a
+taste of the savings to be made through the
+application of mechanical handling equipment.
+He bought conveyors&mdash;and more
+conveyors. He was DEPUTIZING the
+handling job to machines. So far, so good.
+But the first thing you know he had a 50-ft.
+conveyor connecting two points in his
+shipping room. It took one man to load it,
+another to unload it. Previously one man
+with a hand truck had moved the packages
+very nicely, and had a lot of time left over
+for other duties. And here he needed an
+extra man&mdash;and owned a costly piece of
+equipment to boot. Under such circumstances
+the conveyor became very expensive
+scenery&mdash;not nearly so nice to look at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
+as Yellowstone Park or the Riviera&mdash;and
+the money invested in it would have bought
+a trip to either.</p>
+
+<p>Thus all savings through deputization
+don't pay. Many a machine will save time
+and labor, but the interest on the investment,
+and upkeep and the depreciation will
+more than eat up the saving&mdash;UNLESS
+THE TIME AND LABOR SAVED CAN
+BE PROFITABLY TURNED TO SOMETHING
+ELSE.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>No attempted exposition of the
+KNACK OF ORGANIZING can be
+complete without something more than
+passing mention of a phase which may be all
+too easily slid over or completed.</p>
+
+<p>When work is deputized, the responsibility
+of the manager does not end with the
+act of deputization. It is the manager's
+responsibility to see that the work is done
+in the simplest and most effective manner.</p>
+
+<p>A sales executive had allowed a bunch of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
+call reports to accumulate. There were
+several hundred of them. So he called in a
+stenographer whose time was hanging
+fairly heavily on her hands, and asked her
+to put them into alphabetical order preparatory
+to filing.</p>
+
+<p>Fifteen minutes later he happened by
+and was startled to see that she had covered
+two desks with the call reports and seemed
+to be making haste very slowly indeed.</p>
+
+<p>She had made a pile for every last letter
+in the alphabet. And every time she picked
+up a report, she had to hunt for the proper
+pile to put it in.</p>
+
+<p>So he showed her how to sort first in five
+major piles&mdash;A, B, C, D in one pile and
+so on. And then to sort each pile again
+into five piles, one for each letter&mdash;and
+finally to sort each individual pile alphabetically.</p>
+
+<p>It sounded like more handling. And perhaps
+it was. But the job of classification
+was greatly simplified. There was no more<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
+hunting for the missing pile. The work
+proceeded quickly and accurately.</p>
+
+<p>A rough illustration. He might have
+gone a step further and deputized part of
+the girl's task to a machine instead of to
+the primitive system described. That is to
+say, he might have seen that she was provided
+with one of the preliminary filing
+baskets which file clerks often use. Then
+the task of sorting alphabetically could
+have been done in a single handling of
+each report.</p>
+
+<p>But whatever the method he made available
+for the girl's use, the illustration still
+serves to indicate that the manager's responsibility
+does not end when he turns a
+job over to a subordinate. It remains his
+care to see that the job is done by the most
+effective method&mdash;not necessarily the
+speediest, but the one which gets the best
+results for the effort involved.</p>
+
+<p>To find this "one best" method, industry
+has evolved a complete technique of time
+and motion study. And merely to hint at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
+what may be accomplished by breaking
+down an operation into its elementary
+operations and observing the time required
+to perform them, becomes part of our task
+in setting down the ways and means of
+organizing.</p>
+
+<p>First we shall find that any job, simple
+or complex, may be divided into three
+parts: make ready, do and put away.</p>
+
+<p>Shaving, for example. First we get
+everything ready&mdash;razor, brush, shaving
+cream, hot water. Then comes the actual
+operation of shaving. And last, cleaning
+up&mdash;rinsing the brush, wiping the razor,
+and putting things back where they belong.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps you're in the same boat as the
+old farmer who, approached by the subscription
+salesman of an agricultural magazine,
+allowed he wa'nt farmin' now half as
+good as he knew how.</p>
+
+<p>Or perhaps you already hold speed records
+at giving your face the once-over.
+But, you see, the whole point in studying
+the job is not aimed at faster shaving, but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+at simplifying the "make ready" and "put
+away" phases of the operation.</p>
+
+<p>For example, the next time you shave,
+try picking up the tube of shaving cream
+with one hand and unscrewing the cap
+while you're wetting your brush with the
+other. It will be awkward as the dickens
+the first time you try it. But try it again
+and again and again. It won't be long before
+you'll be an expert at doing the job
+that way. Finish up that part of the operation
+by screwing the cap back on while you
+are lathering your face with the right hand.
+Does it require a stop watch to point out
+the saving in time that you've made? Oh,
+it won't be easy the first few times, but
+before you know it, you'll have taught
+yourself good work habits.</p>
+
+<p>Take a simple job like the assembly of a
+license bracket in an automobile factory.
+An analysis of this operation (see "Micromotion
+Technique," by F. J. Van Poppelen,
+<i>Factory and Industrial Management</i>, Nov.,
+1930) showed that the right hand was busy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
+all the time, while the left did nothing most
+of the time except hold the piece.</p>
+
+<p>At the risk of getting too technical&mdash;for
+after all we are interested, not so much in
+the details, as in certain broad principles
+of organizing the work&mdash;let us see how the
+operation was performed.</p>
+
+<p>First the operator assembled a number
+of screws and leather washers by picking
+up a screw with the left hand, a washer
+with the right, putting them together and
+laying the assembly aside. Then he picked
+up a bracket with the left hand and a screw
+and washer assembly with the right, placing
+the screw through a slot in the bracket&mdash;continuing
+to hold assembled pieces in
+his left hand while the right was picking up
+a flat washer and assembling it to the
+screw; picking up lock washer, assembling
+it to the screw; picking up acorn nut and
+starting it on the screw; and finally picking
+up an open-end wrench and tightening the
+nut. Then he assembled screw, washers
+and nut to the other side of the bracket,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
+whereupon wrench and bracket were laid
+aside, completing the cycle.</p>
+
+<p>An analysis of these motions, by right
+and left hands, is given in the table on
+<a href="#Page_120">page 120</a>. It illustrates the important point
+that the right hand was busy all the time,
+but for a considerable part of the time
+the left was doing nothing but holding the
+piece.</p>
+
+<p>On pages <a href="#Page_118">118</a> and <a href="#Page_119">119</a> are shown drawings
+of the old and the new assembly methods.
+Likewise, the lower table on <a href="#Page_120">page 120</a>
+analyzes, by right and left hands, the motions
+required by the new method. Note
+first that fewer elements&mdash;17 as against 26&mdash;are
+required. And note that both hands
+are productively employed with shorter distances
+to travel for stock and with decreased
+effort.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 640px;">
+<img src="images/illus120a.jpg" width="640" height="443" alt="Analysis of this assembly job shows ..." title="" />
+<span class="caption">Analysis of this assembly job shows ...</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 640px;">
+<img src="images/illus120b.jpg" width="640" height="453" alt="... that the right hand was busy all the time...." title="" />
+<span class="caption">... that the right hand was busy all the time....</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 640px;">
+<img src="images/illus120c.jpg" width="640" height="445" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 640px;">
+<img src="images/illus121a.jpg" width="640" height="443" alt="Comparison with the old method" title="" />
+<span class="caption">Comparison with the old method</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 640px;">
+<img src="images/illus121b.jpg" width="640" height="448" alt="... shows both hands productively employed...." title="" />
+<span class="caption">... shows both hands productively employed....</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 640px;">
+<img src="images/illus121c.jpg" width="640" height="446" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h4>TABLE 1</h4>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='right'></td><td align='center' colspan='2'>LEFT HAND</td><td align='center'>RIGHT HAND</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 1.</td><td align='left' colspan='2'>Pick up screw</td><td align='left'>Pick up leather washer</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 2.</td><td align='left' colspan='2'>Assemble</td><td align='left'>Assemble</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 3.</td><td align='left' colspan='2'>Idle</td><td align='left'>Lay aside</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 4.</td><td align='left' colspan='2'>Pick up bracket &nbsp; &nbsp; </td><td align='left'>Pick up screw and washer assembled</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 5.</td><td align='left' colspan='2'>Hold bracket</td><td align='left'>Assemble</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 6.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Pick up flat washer</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 7.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Assemble</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 8.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Pick up lock washer</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 9.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Assemble</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>10.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Pick up nut</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>11.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Start on thread</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>12.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Pick up wrench</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>13.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Tighten nut</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>14.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Lay wrench aside</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>15.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Pick up screw and washer assembled</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>16.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Assemble to other side of bracket</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>17.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Pick up flat washer</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>18.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Assemble</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>19.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Pick up lock washer</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>20.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Assemble</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>21.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Pick up nut</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>22.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Start on thread</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>23.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Pick up wrench</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>24.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Tighten nut</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>25.</td><td align='left'> &nbsp; "</td><td align='left'>"</td><td align='left'>Lay wrench aside</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>26.</td><td align='left' colspan='2'>Idle</td><td align='left'>Lay bracket aside</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<h4>TABLE 2</h4>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='right'></td><td align='center'>LEFT HAND</td><td align='center'>RIGHT HAND</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 1.</td><td align='left'>Pick up screw and transport</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 2.</td><td align='left'>Position on block</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 3.</td><td align='left'>Pick up leather washer and transport</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 4.</td><td align='left'>Position on screw</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 5.</td><td align='left'>Pick up new bracket and transport</td><td align='left'>Pick up assembled bracket; lay aside</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 6.</td><td align='left'>Position bracket on block</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 7.</td><td align='left'>Pick up flat washer and transport</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 8.</td><td align='left'>Position on screw</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'> 9.</td><td align='left'>Pick up lock washer and transport</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>10.</td><td align='left'>Position on screw</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>11.</td><td align='left'>Pick up nut and transport</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>12.</td><td align='left'>Start nut on screw</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>13.</td><td align='left'>Position driver</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>14.</td><td align='left'>Tighten nut</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>15.</td><td align='left'>Position driver to 2nd nut</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>16.</td><td align='left'>Tighten nut</td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>17.</td><td align='left'>Release driver and move assembled bracket 2 in. forward on block &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; </td><td align='left'>Same</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>The new set-up consists of a hardwood
+block, shaped to fit one side of the bracket
+when assembled, and nailed to the bench.
+The open-end wrench was replaced by a
+screw-driver with a socket wrench to fit the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
+acorn nut, suspended on a spring in front
+of the operator. The miscellaneous containers
+for holding the small parts were replaced
+by a supply of sheet-metal duplicate
+trays, so that the various parts could be located
+in the most convenient position.
+(This arrangement was not used in the accompanying
+illustrations because it obscured
+the view.)</p>
+
+<p>In a word, then, the number of elements
+was decreased by one-third&mdash;and practically
+all of the elements in the new method
+require less time than the similar or corresponding
+element in the old method. The
+distance of travel for stock has been
+shortened, parts are grasped more easily,
+better and faster tools are provided, effort
+is decreased, and both hands are productively
+employed.</p>
+
+<p>Need the imagination be stretched to the
+breaking point to see how a job involving
+the work not of one man, but of several,
+may be similarly organized and similarly
+improved?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A second illustration will serve to show
+the application to group work (see "Motion
+Study Applied to Group Work," by
+J. A. Piacitelli, <i>Factory and Industrial Management</i>,
+April, 1931, page 626).</p>
+
+<p>The operation studied here involved
+cycles of approximately eleven seconds' duration,
+performed by a group of seven men.
+The material handled consisted of rolls of
+roofing weighing about 50 lbs. each. Many
+of the elements in the cycle were obviously
+fatiguing. The rolls had to be lifted, during
+transfers from one worker to another,
+and rolled along a horizontal runway. The
+trucker lifted the completed roll and placed
+it on his truck. While the rate of production
+was limited by process and speed of
+equipment, the chance to cut cost and
+fatigue prompted the study.</p>
+
+<p>Examine the equipment layout before
+the study was made (it is shown on
+<a href="#Page_124">page 124</a>), and follow the operation. A roll of
+roofing paper approximately 8 in. in diameter
+and 36 in. long was wound about the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
+mandrel of a winding machine by one of
+the workers. The roll was taken off and
+passed to another worker who wrapped a
+sheet of paper about it and pasted it in
+place. When the roll was wrapped, he had
+to lift the roll, turn and deposit it on the
+runway. The next man inserted a bag of
+nails, a can of cement and an instruction
+sheet into the core of the roll. To do this,
+he was forced to turn and bend almost to
+floor level to get his supplies.</p>
+
+<p>Next the roll was passed along to two
+men who, from opposite sides of the runway,
+placed protectors and muslin caps on
+the ends of the roll. It was then rolled
+along to another man who placed gummed
+paper bands about the ends and pushed the
+roll to the end of the runway where the
+trucker placed it on a truck and wheeled it
+into storage.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px;">
+<img src="images/illus126.jpg" width="800" height="600" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The movie camera, which is gradually
+finding wider industrial use in the search
+for the "one best" method, was used to
+record the work of this group. It supplied
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
+not only a photographic record of the working
+place and surrounding conditions, but
+also a simultaneous record of time and
+method employed by each worker regardless
+of speed. It was then possible to study
+overlapping cycles and to analyze the
+methods to the desired degree of accuracy&mdash;and
+thus to transfer parts of the cycle of
+one operator to that of another, thus effecting
+a better distribution of work and shortening
+the cycle of the person on whom the
+production of the group depends&mdash;thereby
+increasing the productivity of the entire
+group.</p>
+
+<p>These analyses showed immediately an
+unequal distribution of work. Again, from
+the equipment layout made after the study,
+let us follow through and see what changes
+were effected.</p>
+
+<p>First the wrapper was freed from turning
+and lifting the roll from his table by the
+introduction of an elevator which lifted the
+roll to an inclined runway. The roll then
+moved from place to place by gravity when<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
+released by foot-operated trips. The pasting
+problem was solved by using a trough
+the length of the paper, open on the bottom
+and equipped with squeegee lips like the
+mucilage bottle on your desk. A pile of
+wrapping paper with the far edges of the
+sheets inserted under the trough supplied a
+pasted sheet every time one was drawn toward
+the operator. The trough was covered
+with a hinged plate which permitted
+the roll to pass over it to the elevator. It
+was found, by eliminating the fatiguing
+elements in this man's work and simplifying
+his cycle of motions, that the time
+would be so reduced that he could easily
+take over the work of the man who placed
+the cement and nails in the core of the roll.
+The instruction sheet was placed in the roll
+by the winder, who had ample time for this
+additional task. The pile of sheets was
+placed at his right under a date stamp so
+that he could date each sheet and slip it
+into the roll just before it stopped.</p>
+
+<p>Simplifying the cycle of the men who<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
+placed the caps on the ends of the roll enabled
+them to take over with ease the work
+of the man who had placed the gummed-paper
+bands around the ends. Thus each
+man capped and banded his own end,
+whereas formerly the bander had had to assume
+an awkward and fatiguing position to
+reach the far end. And last, by placing a
+redesigned truck at the end of the incline,
+the completed rolls landed in the truck, and
+the trucker was able to care for two machines.</p>
+
+<p>The method finally established was recorded
+on instruction sheets, and the existing
+premium was modified to provide additional
+incentive. Although, as stated at the
+outset, the rate of production was limited
+by the machine, substantial savings resulted
+from the study. Production has
+been maintained with 4&frac12; men instead of
+7; fatigue has been greatly lessened; cost
+has been reduced about 26 per cent; average
+earnings of the group have increased
+about 19 per cent.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Thus the search for the "one best"
+method becomes an important factor in organizing
+the work.</p>
+
+<p>We might go on and show how this group
+work was organized in accordance with our
+two fundamentals, but the purpose of introducing
+this illustration and the one preceding
+it was, after all, to show that the
+<i>principal's</i> responsibility, after deputizing
+work, ends only when he has shown the
+<i>deputy</i> the most effective method of doing
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, we must hasten on to the task
+of handling the "help." We have seen
+that the entire FABRIC OF MANAGING
+rests upon the knack of ORGANIZING;
+that organizing the work must be preceded
+by PLANNING; and that planning must
+be based upon ANALYSIS. And now, having
+organized, we must learn how to handle
+the "help"&mdash;which is a task met in every
+job involving managing.</p>
+
+<p>And what job, big or small, does not involve
+MANAGING?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
+<h2>IV</h2>
+
+<h2>Handling the "Help"</h2>
+
+
+<p>There used to be a good old golden
+rule of thumb that was plenty good
+enough for the good old rule-of-thumb
+days. It was: <i>If you would be fair, treat
+all your men alike</i>.</p>
+
+<p>As a matter of fact it wasn't a bad rule
+in those halcyon days for man wanted then
+but little here below.</p>
+
+<p>And he got it.</p>
+
+<p>Those were the days when a certain
+plant of a certain electrical concern was
+known affectionately among the employees
+as "Siberia."</p>
+
+<p>With good reason, too, for it was the
+dreariest, bleakest place in winter you can
+imagine. And a transfer to it was like
+nothing so much as a sentence to Siberia.</p>
+
+<p>Well, well, their plant today is as com<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>fortable
+a place to work in as you'll find
+anywhere in the country; that concern today
+sets a high standard of employer-employee
+relationships; those same workers
+who, thirty years ago, shivered at the bare
+thought of pulling on their pants and trekking
+over the barren wastes to "Siberia,"
+are today comfortably retired on modest
+pensions which don't do a thing but help
+keep the wolf from the door.</p>
+
+<p>Yet the management, in those days beyond
+recall, would have shown you that <i>all
+men were treated alike</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps that was the trouble. Anyway,
+if you asked the management today how to
+handle "help," dollars to doughnuts the
+answer would come closer to being: To be
+fair, TREAT EVERY MAN DIFFERENTLY.</p>
+
+<p>A suggestive statement&mdash;significant because
+it is indicative of tremendous change
+in the relationships of capital and labor, of
+employer and employee.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Fifteen years ago a lad graduated from
+an Eastern university. His folks were poor
+but proud&mdash;as Mr. Alger used to say&mdash;but
+managed to see Phil through. Phil had
+made a good record in school&mdash;and some
+good friends. Through one of them he got
+a letter to Mr. H&mdash;, the head of an old
+established firm of stockbrokers&mdash;and the
+letter got him a job.</p>
+
+<p>The job paid $5 a week. Even in those
+days there wasn't much left over after carfare
+and lunches had been deducted.</p>
+
+<p>But Phil was "learning the bond business."
+He wouldn't be worth even $5 a
+week the first six months. After that,
+maybe.</p>
+
+<p>He stuck. Graduated from "running the
+street" to a stool in the stock clerk's cage.
+Came the New Year and Phil found an
+extra dollar in his pay envelope. He asked
+the cashier if there wasn't some mistake.
+There wasn't.</p>
+
+<p>Two days later he got a job in a factory
+near his home at $12 a week. Told Mr.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
+H&mdash; he was leaving. Was offered $15 to
+stay. Wouldn't.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. H&mdash; confessed later that he had let
+the most promising prospect in years slip
+through his fingers. All&mdash;if you ask us&mdash;because
+it was a fixed policy of the house
+to treat all alike.</p>
+
+<p>For years it had been doing just exactly
+that. Each June it took on a new crop of
+young men to "learn the business." Each
+young man got $5 a week. No favorites.
+But nine out of every ten came from prosperous,
+even wealthy families. That $5 bill
+was nothing in their young lives. Their
+families were glad to have them work for
+nothing, for they were getting an insight
+into the investment business&mdash;and some
+day, whether they became bond salesmen
+or just plain manufacturers and solid bankers,
+that knowledge would be worth its
+weight in gold.</p>
+
+<p>Phil was the tenth man. Mr. H&mdash; knew
+well enough that he couldn't get by on $5<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
+a week. <i>But there was the rule.</i> It
+couldn't be broken.</p>
+
+<p>No, we can't wind up by telling how
+Phil did well in the pants factory, married
+the boss's daughter and owns the business
+today. That would be wandering far from
+the truth. He couldn't "see" the boss'
+daughter for one thing&mdash;and besides the
+pants factory wasn't such a much.</p>
+
+<p>No, you'll find Phil today doing a
+bang-up job in an Ohio plant. It says
+"General Manager" on his door. And as
+far as he is concerned, it was the best thing
+that ever happened when Mr. H&mdash; treated
+him like all the rest.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. H&mdash;, though, is still taking them on,
+still paying them $5 a week&mdash;or maybe it's
+$10&mdash;still treating them all alike. He gets
+a lot of bright young fellows into the business.
+But every so often he passes up a
+chance to get an exceptionally promising
+boy&mdash;because he is fair and treats them all
+alike. What's a rule for, anyway, except<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
+to break? Mr. H&mdash; will never know that
+it's the <i>exception</i> that proves the rule&mdash;particularly
+when you are dealing with human
+values.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>But more later of the newer viewpoint.
+For the moment we are talking about
+handling the "help"&mdash;and making it sound
+as though it were solely the problem of the
+big employer.</p>
+
+<p>Not so. It is a problem with every one
+of you in business&mdash;unless you do nothing
+but sit in one spot and do one job from
+nine to five, five days&mdash;we hope&mdash;a week.</p>
+
+<p>The editor who wants a manuscript
+typed; the salesman who must get long distance;
+the man at the machine who has to
+get tools from the toolroom; the errand
+boy with his bundle to carry&mdash;all have the
+same problem. To all of them it is just as
+important in relation to their own scale of
+things as it is to the manager of a business
+with ten or a hundred or a thousand em<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>ployees.
+It is the eternal problem of GETTING
+OTHERS TO COOPERATE.</p>
+
+<p>Some men are good at it; others are total
+failures.</p>
+
+<p>Many a man on the bench or at the machine
+has the ability, knowledge and experience
+which qualify him for a job as
+foreman or even superintendent. But he
+can't hold down a foreman's job because
+he hasn't the knack of getting hearty,
+whole-souled cooperation from others.</p>
+
+<p>Foremen, too, have changed, you see.
+Today the successful foreman is less often
+the hard-boiled driver, more often the
+student of his job, of his men, of himself.
+He has learned that, <i>to be fair, he must
+treat every man differently</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Often we hear of Bill's losing his job as
+a mechanic, not because he didn't know
+his job, not because he couldn't run every
+lathe in the shop, but because he "couldn't
+get along" with the other men. And we
+think, Poor Bill! it's too bad he's so quick-tempered.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Generally we blame it on "temperament."
+Yet some of the very best handlers
+of men are the crabbiest, crankiest gents
+in seven states. Others are as cold as steel.
+And like as not the warm-hearted, generous
+man is a monumental failure at handling
+his "help."</p>
+
+<p>No, when you check specific methods of
+handling people&mdash;methods which are successful
+for the most part&mdash;something much
+more fundamental than temperament will
+be found.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 40%;" />
+
+<p>Mrs. Thompson was in charge of the information
+desk and switchboard in a medium-sized
+New England factory. A well-bred
+Englishwoman in her late thirties, the
+boss liked her for her pleasant voice over
+the phone, for her unfailingly courteous
+treatment of visitors.</p>
+
+<p>But if the boss liked her, almost no one
+else did. Salesmen particularly complained
+of her crankiness and of the unsatisfactory<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
+service they got. Young Bacon was an
+exception, though. He always got what he
+wanted.</p>
+
+<p>One day the office manager asked him
+how on earth he did it.</p>
+
+<p>Bacon thought he was being taken for a
+ride, but finally answered: "Why, that's a
+cinch. I take Mrs. Thompson's job seriously."</p>
+
+<p>Pressed for details, he supplied them.</p>
+
+<p>"I never try to kid her. I never bawl
+her out. When I want a number I treat her
+as though the switchboard were her own
+particular business and I a customer. Just
+as if she had something to sell, and I something
+to buy. When I ask for some special
+service, she gives it to me. Or she tells me
+why she can't."</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards the office manager took the
+trouble to look into the situation. The
+switchboard job was a life saver to that
+woman of 38. She needed the money in
+the first place. And besides the job gave
+her a sense of responsibility. She was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
+proud of her job, proud to know that the
+men in the business depended upon her for
+certain important services. She couldn't
+understand, then, when a salesman picked
+up his telephone and barked a command at
+her as though she were a piece of office
+furniture, or patronized her as if she were a
+child, or kidded her as if she were a 20-year-old
+flapper. It made her cranky to be
+treated like that. And when someone like
+Bacon came along with his method of treating
+her work as a responsible piece of business,
+it put her on her mettle.</p>
+
+<p>The solution was obvious. The office
+manager talked Mrs. Thompson and Mrs.
+Thompson's job over with the salesmen. It
+wasn't long before they changed their tactics,
+with resultant improvement in the
+quality of the telephone service they got.</p>
+
+<p>Sounds like a case of knowing the foibles
+of the person involved, doesn't it?</p>
+
+<p>It's more than that.</p>
+
+<p>Edna is a switchboard operator, too. She<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
+is pretty and agreeable. And you couldn't
+blame the boys for liking to hang around.</p>
+
+<p>No one thought much about that until
+some of the more serious-minded men discovered
+they couldn't get a thing out of
+Edna. She was too busy listening to Joe's
+latest exploit with one hand, and plugging
+Jack in with the other. She played favorites
+in putting through long distance calls,
+took advantage of the friendly feeling
+everyone had toward her. The telephone
+service in that office just folded up and
+died. There wasn't any.</p>
+
+<p>The obvious remedy was to fire Edna.
+But the manager was a cagey old codger.
+Beneath a rough exterior beat a heart of
+gold, and somehow he felt that maybe it
+wasn't all Edna's fault. Why, blast it,
+she'd been treated like a pretty, petulant
+girl. Why shouldn't she act like one?</p>
+
+<p>A memo was the result. It announced
+the creation of a new department. "Telephone
+Service" was its name&mdash;and Edna
+Blank was its head. It was just as much<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
+a part of the business as the accounting department,
+or any other.</p>
+
+<p>He had sense enough to PUT DEFINITE
+RESPONSIBILITIES UPON
+EDNA'S SHOULDERS. He did it not
+only to instill in her a sense of duty, but
+also to impress her with his confidence in
+her ability to perform those duties. Then,
+under the rose, he instructed the men to
+treat her just as they treated the capable
+woman in charge of the accounting end of
+the business. They did. And Edna rose to
+the occasion, took pride in her work, discouraged
+the hangers-on, played no favorites
+in putting through calls, and became
+as good an operator as ever you'd hope
+to see.</p>
+
+<p>Now, then, scratch the surface and what
+do you find? Not that it was simply a
+case of understanding Mrs. Thompson's
+and Edna's foibles. Not at all. Mrs.
+Thompson stopped being cranky and became
+accommodating, Edna dropped her
+irresponsible ways and became an alert, at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>tentive
+operator WHEN THEY GOT
+THE FEELING OUT OF THEIR WORK
+THAT THEY WERE TRANSACTING
+BUSINESS FOR THEMSELVES.</p>
+
+<p>And need we look for further proof of
+our postulate that TO BE FAIR, YOU
+MUST TREAT ALL YOUR ASSISTANTS
+DIFFERENTLY? You must know
+them, know yourself, if you would get
+whole-hearted cooperation. That is fundamental
+in any attempt to acquire the
+KNACK OF HANDLING THE "HELP."</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>For there <i>is</i> a KNACK of handling the
+help. It <i>can</i> be acquired. This we say
+despite the difficulty of analyzing the relations
+of one person to another, despite the
+seeming impossibility of setting down a rule
+which will work universally.</p>
+
+<p>Take a man running a peanut stand, a
+hosiery mill, or a steel plant. There are
+three things he wants for himself: (1) to
+build up and hold a good trade; (2) to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
+please his customers; (3) to get a fair
+profit.</p>
+
+<p>Remember these three wants when you're
+dealing with your help.</p>
+
+<p>Get your "help"&mdash;it may be the switchboard
+operator or it may be a thousand
+automobile workmen&mdash;in the position of
+wanting those same three things. The
+help's job is his "trade," you are his customer;
+and his compensation is his profit.</p>
+
+<p>When you do that, you have an employee
+or helper who is going to give you the
+hearty cooperation you're looking for&mdash;just
+so long as you are a good customer, and his
+compensation for helping you is a fair
+profit.</p>
+
+<p>Next time you go into a store, try to
+keep that thought fixed in your mind.
+Everyone working in a business, you see,
+is selling his services&mdash;and when you use
+those services you are the buyer. Perhaps
+you pay in money for the services rendered&mdash;perhaps
+you simply repay him by mak<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>ing
+his day's work easier. In either event,
+treat your requests for service as though
+you and he were transacting a business that
+is mutually, but individually, profitable,
+and the cooperation which is otherwise
+usually begrudged will be automatically
+forthcoming.</p>
+
+<p>But that, you say, is PERSONALITY.
+Then how do you account for this?</p>
+
+<p>A. is a big, breezy salesman. He busts
+into a hotel, calls the "greeter" behind the
+desk by name, asks for 1209 "same as last
+time"&mdash;and gets all kinds of real service
+from porters, bell-hops and waiters.</p>
+
+<p>It looks as though it might be personality.</p>
+
+<p>Yet right behind him walks B. He's a
+horse-faced bird who never smiles&mdash;wiry,
+monosyllabic&mdash;asks brusquely for a $4
+room&mdash;gets it. And gets everything else
+he asks for&mdash;just as promptly as A. does.</p>
+
+<p>No, it can't be personality. For there's
+C. and there's D. C. is A's twin&mdash;and B.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
+and D. were cast in the same mold. Their
+tips are no smaller; their demands no more
+unreasonable. Yet C. gets the poorest sample
+room in the house. And D's trunk is
+always the last one the porter brings up.</p>
+
+<p>These aren't exaggerated cases. Hotel
+men will tell you they happen every day.</p>
+
+<p>Why, then, did A. and B. rate such good
+service while their fellow knights of the
+road got none? Because when A. and B.
+asked for something, there was about the
+transaction a well-defined air of "you've
+something you can do for me&mdash;I've something
+I want done&mdash;what say we trade?"
+Whereas, when C. and D. came along, regardless
+of the personal manners involved,
+there was created the atmosphere of a one-sided
+business deal. C's breeziness had in
+it a touch of condescension, or D's brusqueness
+was the brusqueness of assumed superiority.</p>
+
+<p>Thus is it seen, when we forget all about
+personality and study effects, that coop<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>eration
+is gained by trading with the "help"
+according to the "help's" business.</p>
+
+<p>Trade with an elevator man as though
+running an elevator were his own business&mdash;trade
+with the chief chemist as though
+the laboratory were his store&mdash;and they'll
+trade with you and be eager to make a
+satisfactory deal of it.</p>
+
+<p>Under this fixed policy&mdash;or rule&mdash;the
+proper attitude to take towards this or that
+class of "help" becomes a matter of automatic
+selection.</p>
+
+<p>And that is how we begin to acquire the
+KNACK OF HANDLING THE HELP.
+Thus do we step high, wide and handsome
+on our road to the KNACK OF MANAGING.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Now enters the business of COMPENSATION.
+There must be compensation
+in a trade if all hands are to be satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>Everyone is in business because he wants<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
+something. Everything that will help him
+to get what he wants, he will like to do;
+everything that hinders him, he will dislike
+to do.</p>
+
+<p>When you get ready to "trade" with
+someone, therefore, consider what the other
+man wants&mdash;that is, if you want to get the
+most help or cooperation out of the transaction.
+Then consider what you can give
+in return&mdash;balancing his wants.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 640px;">
+<img src="images/illus148.jpg" width="640" height="335" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>There must be that balance in every satisfactory
+deal.</p>
+
+<p>Examine the chart on this page. It will
+save a lot of paper and ink because it shows
+diagrammatically what must happen if<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
+there are to be satisfactory arrangements
+between you and your "help".</p>
+
+<p>A word or two by way of interpretation
+may serve to show how it works out.</p>
+
+<p>When the "help" is in your employ, the
+compensation&mdash;what you can give and he
+can take, leaving both parties satisfied&mdash;is
+his monthly pay check or his weekly envelope.
+Or it is the rate of commission.
+And bearing upon it are such things as local
+living conditions, and so on. When the
+"help" is someone not in your direct employ,
+then the compensation is regulated by
+the effect which performing the service you
+require, has on the success of the "help's"
+regular day's work.</p>
+
+<p>For the moment, let's us return to the
+messenger boy whom we left in Chapter
+III just as he was about to deliver a message.</p>
+
+<p>Or, at least, let's talk about another messenger
+boy whose task of managing his job
+differs in no wise from the first's&mdash;or, for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
+that matter, from any other job of management.</p>
+
+<p>This boy worked in a large Chicago
+building and his job was carting light but
+bulky packages back and forth between his
+company's quarters and its customers'.
+There were a dozen other boys, and most
+of them complained of having trouble getting
+up and down in the elevators. It
+seemed that the starter took delight in making
+the boys wait for the freight elevator&mdash;even
+when there was plenty of room in
+the others.</p>
+
+<p>But this particular boy&mdash;an impudent
+youngster with a "fresh" way about him&mdash;had
+no trouble at all. So the office
+manager was anxious to know "how come."</p>
+
+<p>He posted himself where he could
+observe without being seen. And sure
+enough, in came the fresh messenger boy
+with a bundle almost as big as himself.
+Down he set it, favored the starter with
+an impudent military salute and leaned<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
+nonchalantly up against the wall&mdash;well out
+of the way.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello, feller," said he breezily; "lemme
+know when there's room. And don't keep
+me waiting too long, or I'll be out on my
+ear."</p>
+
+<p>Picture the manager's astonishment when
+the starter replied:</p>
+
+<p>"Git in here, then, and git in quick," and
+let him in the first car going up.</p>
+
+<p>Somewhere, somehow, that impudent
+youngster had struck a responsive chord.
+Instinctively&mdash;or else because of past experience
+with elevator starters&mdash;he had put
+the problem of that particular starter's
+service on a business basis. He had put it
+in the starter's power to perform his own
+work without trouble, and to feel at the
+same time that he was "a man of affairs."</p>
+
+<p>He was able to show his authority without
+taking it out on the boy.</p>
+
+<p>Analyze this "trade" with the "compensation"
+chart in mind. Do you not see the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
+"balance" of interests? Do you not see
+the starter's feeling that the service he rendered
+was his own business, that the boy
+was one of his customers, that the avoidance
+of trouble was his compensation or
+profit?</p>
+
+<p>Is there not in this very unimportant
+transaction the BALANCE OF INTERESTS
+suggested by our little chart?</p>
+
+
+<p>At this stage of our approach to the
+KNACK OF MANAGEMENT, a
+ready objection comes to mind. We are now
+dealing in human values and relationships&mdash;and
+you can't chart them. Analysis, planning,
+organization&mdash;certain rules may be
+set down which will enable one to attain
+some degree of effectiveness in carrying
+them out.</p>
+
+<p>But human nature? You can't deal with
+it by rule.</p>
+
+<p>The objection is well founded. You<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
+can't chart human nature&mdash;but you <i>can</i>
+study the approaches to it and chart the
+laws that appeal to it.</p>
+
+<p>Our chart on <a href="#Page_146">page 146</a> is based upon what
+successful managers have learned about
+finding the wants of the human element
+when it works, and is constructed to supply
+a method of supplying those wants with as
+much productiveness and as little friction
+as possible.</p>
+
+<p>When you buy a new car and "put it to
+work," your first care is to find out its
+wants&mdash;how much you must give to get
+what it has to "sell"&mdash;what parts need oil
+and grease and so on.</p>
+
+<p>So, IF YOU WANT TO GET WORK
+OUT OF A HUMAN BEING, your best
+bet is to find out what that human being
+needs and must get in return for the work
+he performs or the service he gives.</p>
+
+<p>Some men seem to be born with an instinct
+for finding this out. But if you
+aren't built that way, there is no reason<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+why you can't drill yourself to the same
+end by deliberately studying each case.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>See, for example, how a study of this sort
+gets the most out of men in a large New
+England plant where modern management
+methods are making serious inroads into
+the old rule-of-thumb ways of doing things.</p>
+
+<p>This concern was confronted with the
+very serious problem of maintaining a
+steady flow of product from one manufacturing
+department to another. Because
+of the nature of the product, skids and
+power trucks had been chosen as the equipment
+best suited for the job.</p>
+
+<p>Skids and lift trucks are effective handling
+units. No argument about that.
+Their introduction into any factory which
+has been using more primitive handling
+methods should automatically cut costs.
+But they save precious little time and
+money when they aren't working, or when
+they are being worked uneconomically.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The problem, then, as this concern saw
+it, was how to be sure that Big Ed hadn't
+shipped off for a quiet smoke far from the
+maddening crowd&mdash;or that Little Joe
+wasn't arranging his work so that there'd
+be a handful of skids left over at closing
+time&mdash;moves that called for overtime pay.</p>
+
+<p>In other words, to get 100 per cent efficiency
+out of very efficient handling equipment,
+the management realized that it must
+take out some sort of insurance which
+would guarantee Little Joe's and Big Ed's
+and all the other truckers' being engaged
+in gainful occupation eight hours&mdash;count
+'em&mdash;each and every day.</p>
+
+<p>The best insurance seemed to be a central
+dispatching system. No need to go
+into the details of its operation. Suffice
+it to say that it went a long way toward
+directing the efforts of the truckers along
+gainful lines. There came to be an orderliness
+which had never existed before.
+When a foreman put in a call for a trucker,
+he knew that the move would be made<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
+without unnecessary delay. In fact, orders
+were placed into the truckers' hands within
+three minutes of the time the foreman
+picked up his telephone to call the central
+dispatching department.</p>
+
+<p>BUT&mdash;no attempt had been made to sell
+this system to the truckers. It met with
+some little resistance, just as anything new
+does. And there are ways, as who does
+not know, of beating any "game" designed
+to get more work out of human beings.</p>
+
+<p>So the management&mdash;after many a huddle
+over this particular situation&mdash;decided
+upon a bonus plan.</p>
+
+<p>And they set about selling it to the
+truckers&mdash;somewhat in the fashion about to
+be narrated.</p>
+
+<p>"See here, men," said the manager in
+effect, "I'm going to put this plan right
+up to you and let you decide for yourselves.
+We've looked into it carefully.
+You men average 30 moves a day. So
+we've chosen 40 moves as the starting
+point. We're sure you can make 40 moves<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
+a day without tearing your shirts&mdash;and
+from there on, you begin to collect. For
+the next five trips you get a bonus of a
+nickel over and above your day rate; for
+the next five trips your bonus is 6 cents;
+and so on.</p>
+
+<p>"So, if a man makes 50 trips, his day's
+pay is not $4.50, but $5.05 because he has
+earned 55 cents in bonus. Do you get it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah, we get it all right, all right. We
+do twice as much work for 50 or 60 cents
+more a day. How come? Why don't we
+get paid extra for <i>all</i> the moves we make
+over 30?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because we're just like you. The company
+wants to make more money. We've
+shown you how it can be done and we'll
+split pretty much 50-50. But we won't
+give you all the extra profit any more than
+we'd think of keeping it ourselves. Now
+think it over tonight and if you want to
+make $5 or $5.50 a day instead of $4.50,
+come 'round in the morning and we'll talk
+some more about it."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Came only the dawn.</p>
+
+<p>The truckers were pretty sure that they
+were being had, although they couldn't
+figure out just how. 'Tis ever thus when
+the old order yields place to new.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing left to do but try a
+new tack. So the manager talked to his
+fifteen or eighteen truckers again. And
+this time he proposed taking two of them
+and putting them on the new plan. After
+a little conversation to assure themselves
+that there was no skullduggery afoot, the
+truckers consented. And Little Ed and Big
+Joe (sic!) were nominated.</p>
+
+<p>Little Ed made 62 moves the very first
+day and was as fresh as a daisy when the
+5 o'clock whistle blew. Big Joe made 56
+trips and looked none the worse for it.
+Ed's bonus was $1.98; Joe's was $1.28.
+If you check up, we're sure you'll find those
+figures are wrong. But cheer up, we aren't
+nearly so much interested in the exact
+amounts of Ed's and Joe's earning as we<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
+are in the ultimate results and in the principles
+involved.</p>
+
+<p>We may pass quickly over the former.
+Of course the men were convinced. And
+Big Ed would have beaten any trucker to
+a gentle pulp who wouldn't have been convinced.
+In a week's time, those truckers
+were making nearly twice as many trips a
+day&mdash;and their earnings had increased by
+something like 35 per cent.</p>
+
+<p>If you don't believe it, look at the figure
+on <a href="#Page_158">page 158</a>. See what happened to production?
+Yes, that pretty dotted line&mdash;the
+one with the big dip in it&mdash;marks labor
+costs per trip.</p>
+
+<p>The manager, you see&mdash;and now we
+come to the principle involved&mdash;had
+MADE HIS HELP SEE THAT THE
+BONUS PLAN AMOUNTED TO GIVING
+THEM WHAT THEY WANTED.
+And of course, that was more pay. At the
+same time it got the company what it
+wanted&mdash;more production.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1024px;">
+<img src="images/illus160.jpg" width="1024" height="559" alt="CHART OF RECORDS
+OF DISPATCHING ELECTRIC TRUCKS
+
+1922-1929" title="" />
+<span class="caption">CHART OF RECORDS
+OF DISPATCHING ELECTRIC TRUCKS<br />
+
+1922-1929</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Fundamentally, the manager's system<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
+was precisely like the messenger boy's.
+And you can prove that in a trice by charting
+it on the same old basis.</p>
+
+<p>Try it. It won't take you more than a
+couple of minutes.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>This might go on for a long, long time.
+Innumerable examples might be introduced
+into this text to illustrate this balancing
+of wants and its importance to the
+successful conduct of this business of MANAGING&mdash;to
+illustrate that your own
+personal method of seeking cooperation or
+service is more a matter of reason than innate
+ability to "size up the other fellow."</p>
+
+<p>There is, in a word, method back of this
+"KNACK OF HANDLING THE HELP."</p>
+
+<p>The method is this. Ask yourself each
+time this simple question: What does your
+"helper" want?</p>
+
+<p>Does your stenographer want to leave
+promptly at five so she can get ready for
+an evening of whoopee? Or does she have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+to catch a particular train in order not to
+find a cold supper waiting for her at home?
+Then why not fix things so she can work
+during the hours she is paid to work&mdash;and
+so she can leave at the hour when pay
+stops?</p>
+
+<p>Can your truckers live in the style to
+which they are accustomed on $4.50 a day?
+Or will $5.50 enable them to put away a
+bit for a rainy season? Then why not
+arrange a wage payment method which will
+help them to do it?</p>
+
+<p>And above all, tell them WHY.</p>
+
+<p>To do such things is not philanthropy.
+Successful managers will tell you IT IS
+NOTHING MORE NOR LESS THAN
+GOOD BUSINESS. Strip from their
+methods the individual characteristics required
+by the individual conditions involved.
+What do you find? EVERY
+LAST ONE OF THEM IS BASED ON
+OUR PRIMARY RULE. That, you remember,
+is to find out what you want from
+your "help" and what your "help" wants<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
+from you; then a way to make the two
+meet on a ground of mutual satisfaction&mdash;the
+compensation you can give and the
+compensation they can take&mdash;and BOTH
+OF YOU GET WHAT YOU WANT.</p>
+
+<p>Don't you see, to grasp the real KNACK
+OF HANDLING "HELP," the necessity
+for making what you want from them balance
+with what they want from you? If
+there isn't that balance, there won't be
+whole-souled COOPERATION. To paraphrase
+what Henry Ford once said&mdash;or
+what one of his collaborators made him
+say: "See that each man in doing the best
+he can for you is also doing the best he can
+for himself."</p>
+
+<p>Thus, by digging in and finding out what
+everybody involved in the situation wants,
+it is possible to get the utmost in cooperation
+and loyalty. Where one man does so
+instinctively, another gets equally good results
+by making a deliberate study along
+the lines we have pointed out.</p>
+
+<p>Hundreds of jobs don't get done<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
+promptly and enthusiastically for no other
+reason than that they aren't interesting.
+They can be made interesting if you get
+the right line on what your work requires,
+what your "help" wants, and then make a
+common meeting ground.</p>
+
+<p>Mark Twain knew all about the KNACK
+OF MAKING WORK INTERESTING
+AND ATTRACTIVE.</p>
+
+<p>Remember his description of Tom Sawyer's
+whitewashing the fence? Even if you
+do, it won't hurt to read it again.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Tom. It was on a summer's morn
+just made for swimming or fishing&mdash;and he
+had to work.</p>
+
+<p>Along comes Ben, one of his cronies.
+Tom begins to do some tall thinking. But
+let's not try to improve the original:</p>
+
+<p>"He took up his brush and went tranquilly
+to work....</p>
+
+<p>"Ben said: 'Hello, old chap, you got to
+work, hey?'</p>
+
+<p>"Tom wheeled suddenly and said: 'Why,
+it's you, Ben! I warn't noticing.'<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'Say&mdash;I'm going in a-swimming, I am.
+Don't you wish you could? But of course
+you'd ruther <i>work</i>&mdash;wouldn't you? Course
+you would!'</p>
+
+<p>"Tom contemplated the boy a bit, and
+said: 'What do you call work?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Why, ain't that work?'</p>
+
+<p>"Tom resumed his whitewashing, and
+answered carelessly: 'Well, maybe it is, and
+maybe it ain't. All I know is, it suits Tom
+Sawyer.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh come, now, you don't mean to let
+on you like it?'</p>
+
+<p>"The brush continued to move.</p>
+
+<p>"'Like it? Well, I don't see why I
+oughtn't to like it. Does a boy get a
+chance to whitewash a fence every day?'</p>
+
+<p>"That put the thing in a new light. Ben
+stopped nibbling his apple. Tom swept his
+brush daintily back and forth&mdash;stepped
+back to note the effect&mdash;added a touch here
+and there&mdash;criticized the effect again&mdash;Ben
+watching every move and getting more and
+more interested, more and more absorbed.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Presently he said: 'Say, Tom, let <i>me</i>
+whitewash a little.'</p>
+
+<p>"Tom considered, was about to consent;
+but he altered his mind. 'No, no&mdash;I reckon
+it wouldn't hardly do, Ben. You see, Aunt
+Polly's awful particular about this fence&mdash;right
+here on the street&mdash;you know&mdash;but
+if it was the back fence I wouldn't mind
+and she wouldn't. Yes, she's awful particular
+about this fence; it's got to be done
+very careful; I reckon there ain't one boy
+in a thousand, mebbe two thousand, that
+can do it the way it's got to be done.'</p>
+
+<p>"'No&mdash;is that so? Oh, come now&mdash;lemme
+just try. Only just a little&mdash;I'd let
+you, if you was me, Tom.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Ben, I'd like to, honest Injun; but
+Aunt Polly&mdash;well, Jim wanted to do it, but
+she wouldn't let him; Sid wanted to do it,
+and she wouldn't let Sid. Now don't you
+see how I'm fixed? If you was to tackle
+this fence and anything was to happen to
+it&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, shucks, I'll be just as careful.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
+Now lemme try. Say&mdash;I'll give you the
+core of my apple.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, here&mdash;no, Ben, now don't. I'm
+afeard&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"'I'll give you all of it!'</p>
+
+<p>"Tom gave up the brush with reluctance
+in his face, but alacrity in his heart. And
+while the late Steamer Big Missouri worked
+and sweated in the sun, the retired artist
+sat on a barrel in the shade close by, dangled
+his legs, munched his apple, and
+planned the slaughter of more innocents.
+There was no lack of material; boys happened
+along every little while; they came
+to jeer, but remained to whitewash. By
+the time Ben was fagged out, Tom had
+traded the next chance to Billy Fisher for
+a kite, in good repair; and when he played
+out, Johnny Miller bought in for a dead
+rat and a string to swing it with&mdash;and so
+on, and so on, hour after hour. And when
+the middle of the afternoon came, from being
+a poor poverty-stricken boy in the
+morning, Tom was literally rolling in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
+wealth. He had, besides the things before
+mentioned, twelve marbles, part of a jew's-harp,
+a piece of blue bottle glass to look
+through, a spool cannon, a key that
+wouldn't unlock anything, a fragment of
+chalk, a glass stopper of a decanter, a tin
+soldier, a couple of tadpoles, six firecrackers,
+a kitten with only one eye, a brass
+doorknob, a dog collar&mdash;but no dog&mdash;the
+handle of a knife, four pieces of orange
+peel and a dilapidated old window sash.</p>
+
+<p>"He had a nice, good, idle time all the
+while&mdash;plenty of company&mdash;and the fence
+had three coats of whitewash on it! If he
+hadn't run out of whitewash, he would have
+bankrupted every boy in the village."</p>
+
+<p>Mark Twain didn't have the worker on
+the modern assembly line in mind&mdash;nor the
+stenographer tapping her typewriter&mdash;but
+he <i>did</i> see that THE WORK MEN CAN
+DO BEST IS THE WORK THAT IS
+MADE ATTRACTIVE TO THEM&mdash;either
+through the money in it or the sheer
+success in doing it. Find out what's wanted<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
+to make your work attractive, then find
+out what you can give that will meet those
+wants. Then you get not only good work,
+but loyalty in it and enthusiasm for it.</p>
+
+<p>But you can't fool your "help"&mdash;at least
+not for long. If you play upon the desire
+for responsibility, you must give it up to
+capacity. If it is promotion you hold out
+as a reward, you must give it when it is
+deserved. If you play upon the desire for
+good pay, you must give it as far as the
+job will allow.</p>
+
+<p>And the nearer you come to giving all
+you can afford for the service received, in
+as nearly as possible the form that is
+wanted, whether in courtesy or in coin, in
+reasonable hours or in rapid advancement,
+in self-respect or in reciprocal service, THE
+MORE COOPERATION YOU MAY
+EXPECT.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span></p>
+<h2>V</h2>
+
+<h2>Safeguarding the
+Business</h2>
+
+
+<p>Now for the last lap. Our journey has
+run four-fifths of its course. We
+have passed through the successive stages
+of analysis, planning, organization and handling
+the "help." They have all been
+child's play compared with the most important
+part of the manager's work&mdash;the
+task of GUARDING THE WELFARE OF
+A BUSINESS OR A JOB. All other managerial
+cares fade into insignificance before
+the necessity of conserving the general good
+of the business.</p>
+
+<p>A business rises. A business falls. Its
+life must be protected. And, as has been
+said so often, "the bigger they are, the
+harder they fall."</p>
+
+<p>A certain concern in New York State
+had been enjoying prosperity for lo! these<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
+many years. Established 'way back in the
+"Roaring Forties," it had passed through
+three generations of the same family.</p>
+
+<p>Each morning at nine the president was
+at his desk opening the mail into three piles&mdash;taking
+great care that no checks fell into
+the waste basket&mdash;as might easily have
+happened had the task been delegated to
+the office manager or to his assistant.</p>
+
+<p>It was unfortunate, of course, that no
+orders reached the stockroom until ten
+o'clock. But a president must earn his
+salt. Besides, is there a better way to keep
+one's finger on the pulse of the business
+than to know what's in the mail?</p>
+
+<p>Let's take a look at those three piles,
+though. Here is the daily "take"&mdash;a fat
+pile of checks&mdash;with the big one from San
+Francisco laid carefully aside so that it can
+be admired a couple of extra times before
+being placed on the top of the heap.</p>
+
+<p>Reverently the president carries the receipts
+to his head bookkeeper. With slow
+and majestic tread, almost.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And over here are the orders.</p>
+
+<p>It's a fat pile, too.</p>
+
+<p>The president casts one last lingering
+glance at the &frac12; doz. of something or other
+ordered by a famous name&mdash;and, secure in
+the knowledge that Fifth Avenue shoppers
+are still clamoring for his product, hands
+the sheaf to his office manager who has been
+pretty fidgety for the past hour and a half
+because he knows the stock department is
+going to have a heck of a time making the
+afternoon express.</p>
+
+<p>Ho, hum! It's a busy life, this being
+the president of a successful concern doing
+over a million a year. Why, when grandfather
+started in, he didn't have a&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>But that's another story, and there's that
+third pile.</p>
+
+<p>A slim little pile scarcely demanding a
+president's attention&mdash;or a sales manager's.
+A few complaints. A retailer out in Butte.
+That San Antonio jobber Winchester had
+such a hard time landing. What's this?
+Didn't get the buttons he ordered? Stuff<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
+and nonsense&mdash;well, Henry will write nice,
+consoling letters and those will be those.</p>
+
+<p>Now Henry is a good kid. Just out of
+school. Learning the business. Writes a
+bang-up letter.</p>
+
+<p>But the San Antonio jobber doesn't want
+nice, consoling letters. He wants to know
+how come his pants came without the special
+buttons he ordered. And those special
+buttons are so important in his life that he
+has written to the head of the firm&mdash;whom
+he'd met at the Atlantic City convention&mdash;and
+he expects the head of the firm to
+tell him what he wants to know.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come," the president would have
+said to him, had he walked into the inner
+sanctum, "you know I can't give my time
+to such petty details&mdash;I've got department
+heads who attend to such matters. When
+you want an extra thirty days&mdash;or want to
+talk over handling our goods exclusively in
+the Southwest&mdash;why, those are the things
+for you and me to spend our time on."</p>
+
+<p>But the San Antonio jobber, had he been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
+there, and had he been asked, would have
+rejoined:</p>
+
+<p>"I, too, have my department heads. I,
+too, leave many of the trivial details to
+them. But if a customer came to me with
+a complaint, I wouldn't care a rap what it
+was about. It wouldn't be that particular
+complaint which would interest me. It
+would be the mere fact that he had a complaint
+at all. A dissatisfied customer is a
+dissatisfied customer, and there isn't anything
+in my business that would get quicker
+and more personal attention from me."</p>
+
+<p>Well, well, businesses come and businesses
+go. Our imaginary conversation will
+never take place between the president and
+the San Antonio jobber. The San Antonio
+jobber took his business elsewhere some five
+years ago. The president still comes in at
+nine and opens the mail. He never drops
+a check in the wastebasket. There are still
+three piles in front of him. Three slim
+piles. Even the pile of complaints is slim.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
+There isn't enough business left to produce
+many complaints.</p>
+
+<p>Henry? Oh, he got to writing letters
+to an heiress who was wintering on the
+Riviera. And when her daddy died, he
+wrote such a nice, consoling letter&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>But we wander far afield. We're out
+in the rough somewhere, and it's going to
+take a real recovery to get us back on the
+fairway if we don't watch out.</p>
+
+<p>For one thing and for instance: <i>Is</i> the
+customer always right?</p>
+
+<p>A one-time shoe salesman reports the following
+incident in a Chicago department
+store. He was talking with the head buyer
+in the middle of the sales floor when up
+marched a thoroughly angry woman with
+the shoe adjuster tagging on behind.</p>
+
+<p>"These shoes," she pointed to a pair of
+satin pumps in the adjuster's hands, "are
+too small."</p>
+
+<p>"And she wants a new pair after having
+worn them half a dozen times," added the
+adjuster.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Who sold them?" asked the buyer.</p>
+
+<p>"Jones."</p>
+
+<p>"Go get him."</p>
+
+<p>Came Jones. "But, madam," he protested,
+"don't you remember I warned you
+that you needed a 5&frac12;? And don't you remember
+that I also suggested an A instead
+of a double A? And when you felt certain
+you wanted the 5AA, didn't I suggest that
+you try them again at home before having
+the cut-steel buckles sewn on?"</p>
+
+<p>Well, yes, that was all quite true. But
+it didn't offset the fact that the shoes were
+too small and she couldn't wear them.</p>
+
+<p>Two guesses as to what she got. And
+if each guess is a satin pump you may step
+quickly and quietly to the head of the class.
+She got a new pair of shoes.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," sighed the buyer, when peace
+and quiet had been once more restored,
+"they tell me upstairs the customer is always
+right. Certainly it's true that one
+dissatisfied woman has more effect on our
+business than four or five satisfied cus<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>tomers.
+Oh, no, she won't go and tell her
+friends about the fair treatment she got
+here, but oh, man, if we'd let her get away!
+What a story that would have been&mdash;in
+spite of admitting she was wrong!"</p>
+
+<p>Innumerable examples of that sort of
+thing might be introduced. There is the
+story of the North Shore matron who had
+an expensive rug sent out, kept it three
+months and then decided she didn't like the
+color. In its place she wanted a certain
+oriental, but oh, dear, it was just a bit too
+big for her purpose.</p>
+
+<p>Of course the rug was cut to fit. And
+when she decided a week later that it, too,
+wouldn't do and went and bought another
+rug somewhere else, the management
+thanked her kindly and credited her account
+with the full amount. It knew that
+the life of the business had to be protected,
+and every now and then found it distinctly
+worth while to take time out to LOOK
+AFTER THE WELFARE OF THE
+ENTERPRISE.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And here we face another question:
+"Must the manager occupy his time with
+every minor complaint, just because it happens
+to be one which comes from a good
+customer?"</p>
+
+<p>To answer it, we must go back to our
+New York State manufacturer and strip
+the scenery from his particular enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>His is a business of few customers. Except
+for a half-dozen famous retailers whose
+accounts cost more than they earn, but to
+whose stores he may point the finger of
+gesticulating pride as being among his outlets
+(it would be better for him if they were
+among his souvenirs), his business is handled
+through thirty or forty jobbers. Naturally
+each of his customers is a very
+important unit in the business.</p>
+
+<p>The loss of one account is serious.</p>
+
+<p>So a customer to him is an outlet for
+business greater than the trade a big department
+store gets from a hundred good
+customers. One customer to him is as a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
+score of customers to the manufacturer who
+sells to the retail trade.</p>
+
+<p>To him, then, a complaint from a San
+Antonio jobber that the buttons on his
+pants aren't right has all the importance
+that the same complaint, echoed by a hundred
+different customers, would have to the
+retail merchant. Looked at in this light,
+is it not logical that any complaint&mdash;no
+matter how trifling its nature&mdash;should have
+his prompt, personal attention? Had he
+but known it, the letters he turned over to
+Henry were danger signals. They warned
+of the need for GUARDING THE WELFARE
+OF THE BUSINESS&mdash;LOOKING
+AFTER ITS GENERAL GOOD
+HEALTH.</p>
+
+<p>And that task, as we have said, overshadows
+in importance every other task
+which the successful manager, in his daily
+business of managing, may have to perform.</p>
+
+<p>The maintenance foreman in a New
+England mill walked into the agent's office<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
+one day&mdash;why the manager of a mill is
+called an agent is just one of those things&mdash;and
+said:</p>
+
+<p>"Something's got to be done about that
+freight elevator over in Building C, Mr.
+Dearle. I've monkeyed with it and monkeyed
+with it. It's just worn out, and one
+of these fine days, it's going to drop a
+couple of floors and pile up in the basement."</p>
+
+<p>And one fine day it did. You see, the
+manager was all tied up in a labor controversy.
+Labor squabbles aren't any fun.
+And presumably their speedy settlement is
+far more important to the business than the
+matter of what to do about a tired freight
+elevator which has seen far better days.</p>
+
+<p>So Frank the maintenance man had to
+run along and sell his papers. And the elevator
+kept on working.</p>
+
+<p>The day it quit, Henry Fitts was aboard.
+And when the elevator man picked himself
+up off the cellar floor, Henry couldn't.</p>
+
+<p>But why go into that? Henry's broken<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
+leg and Henry's lost time cost the company
+more than a new elevator. And Henry was
+one of the company's best technical men.
+Lots of bum sheets and pillow cases got
+made and shipped and returned while
+Henry was laid up. The damage done by
+that falling elevator could hardly be measured
+in dollars.</p>
+
+<p>Now, then, settling the differences of
+capital and labor was a big job to the mill
+agent. Saying "No" to Frank was merely
+postponing a trifling detail. Yet what a
+heap of difference a "Yes" would have
+made. That defective elevator, because it
+endangered lives, overshadowed all else in
+importance, had the agent viewed his job
+from the standpoint of CARING FOR
+THE BUSINESS. THE KNACK OF
+SAFEGUARDING ITS WELFARE lies
+not merely in doing tasks that preserve the
+safety of the business or job, but also in
+the ability to discern when such tasks are
+really mere trifles, and when, because of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
+their potential effect, they are details vital
+to the life of the business.</p>
+
+<p>How is a manager to know when he shall
+devote his entire attention to settling wage
+rates, and when listen to the maintenance
+man's song? How can the president of a
+million-dollar concern tell when it is good
+business to drop a tremendously important
+managerial task and listen to a customer's
+tale of woe about pants buttons&mdash;and personally
+set the complaint right?</p>
+
+<p>How, on the other hand, are you to know
+when to lay off such tasks?</p>
+
+<p>Some few men&mdash;seventh sons of seventh
+sons&mdash;may be born with that instinct or
+knowledge. The rest of us must cultivate
+a true knack of conserving the business&mdash;a
+knack which carries with it the finest
+sense of discrimination and the best of business
+judgment.</p>
+
+<p>And not until we have acquired this important
+knack and added to it all the other
+knacks we've been talking about, can we
+consider ourselves successful managers.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
+Not until then shall we have acquired THE
+TRUE KNACK OF MANAGING.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>"I've learned how to pick out the tasks
+that are vital to the business and make
+them my own special responsibilities," a
+successful newspaper publisher once said,
+"by setting up a sort of yardstick to judge
+every job that comes along.</p>
+
+<p>"My paper was in the 'red' when I
+bought it. It was a weak sister. It carried
+the least advertising, had the least circulation
+and exercised the least influence. Today
+its lineage is nearly one-third more than
+its nearest competitor's&mdash;and circulation
+has more than doubled in four years, so
+now it tops all the rest.</p>
+
+<p>"I analyzed my job something like this:
+I bought the paper because I thought I
+could make money with it. To make
+money, I must carry a large volume of advertising.
+To get advertising, I must show
+results to advertisers. To show results, I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
+must make my paper a real "home" paper&mdash;a
+paper really read and appreciated&mdash;not
+merely a paper with which people are only
+satisfied. To get that kind of circulation,
+I must put into the paper what people who
+read a paper at home wouldn't 'miss for
+anything.'</p>
+
+<p>"What did this analysis show me? Simply
+this: That while more advertising and
+more circulation meant more profits, the
+attitude of <i>my</i> readers toward <i>their</i> paper
+meant even more&mdash;it meant business life
+or death.</p>
+
+<p>"So my yardstick is never to let anything
+get by me that might change our
+standing with our readers. The toughest
+business problem is shoved aside when
+something comes up that means loss of
+respect among our public.</p>
+
+<p>"I made it my first business to get to
+know our type of reader. Never was a
+good hand at guessing. So had to learn
+about human nature.</p>
+
+<p>"After a lot of hiring and firing, picking<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+and sorting, coaching and drilling, I got me
+four women who could go out and get exactly
+the kind of information I had to have.</p>
+
+<p>"Each of the four took a section of the
+city. Each section represented a distinct
+type of home-dweller&mdash;and it takes all
+kinds of people to run a world, you know&mdash;or
+to buy a newspaper.</p>
+
+<p>"Every week those four women canvassed
+close to a thousand homes between
+them. Their method was to tell the housewife
+that we were going to deliver our
+paper free for a week&mdash;and hoped they'd
+take it in and read it. A week later they
+went back over the same ground, soliciting
+subscriptions, of course, but also gathering
+information for me.</p>
+
+<p>"More important than getting a subscription
+was finding out why a woman
+subscribed&mdash;or why she wouldn't subscribe.
+They asked what the women thought about
+certain special features.</p>
+
+<p>"I got a lot of good pointers. For instance,
+I'd been a bitter opponent of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
+'funnies.' But I put them back when I
+learned that people really wanted them.
+You see, I was getting a good cross section
+of the likes and dislikes of all my customers
+and my prospects.</p>
+
+<p>"After the 'funnies' were in&mdash;and after
+various other changes had been made&mdash;I
+sent my four scouts back once more to tell
+of the improvements. Then we checked the
+new reports with the old ones. There was
+plenty of deadwood. I knew there would
+be. But there was enough good live stuff
+to furnish food for thought.</p>
+
+<p>"Some needed changes couldn't be made
+right away. Many people preferred a competing
+paper because it carried more department
+store ads. Well, I couldn't do
+anything about that for the moment. But
+I could and did improve the sports page,
+put in more home-stuff for the women, more
+society news, funnier 'funnies' and so on.
+Those were things our readers wanted
+which I could gradually give them.</p>
+
+<p>"Then it was time to tackle the adver<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>tising
+problem. I had my ammunition.
+Carried a bunch of reports around with me.
+Told the merchants frankly what I was
+up to. Showed them the reports from
+women who said they'd subscribe if we had
+more advertising as well as the reports from
+those who did subscribe for certain good
+reasons.</p>
+
+<p>"And I quoted a rate on what we were
+worth at the time, not on what I knew we
+could do in the future. I didn't begrudge
+a full day spent in one small store, if that
+small store advertised the stuff I felt was
+wanted by the people I wanted for readers.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, they came 'round one by one&mdash;the
+stores and the people. And I think
+the results prove that I was keeping busy
+on the right tasks&mdash;the tasks on which the
+welfare of my business depends&mdash;and not
+on the tasks that mean only increased
+<i>volume</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"How does it affect my readers? That
+is my yardstick for measuring everything
+about my business. That is my guide to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
+whether or not I should worry. If a little
+error in last night's paper has the power
+to affect my readers' opinion of the paper,
+then it's my job to run it down to earth,
+find out how it happened&mdash;and see that it
+never happens again. But if there's a big
+advertising contract in the offing which
+won't affect the permanent standing of the
+paper in any way whatsoever&mdash;except to
+increase the number of dollars that come
+clinking into the coffers&mdash;I don't give thirty
+seconds of my time to it. I hire a sales
+manager to do that. That's his job. The
+other's mine.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll spend a week with my managing
+editor trying to figure out a way to get our
+afternoon editions on the street a few minutes
+earlier. It may involve some minor
+change in the pressroom running into only
+a few hundred dollars&mdash;but it does affect
+our permanent place in the sun. On the
+other hand, the managing editor can go
+ahead and spend $5000 of my good money
+on something that has nothing to do with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
+our readers' interest, and all I'll do is okay
+the expenditure. He'll do the worrying this
+time."</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>You and I aren't interested in the way
+this publisher went about building up
+his newspaper. That is to say, we don't care
+anything about his female quartette who
+went around and sang the paper's praises.
+His methods were sound, of course, and
+merit attention. But our interest right now
+is in his division between the tasks he
+watched personally and the tasks he left
+his business manager or his managing editor
+to work out for themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Strip off the publishing scenery&mdash;just as
+a moment ago we stripped off the individual
+characteristics of a totally different business&mdash;and
+you find that HIS DIVISION
+IS APPLICABLE NOT ONLY TO ANY
+BUSINESS, BUT TO ANY SINGLE JOB.
+Which means once more that that's the way
+the successful manager of a steel mill or of a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
+peanut stand will divide the tasks which
+confront him from nine to five every day.</p>
+
+<p>Who are your "readers"?</p>
+
+<p>Every business, every job has its "readers"&mdash;some
+element which, once injured or
+neglected, affects the welfare, the health,
+the profits, or the ultimate success of the
+business or job.</p>
+
+<p>A file clerk may acquire tremendous
+speed in putting letters away in drawers,
+but if she can't get you the correspondence
+you need at a moment's notice, what good
+is all her speed? Your stenographer may
+keep up with you in your best and fastest
+moments of dictation, but if her finished
+letters don't say what you said, her facility
+isn't worth the proverbial thin dime. An
+accountant may work out a cost system that
+reflects conditions like a mirror, but what
+of it if his reports come out so late that
+they're ancient history by the time the
+plant manager gets them? A miller may
+produce a flour that contains more vitamins
+than any other flour on the market, but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
+if the dough won't rise properly, it isn't
+much use. A small-town banker may have
+splendid reserves and a strong cash position,
+but he's going to lose your business
+if he asks 6&frac12; per cent interest and 3 per
+cent commission to extend your mortgage
+when the big-city bank offers you the same
+loan at 6 per cent interest and 2&frac12; per cent
+commission. That messenger boy of ours&mdash;no
+chapter is complete without him&mdash;may
+run all the way from the Tribune
+Tower to State and Madison, but what if
+in his haste he loses the message?</p>
+
+<p>There is, then, in every business or job
+a VITAL ELEMENT. And no one can
+do a good job of managing unless he finds
+out definitely what that element is, and
+then proceeds to guard it through all the
+hustle and bustle of cost cutting, labor saving
+and so on.</p>
+
+<p>One manager put it pretty plainly to his
+billing clerk. The latter tried out some
+short cuts. They were splendid from the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
+billers' point of view. Saved time and
+money. But the customers weren't used
+to any of this new-fangled stuff and kicked
+like steers. They couldn't check the invoices.
+Or wouldn't.</p>
+
+<p>"They just won't use their heads. It's
+all as simple as ABC," protested the billing
+clerk when the manager called him in on
+the carpet. "All they've got to do is check
+the numbers on the cartons against the
+numbers on the invoices. There's no need
+of all the description we've been giving
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"Right you are, Johnson," replied the
+manager. "But sometimes you bump up
+against a stone wall when you try to educate
+the trade. Oftentimes life's too short.
+Your system saves us money. It's good up
+to a certain point. That point is where
+your labor saving and cost cutting begin
+to have an adverse effect on sales or sales
+satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>"I've seen you playing bridge at noon,"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
+he went on. "You score honors above the
+line, don't you? Below the line you keep
+your game score. If you hold 80 or 90
+honors in your hand, it affects your play.
+But you can't give your entire attention to
+scoring above the line, for after all it's the
+score below which determines who wins
+games and rubbers.</p>
+
+<p>"You can score your job in pretty much
+the same way. All this work you're doing
+along cost-cutting lines is fine. Those
+things determine the size of your department's
+profits. Sketch them out on a card
+and check them over and add to them. But
+below the line put down the main object of
+your work&mdash;to have your invoices correct
+and to have them so plain that no customer
+can fail to understand them. Keep plugging
+away above the line. Don't let me
+discourage any effort that will reduce costs.
+They're all-important. But at the same
+time keep your eye below the line and make
+sure your game score is piling up. That<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
+sort of thinking and playing wins in business
+just as it does in bridge."</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>It's a long time since we've drawn any
+charts. Let's study the newspaper publisher's
+policy and see if he wasn't doing
+mentally just what the manager recommended
+that his billing clerk do on paper.</p>
+
+<p>You remember he made it his business
+to find out all about the error in last night's
+paper and to prevent its occurring again.
+That was something which, to his way of
+thinking, affected the permanent standing
+of his paper. When the department store
+stood ready to start a big institutional campaign
+which meant nothing more to his
+business than a big increase in volume, he
+left the job of closing the contract to his
+hired help. But when, in another newspaper,
+the same department store advertised
+a new type of radio which he thought
+his readers ought to know about, once more
+he made it his own business to go out and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
+get a few lines for his own paper and his
+own readers.</p>
+
+<p>Then, if we keep tally&mdash;and consider
+whether they "score" above the line as increased
+profits, or below the line as permanent
+success, our card will look something
+like the chart on this page.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px;">
+<img src="images/illus195.jpg" width="800" height="590" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The handling of the error in last night's
+paper is something that will score down
+where the success of the business lies&mdash;and
+to lose on it means losing a vital point.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
+In short, it affects the permanent standing
+of the business enterprise. So does the securing
+of the radio advertisement. It's
+business news and something his readers
+must know about. So after it he goes. On
+the other hand, the institutional advertising
+will add only to the revenue of the newspaper.
+Don't mistake the point. He wants
+that contract, too. It will add materially
+to his profits. But getting it or not getting
+it will in no way affect the standing of the
+paper with its customers. School will keep
+just the same. So that particular job is on
+the other side of the line. That's why he
+has a sales manager.</p>
+
+<p>To illustrate once more, let's attempt to
+"score" the work of a credit man. What
+is the "vital element" in his work? What
+determines whether his work is worth doing,
+or whether it's worthless? Offhand,
+you might say: "Preventing losses on bad
+debts." But is it that? Surely not, when
+we analyze the job. The final objective
+of the credit department is to enable the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
+house to sell more goods by extending credit
+wherever it is justified. On that basis it
+is easy to see that the "vital element" in
+the credit man's job is "to not lose a good
+sale"&mdash;and we know we're splitting an infinitive
+to say it. If it weren't, why have
+a credit man at all? It would be far simpler
+not to extend credit to anyone who
+could not prove his worth.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px;">
+<img src="images/illus197.jpg" width="800" height="576" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Now look at the credit man's score card.
+Such a chart might not help an old, ex<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>perienced
+hand, but would it not help a
+beginner to get a grip on what his job is
+all about? Would it not enable him to see
+his job from the angle of CONSERVING
+THE BUSINESS?</p>
+
+<p>Hold on, though. Lining up the various
+jobs according to whether they score
+"above or below the line"&mdash;that is, whether
+they affect the essential well-being of the
+business or simply swell its profit&mdash;does
+not mean that he shall neglect all tasks
+above the line any more than give his constant
+attention to those that score below the
+line. The chief value of such an outline of
+your job or business is to KEEP ACTIVELY
+IN MIND A SENSE OF THE
+VITAL SPOTS TO GUARD&mdash;the spots to
+keep an eye on&mdash;the tasks for which you
+are always ready to plunge in and defend,
+once they are threatened.</p>
+
+<p>Wherever you find a successful manager,
+whether running a big business or just
+handling a small job, you will see that he
+has a clear understanding of the elements<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
+that mean the life of his work. And further
+observation will show that he is always
+protecting them.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The head miller in a small flour mill was
+smart and aggressive&mdash;a bit on the "go-getter"
+order, to be sure, but very, very
+competent none the less. It seems he had
+worked out some method of increasing the
+nutritive value of the mill's best grade of
+flour by adding something or other&mdash;it
+doesn't matter what.</p>
+
+<p>Naturally he was enthusiastic.</p>
+
+<p>Why not? He had persuaded the manager
+to have this new product analyzed by
+experts&mdash;and the analyses had proved extremely
+favorable.</p>
+
+<p>He wanted to go ahead.</p>
+
+<p>But the manager moved slowly. "It may
+make a good flour and the bread made from
+it may be good for the digestion," said he,
+"but will the bread taste as good?"</p>
+
+<p>Finally, after trying out the flour in his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
+own home, he refused to go ahead with the
+project. The miller, knowing how good the
+bread would be for people, fired up his job,
+went into business for himself and put his
+trick flour on the market.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px;">
+<img src="images/illus200.jpg" width="800" height="595" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>It never sold.</p>
+
+<p>The bread baked from it didn't taste
+good.</p>
+
+<p>The mill owner, you see, had kept his
+eye on what the miller had neglected&mdash;the
+big, vital element of the business&mdash;that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
+people bought flour to make bread, and that
+anything affecting the quality and taste of
+the bread must therefore be handled very
+carefully.</p>
+
+<p>What the miller needed, to take the
+place of the boss's years of experience, was
+a chart like the one on the opposite page&mdash;a
+graphic outline in skeleton form of his
+work's vital element.</p>
+
+<p>What a different aspect could be put on
+many an employee's work if the employer,
+instead of depending on the man's own-farsightedness
+in seeing the main items of
+value in his work, would graphically put
+them before him by some such chart as this
+one!</p>
+
+<p>Right here, however, we must guard
+against one important characteristic of this
+vital element.</p>
+
+<p>It CHANGES&mdash;or at least it <i>may</i> change
+as the business develops.</p>
+
+<p>Ask the manager of the circularizing department
+of a certain mail-order house. He
+will tell you it's VOLUME. All his other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
+problems have been stabilized except the
+single job of getting out enough circulars
+every day to keep the required volume of
+orders flowing in. Again, go to the circularizing
+room of an Eastern financial house
+and the manager will tell you that the vital
+element in his work is QUALITY&mdash;quality
+addressing, quality folding and so on. Here
+the whole success of the department depends
+upon reflecting the dignity and prestige
+of the house. The danger point with
+this manager is therefore touched by anything
+that might affect the quality of the
+work.</p>
+
+<p>Many a manufacturer starts with limited
+capital. For the first year or two the vital
+element in his business is finance. He may
+have to sacrifice attention to production
+and sales problems in order to guard the
+slender balance in the bank. Sometimes
+he may have to pay higher prices for materials
+because he must buy in small quantities;
+he may even have to check sales
+because he hasn't the capital with which to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
+finance them. Later, though, as a reserve
+is built up, or when better credit is established,
+he will find the vital element has
+shifted to manufacturing, buying, or maybe
+sales.</p>
+
+<p>A certain shoe manufacturer&mdash;we seem
+to gravitate toward shoes every so often&mdash;found
+manufacturing the vital element of
+his business a scant dozen years ago. His
+big job was to see that shoes went out the
+door. He doubled the size of his plant.
+In the short space of three years his problem
+had shifted to one of sales&mdash;he was no
+longer getting enough volume to fill his
+plants. And today his greatest concern is
+his shrinking bank balance.</p>
+
+<p>The same tendency toward change will
+be found in individual jobs.</p>
+
+<p>The traffic manager of an electrical supply
+house deposes that the vital element in
+his department's work changed completely
+in less than two years.</p>
+
+<p>"When I first came here," he declares,
+"the business had grown faster than our<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
+manufacturing facilities. We were always
+working close up to the contract date for
+delivery. I was hired simply because I had
+a reputation for being able to speed up
+shipping, pick the shortest routes and rush
+things through at the last minute.</p>
+
+<p>"Later on, we got in better shape in the
+factory. The goods began to come through
+to us further in advance of the promised
+delivery dates. I noticed this and changed
+my methods. Where I had previously
+watched after speed alone, slapping things
+into any old case to get them packed, hustling
+them out by any route which would
+save a day, regardless of rates, I now began
+to pack more carefully, to sort mixed shipments
+in order to get the lowest classification
+in freight rates, to pick the cheapest
+routes, and so on.</p>
+
+<p>"One day the chief called me in and gave
+me a raise.</p>
+
+<p>"'Warren,' said he, 'I thought I'd have
+to fire you when we got past the rush stage.
+I had you down as just a speed demon.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
+But you have been wise enough to change
+your methods as conditions changed. And
+I want you to know we appreciate it.'"</p>
+
+<p>A similar shift is noted by the managing
+editor of a well-known business paper.</p>
+
+<p>"When I took hold five years ago, it was
+a constant fight against time. We never
+had quite enough material on hand. There
+was always a mad scramble at the last moment
+to put the book to bed. Night after
+night I stuck around writing fillers&mdash;a column
+here, half a column there.</p>
+
+<p>"Today it's quite a different story. We
+have a carefully selected inventory from
+which we make up our schedules at least 60
+days ahead of publication. We have figured
+out close production dates&mdash;and we
+stick to 'em. There's no longer the problem
+of digging up enough eleventh-hour
+material to get out an issue. The job is
+one of selection. My biggest care is to find
+room for all the things I know our readers
+are interested in."</p>
+
+<p>A constant check is the safest way to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
+note in time the conditions that govern the
+conservation of the welfare of your job or
+business. Check the POINTS ABOVE
+THE LINE and watch the POINTS BELOW
+THE LINE.</p>
+
+<p>That constant effort to measure the importance
+of all the things that come up
+before him by their effects above and below
+THE DANGER LINE will do much to
+keep a manager practical. For summed
+up, the "practical" man is the one who
+combines with his progressiveness and
+vision the knack of never letting his progressive
+ideas puncture the vital element of
+his business and bleed it to death.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Make your score in any form that
+fits your needs or your tastes, but
+MAKE IT&mdash;WATCH IT&mdash;ACT ON IT.
+Some men can do the scoring in their heads.
+Most of us, even in so simple a procedure as
+keeping our golf scores, find it's better to
+carry it on paper.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>On paper? Can a man with real work
+to do, spend his time plotting curves and
+making pie charts? Does the Knack of
+Managing depend upon a man's ability to
+draw pictures?</p>
+
+<p>Not at all. If that's the impression you
+have gained from reading this little book,
+go back to the beginning and start all over
+again.</p>
+
+<p>If, from time to time, charts and diagrams
+have been suggested, it is only because
+the successful manager has somehow
+or other to go through precisely those same
+motions. His job&mdash;if he is to understand
+it and manage it successfully&mdash;must be
+analyzed somehow, sometime. We have
+merely suggested ways in which the
+ANALYSIS can be made more easily and
+intelligently by means of charts.</p>
+
+<p>His operations must be planned&mdash;in his
+head or on paper&mdash;if he is to perform them
+with the least lost motion, lost time and
+lost money. The Knack of Managing has
+simply gathered from other men's methods<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+a form of chart by which PLANNING can
+be done more accurately.</p>
+
+<p>Again, his work must be organized&mdash;if it
+is to be done in the simplest and best way.
+An attempt, then, has been made to sift
+the organization methods of successful
+managers and firms to develop a chart
+which at least indicates how to go about
+ORGANIZING THE WORK.</p>
+
+<p>"HELP" MUST BE HANDLED. So,
+from the experiences of shrewd managers,
+we have dug out the gist of their ideas and
+put it in the form of a chart that gives a
+basis on which to work.</p>
+
+<p>Above all, a business or job must be
+CONSERVED AND CARED FOR. The
+charting method suggested is but the
+method used by every successful manager&mdash;though
+he does not take the time to
+reduce his plans to paper.</p>
+
+<p>And last, in our search to acquire THE
+KNACK OF MANAGING, have we not
+learned that the fundamental principles of
+management are universally applicable?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>More than anything else we have seen
+why the manager who has made a success
+in one business can step right into another
+and make the same brilliant record. His
+business, after all, is not ships or shoes or
+sewing machines. It's MANAGING. And
+that job, in its fundamental principles, is
+the same, whether it's running the U. S.
+Steel Corporation or operating a peanut
+stand.</p>
+
+<p>That's our story&mdash;and we'll stick to it.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KNACK OF MANAGING***</p>
+<p>******* This file should be named 39761-h.txt or 39761-h.zip *******</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Knack of Managing, by Lewis K. Urquhart
+and Herbert Watson
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Knack of Managing
+
+
+Author: Lewis K. Urquhart and Herbert Watson
+
+
+
+Release Date: May 22, 2012 [eBook #39761]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KNACK OF MANAGING***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 39761-h.htm or 39761-h.zip:
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/39761/39761-h/39761-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/39761/39761-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+THE KNACK OF MANAGING
+
+by
+
+LEWIS K. URQUHART and HERBERT WATSON
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Published by
+Factory Management And Maintenance
+330 West 42nd Street
+New York City, N. Y.
+
+[Illustration: A McGRAW-HILL PUBLICATION]
+
+330 West 42nd Street
+New York City, N. Y.
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+Analysis
+
+
+Someone once said--probably it was Mr. Schwab--that given the right
+organization it was no harder to manage the U. S. Steel Corporation than
+to operate a peanut stand.
+
+And Mr. Schwab ought to know, although no life-sized portrait of him all
+dressed up like a peanut vendor has ever been brought to our attention.
+
+However that may be, his statement is interesting--especially
+interesting because his appraisal of the job of managing very nearly
+approaches ours. In "The Knack of Managing," you see, much of the
+emphasis will be on the fact that the fundamental PRINCIPLES OF
+MANAGEMENT apply to every business alike. And if we may start out with
+the premise that managing Mr. Schwab's Bethlehem Steel Company is not
+such a far cry from operating a pretzel plant or a furniture factory,
+our battle is already half won.
+
+THE PRINCIPLES OF MANAGEMENT vary not at all, however different may be
+the MECHANICS OF APPLICATION.
+
+How often the editor, how often the equipment salesman, listens to that
+time-worn tale of woe: "My business is different. So-and-so can do that
+sort of thing. But I make gadgets--and your conveyors, your air
+conditioners or whatever it is you write about or sell, won't do me a
+bit of good."
+
+_Of course_ his business is different--different in its individual
+characteristics, its financial, sales, production, labor problems. But
+they are only the CLOTHES the business wears. They may differ from the
+clothes of another enterprise as widely as the frilly importation from
+the Rue de la Paix differs from the sleazy issue of the East Side sweat
+shop. But underneath the clothes the artist knows there is the human
+body--and a study of anatomy is necessary before he can paint the
+picture. Beneath the "clothes" of the business are the principles of
+management--The ANATOMY OF MANAGEMENT--the framework upon which the
+completed structure is built.
+
+Doesn't it all boil down to something like the Colonel's lady and Judy
+O'Grady? One, presumably, wore a brief peignoir with a Paris label; the
+other, a substantial bungalow apron from a department store basement.
+But weren't they "sisters under the skin"?
+
+Stripped of all the furbelows--the details of operation, of tools, of
+materials--the objectives of our steel master, our peanut vendor, our
+pretzel maker, our furniture manufacturer, are one and the same thing.
+Their every-day job, in short, is to _get something well done with
+maximum dispatch and at minimum expense_.
+
+That's management's job. It goes for every type of enterprise; whether
+it involves the use of a million dollars' capital, or only ten cents'
+carfare--or a few minutes of a man's time. The "clothes" matter not at
+all. Beneath them the fundamental steps in managing are identical. The
+basic KNACK OF MANAGING is the same.
+
+Consider one of the simplest forms of business enterprise--the delivery
+of a message. The errand boy--if he's worth his salt and is really
+_managing_ his job--does in principle exactly what the general manager
+of the glass plant, the automobile factory, the textile mill, does when
+he comes face to face with _his_ problems. _In principle_, mind you.
+
+FIRST--this is the errand boy managing his job--he settles in his mind
+exactly where he has to go. Not just over to Federal Street--but to 63
+Federal. In a word, he ANALYZES THE BUSINESS or the job to be done.
+ANALYSIS, then, is the first step.
+
+SECOND--he figures out the shortest, most economical way to go there. In
+other words, he PLANS THE DOING OF THE JOB for the least expenditure.
+PLANNING is the second step.
+
+THIRD--shall he walk or shall he ride? Shall he do the work himself? Or
+shall he hire someone else to do it for him? His third step, you see, is
+ORGANIZATION. He organizes the handling of his work. The "right
+organization," said Mr. Schwab----
+
+FOURTH--he must get service. There are other errand boys. There are
+elevator men, office boys to meet and get along with if he is to execute
+his errand with the greatest dispatch. Now, you see, he's HANDLING THE
+HELP. The manager of the piano plant, the agent of the cotton mill,
+would call that phase of his job INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS.
+
+FIFTH--All the time he's planning, going and doing, he never loses sight
+of the final object of his errand. He never forgets he has a message,
+perhaps a bunch of securities, to deliver. He keeps his eye on the
+parcel he's carrying. He gets a receipt before he lets go of it. In
+other words, he SUPERVISES AND CARES for his business. The manager of
+the shoe shop, of the furniture factory, never forgets the final
+objective. After all, it's PROFIT.
+
+ +---------------------------+
+ | Analyzing the Job |
+ +---------------------------+
+ /\
+ / \
+ / \
+ / \
+ +--------------+ +---------------+
+ | Planning the | | Organizing |
+ | Operations | | the Work |
+ +--------------+ +---------------+
+ \ /
+ \ /
+ \ /
+ \/
+ +-------------------------+
+ | Handling the Help |
+ +-------------------------+
+ |
+ |
+ +-----------------------------+
+ | Supervising and Conserving |
+ | the Business |
+ +-----------------------------+
+
+Now look at the chart. It pictures THE ANATOMY OF MANAGEMENT. The
+Chinese say a picture is worth ten thousand words. And it would take a
+heap of writing to tell the story more completely, more simply than this
+picture.
+
+Try hanging the "clothes" of your machine shop, your woodworking plant,
+your paper mill, on it. THEY FIT, don't they?
+
+True, the chart is drawn from one of the most primitive tasks of
+management--the simple delivery of a message. But suppose the boy
+doesn't deliver the message himself, but has an assistant. Won't it be
+necessary to go through exactly the same motions? Suppose, instead of
+one message, there are _fifty_. Fifty assistants will be necessary.
+Will the job of managing vary a jot--or even a tittle?
+
+Now substitute fifty _boxes_ for fifty _messages_. The boxes have to be
+shipped. The same processes of thought, the same principles of
+management, apply.
+
+If, instead of fifty boxes to be _shipped_, fifty machines are to be
+_manufactured_--or if instead of fifty machines it's fifty thousand, and
+a thousand men and a million dollars of capital are to be employed,
+every one of the five principles shown on the chart will be used. And
+every essential point in the management of the _business_ could be
+covered by those five fundamentals.
+
+Now substitute ships or shoes or breakfast food for the machines we have
+been talking about, and it becomes clearer than ever that this BUSINESS
+OF MANAGING recognizes no industrial fences. Learn to manage a peanut
+stand and, in principle, you are well on the road to knowing how to
+handle the affairs of the U. S. Steel Corporation.
+
+Five steps there are: (1) Analyze; (2) Plan; (3) Organize; (4) Handle;
+(5) Supervise. Tackle any job on this basis and follow through. The
+chances that success will crown your efforts far outweigh the
+possibilities of failure. At least, approaching a job from these five
+successive angles should limit the causes of failure to circumstances
+quite beyond your control.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FIVE PRINCIPLES OF MANAGEMENT, then. Their skillful application to a
+business or to a job is the KNACK OF MANAGING.
+
+To do a real bang-up job of managing, whether carrying a message or
+directing a million-dollar business, the first step is: _Don't make a
+single move until you've found out exactly what needs to be done._
+
+But our first Do turned out to be a Don't. So let's restate it. _Find
+out exactly what has to be done before you make a single move._
+
+You've heard that before? And it doesn't mean a thing?
+
+Neither did it mean a thing to a bright young man who was taken on as
+production manager in a shoe factory. The shoes were good. Prices were
+right. Business was booming. The factory was full of orders.
+
+But somehow or other shoes weren't getting shipped on time--or anything
+like on time. Three to four weeks late came to be the customary thing.
+And customers were, needless to say, kicking like steers.
+
+So the bright young man was taken on to get things ironed out.
+
+He pitched in with vim and vigor.
+
+The first morning's mail brought a dozen complaints of slow deliveries.
+People were practically barefoot out in Kansas and Ohio. They were
+waiting for those shoes.
+
+"Ha!" said the new production manager, "_Nous verrons._" Which means,
+even in English, "Now, for what we are about to see, make us truly
+thankful." And he went away from there to see why those orders weren't
+out the door.
+
+He was out to prove something. And Providence--Rhode Island--had
+supplied him with enough ammunition to shoot a manufacturing
+organization full of holes.
+
+Each order was traced. One was in the shipping room.
+
+"What's holding this up?" he asked the shipping clerk.
+
+"Haven't had time to ship it. And we got other shoes that have been
+waiting longer than those. It's a feast or a famine down here. Some days
+we just can't get 'em out."
+
+"You're working short-handed. Get a couple more packers. You've got to
+get those shoes out. The customers are hollering like hell. Get 'em
+out!"
+
+He found another order up in the cutting room. But why report the
+conversation? It varied only in the number of cusswords used. It was
+always the old story.
+
+"Can't be done."
+
+"Put more people on then. Will two be enough? Or had we better make it
+three?"
+
+All down the line it went. More people. Costs went up. And did orders
+get out? Oh, yes, some did. But they got out at the expense of others.
+There was more congestion than ever. Complaints increased.
+
+Then the big boss called him in--and down--pointed out the increasing
+costs and asked how come. So the new production manager went back over
+his trail demanding retrenchment.
+
+"Put 'em on" was changed to "take 'em off."
+
+The big boss tells the rest of the story.
+
+"He had simply jumped in without finding out what it was he had to do.
+Maybe it was my fault for giving him too much rope.
+
+"Anyway, he hanged himself--or rather we had to fire him. Then we
+took on a quiet lad who had served his apprenticeship with a large
+electrical supply house.
+
+"He didn't know a twelve-iron sole from a three-quarter foxing. But he
+knew plenty about managing, as it turned out.
+
+"I watched him. Things were in a bad way, you see, and getting no better
+fast. He did nothing much for several days but read his mail. Sat around
+his office. Didn't make a move to boss anyone. Stuck his nose in here
+and there to find out what this clerk or that clerk was up to.
+
+"But no action. No tearing his shirt. No nothing. And the complaints
+were coming in with every mail. They never fazed him. One day I ran
+across him up in the fitting room. Another time I bumped into him he was
+picking lasts out of the bins. Again I saw him pushing empty racks into
+the heeling room elevator.
+
+"Apparently I had picked another lemon. Looked like the best thing he
+did was sit around and tap his teeth with a pencil.
+
+"He fooled me, though. One afternoon he dropped into my office with a
+map. He'd drawn it between taps. It was a good map with dotted lines to
+show just exactly what happened to an order--any order--every order.
+That map showed when it went into the works, where it went from there.
+And so on until it went out the shipping room door. That's what he'd
+been up to the day I saw him picking out lasts. And I tell you I never
+had any idea how many things could happen to an order. I never realized
+how shoes halted and stumbled and staggered around that factory of ours.
+
+"There were red lines, too. They showed the changes he proposed making.
+Here he would stop backtracking. Here was unnecessary travel. Here was
+an old bottle neck and here was how he was going to crack it open. And
+look at those lasts lying idle with shoes upstairs waiting to be made on
+them!
+
+"That wasn't half. It was actually taking four days to get orders
+through the office routine. He showed me how certain necessary records
+that took time to make could be made after the shoes were in work. Other
+short cuts would wipe whole days off our schedules.
+
+"There was nothing to it--when you saw it in red ink. In fact there's
+nothing half so convincing as red ink. There's been none on our books
+for the past five years--and during that time the shoe business has been
+no bed of roses.
+
+"What he proposed was simple as pie--if only someone had stopped to
+think. We'd simply got into bad habits. We were handling the work the
+same way we'd handled it back in the days when grandfather started the
+business. And this fellow had been smart enough to wait and wonder why.
+Not wonder why either. _He went and found out how come._
+
+"In thirty days we were back on earth. We were getting shoes out on
+time--many many days sooner than we'd even been able to before. And all
+because a smart young man, who didn't know a thing about shoes but a
+whole lot about managing, sat and tapped his teeth and drew a few
+pictures.--All because he had been in no hurry to act until he had found
+out just what had to be done."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is so easy to jump to conclusions! If you look about a bit, you will
+see plenty of men who don't stop to find out what needs to be done
+before they start trying to do it. They're like the shortstop who
+hurries his play and tries to throw the runner out at first before he
+really gets his hands on the ball. An error is more often than not the
+result.
+
+MANAGING, such men will tell you, is putting "pep" and "punch" into your
+work. Pep and punch were once good words. But their good qualities have
+been so often extolled that most of us have lost sight of the fact that
+all the "drive" in the world is so much wasted energy when it isn't
+directed along the right lines. And when it isn't so directed, it comes
+pretty close to being the lowest form of human endeavor. Witness the
+"go-getter" who really doesn't know what it's all about, but often
+succeeds in covering up a world of defects under a cloak of ill-directed
+energy.
+
+Other men think they are finding out what needs to be done when actually
+they aren't even getting close to the root of the matter. With the best
+intentions in the world, they are grasping at the first straw the wind
+blows their way. Eureka! they shout when they haven't found it at all,
+but are merely jumping all the way over the facts to conclusions!
+Actually to know your business or your job demands ANALYSIS.
+
+You have a right to duck. It's another of those words that work overtime
+and have suffered as a result. A certain type of superficial business
+executive has done analysis no good. To him the impressiveness of the
+word suffices--to the complete exclusion of the simplicity of the act
+itself. And so analysis to you and _you_ and YOU has come to mean
+involved, complex research--running around a lot in circles and getting
+exactly nowhere. Analysis has become for you an A1 example of the
+phrase-maker's art.
+
+REAL ANALYSIS of any problem in business can, however, be simple--in
+fact, _it can be nothing else but simple_.
+
+Analysis, says Noah Webster, is "a resolution of anything, whether an
+object of the senses or the intellect, into constituent parts or
+elements; an examination of component parts, separately or in their
+relation to the whole."
+
+Whooee! all that when he might have said "TAKING TO PIECES." For
+analysis is literally that--taking a thing to pieces to see what makes
+the wheels go round. Not, however, with the destructive intent of the
+small boy who strews his watch all over the floor, but with the avowed
+purpose of getting right down to the sort of brass tacks which make it
+possible to see the composition of the whole clearly and plainly.
+
+Analysis which befogs the issue is not analysis at all. It's--in the
+vernacular--a lot of "hooey."
+
+But the RIGHT KIND OF ANALYSIS "breaks down" the problem into its
+component parts--without losing sight of each part's relation to the
+whole. There may be only two parts to a job of managing. The messenger
+who analyzes his business correctly will find exactly two: where to go
+and what to do after he gets there--the simplest kind of problem and the
+simplest type of business analysis. But if the analysis consisted of
+twenty pieces instead of two, it would be no harder; it would only be
+longer.
+
+The production manager in the shoe factory analyzed his job correctly
+when he mapped out the route of an order. All he did was take the
+manufacturing process to pieces so that he could put the pieces
+together again to form a more efficient whole.
+
+So whether there are two or twenty or two hundred pieces, the act of
+ANALYZING--of TAKING TO PIECES--differs only in the amount of territory
+it covers. Naturally it will be a somewhat more lengthy process to
+analyze the job of managing a steel mill than to separate a peanut stand
+and its operation into a few component parts. But the approach is always
+the same.
+
+And no matter how good you may be with the woods, how the approach does
+affect the final score!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Consider for the moment that you have a house built of blocks and want
+to take it to pieces. A quick and easy way of separating it into its
+component parts would be a swift kick aimed down around the foundations.
+
+A quick method. But comes nothing. There are all your blocks lying on
+the floor, but so far as knowing what they're all about, you're worse
+off than ever you were before you kicked your house down.
+
+The other way of taking your house of blocks to pieces is to start with
+the roof and WORK BACKWARDS. The very thought, then, of "taking to
+pieces" suggests the correct way to undertake the analysis of a business
+or of a job.
+
+And a study of the methods of successful managers will convince the
+doubtingest Thomas that starting at the top and working down to the
+cellar is the method they follow in the analysis of any business problem
+they have to tackle.
+
+Once a busy ceramic manufacturer found himself in the restaurant
+business. He knew about all there was to know about dinnerware up to the
+point where it left his customers' counters. What went on after that was
+pretty much Greek to him if you know what we mean.
+
+And then he became a restaurateur. All because his brother-in-law got
+into him for several thousand dollars and then couldn't quite seem to
+make the darned thing pay a profit.
+
+Brother-in-law knew the game. Oh, yes. He had worked for a number of
+years as assistant manager in a similar enterprise. With his "knowledge
+of the business," he should have made a success of this cafeteria of
+his.
+
+He knew how to handle the help, how to buy, how to run the kitchen, and
+so on. The operating details were as an open book to him. Judged from
+every outward appearance, the cafeteria was up to standard. It should
+have climbed out of the red in short order.
+
+He had been taught to buy carefully and to manage economically. "Well
+bought," he announced, "is half sold." He'd read it in a book and he
+thought he was being a good salesman. Still the business stayed in the
+red.
+
+Our ceramic friend was faced with kissing his investment goodbye--and
+probably with making a job in the pottery for a good restaurant
+man--with throwing good money after bad, or with getting into the
+cafeteria business.
+
+He figured this business ought to pay. Somewhere, he knew, his
+brother-in-law had gone wrong. Just where, he believed he could find
+out.
+
+So he took over the business. Brother-in-law stayed on, leaving the new
+owner free to observe.
+
+And he did nothing but observe for a solid week.
+
+Each night he made a list of the points in managing which had come up in
+the course of the day's work.
+
+In a week's time he had an accurate list of all the actual jobs of
+managing, as all bills except for gas and light and rent were paid and a
+profit and loss statement was taken each week.
+
+Then he arranged the list in order of natural importance.
+
+It began with marketing and checking bills with deliveries, and ended
+with counting the money and depositing it in the bank.
+
+"Hold on," he thought, "this isn't such a long way from running a
+pottery. What am I in this business for?"
+
+"Because," he answered, "I want to leave as much of that money in the
+bank as possible, and mark it down as profit."
+
+So right away he started to draw pictures. The chart on this page is the
+result after he had worked it over and polished it up.
+
+ +---------------------------------------+
+ | +-----------+ |
+ | | Making | +--------+ |
+ | |the Service| | Keeping| |
+ | | Pleasing | /| Down |\|
+ | +-----------+ / |Expenses| \
+ | / \ / +--------+ |\
+ +-----------+ | / +----------+ | \
+ |Building up| | +---------+ | Fixing | +--------+ | +-------+
+ | and | | | Getting | | Prices |__|Guarding|_|_| Net |
+ |Maintaining|_|_| More | | to Be | |Against | | | Cash |
+ | the | | |Customers| | Fair and | | Waste | | |Profits|
+ | Run-Down | | | In | |Attractive| +--------+ | +-------+
+ | Cafeteria | | +---------+ +----------+ | /
+ +-----------+ | \ / \ +---------+ |/
+ | \ / \| Buying | /
+ | +----------+ |Supplies |/|
+ | | Making | |Carefully| |
+ | |the Foods | +---------+ |
+ | |Attractive| |
+ | +----------+ |
+ +---------------------------------------+
+
+Note how it works backward from his final objective--"Net Profits."
+
+"Now," questioned his _alter ego_, "how do I determine how much of that
+money stays in the bank as profit, and how much has to be checked out
+right away for expenses?"
+
+And from his handy list of managerial functions it was plain that it
+depended on three things--buying right, selling with as little waste as
+possible, and keeping expenses down.
+
+"Now we're getting somewhere," he said to himself. "Those things lead me
+right into my next job--which is to fix prices fairly. For what's the
+use of buying right, handling supplies carefully and keeping expenses
+right down to the bone unless my selling prices cover costs, yield a
+profit, and still look reasonable to the public?"
+
+Yes, and the most attractive prices, backed up by careful buying and all
+the rest, wouldn't keep the dollars clinking merrily over the counter
+unless the food was so good and the service so excellent that customers
+bought liberally and came back for more.
+
+By this time, you'll note, on taking another peek at the chart, he had
+worked right back to his "Number 1" job--getting more customers in.
+
+Thus, by ANALYSIS, he found out definitely what had to be done--and what
+had to be done first. Brother-in-law thought he knew, but he had begun
+at the wrong end. He had been looking after expenditures first and
+receipts last. He was trying to squeeze a little margin out of his
+receipts before he did anything about getting the receipts.
+
+How different the new owner's viewpoint! His brother-in-law, he found,
+was thoroughly competent. He'd simply got off on the wrong foot. In the
+kitchen and the storeroom, he was a good operator. But the new owner's
+place was "out front."
+
+His job was to "get more customers, get them to spend more--and to give
+them such good food and service that they would come back and bring
+their friends."
+
+He began by spending money. Took out the gas pipe at the entrance.
+Replaced it with a brass rail. Provided a small lounging room where
+customers could wait for their friends. Put in upholstered chairs so
+they could be comfortable while waiting. Put attractive uniforms on
+attractive serving girls.
+
+There was an air of good taste about the place when he got through.
+
+Then he changed the arrangement of the counters. But you know all about
+that--how the desserts came first so they would catch your eye before
+your tray was too heavily loaded with the heavier part of the meal.
+Staples which offered a small margin of profit were relegated to places
+in the rear. Dishes that made the best profit got the positions up
+front. Each day he offered a low-priced "special." Thus he planned to
+increase customers' purchases.
+
+And the business began to grow.
+
+That's all there is. There isn't any more. Today he doesn't own a chain
+of cafeterias extending into many cities and feeding many thousands of
+people every day at a good profit.
+
+He's still a very successful ceramic manufacturer--and a cafeteria
+proprietor.
+
+"I flew in the face of tradition," he says. "'First watch your kitchen'
+is the cry of the restaurant man. But I started with what I wanted--net
+profits--and WORKED BACKWARD to make conditions that would provide net
+profits.
+
+"VOLUME OF BUSINESS had to come first. I had to get it before I could
+get a margin of profit.
+
+"No doubt I could go out in the kitchen today and save some money. If I
+went to market myself, maybe I could save a cent a pound on my meats.
+But I can't give up my attention to the 'front' in order to watch the
+'back.' As soon as I do that I'm going to be right back where I
+started."
+
+It would sound like heresy, wouldn't it, if we hadn't sat in and
+watched him begin with his final objective and work back through the
+means which make the objective possible. Only by careful analysis would
+he have had courage enough to FOLLOW HIS PLAN THROUGH to its successful
+conclusion.
+
+And here's the amusing sequel. Today, as he still dabbles at feeding
+people, he will admit that he's a better ceramic manufacturer as a
+result of his cafeteria experience. His pottery had always yielded a
+nice profit. When he sat down with his sheet of coordinate paper and
+analyzed it, he found his job of management differed not at all in its
+fundamentals.
+
+His first job he found was "out front" getting more customers in. A
+better knowledge of markets, a better job of selling, a better
+product--those were the ways to get the customers in and make them come
+back for more.
+
+And his need for a better product led him out into the plant where he
+found that tunnel kilns with exact temperature control would more than
+treble the production of the old periodic kilns--and would produce
+better ware.
+
+But that's another story. The important thing, anyway, is not what he
+found had to be done in the cafeteria and in the pottery, but HOW he
+found it.
+
+He took his business to pieces--BACKWARDS.
+
+He began with the objective he wanted to get--MONEY. It was a simple
+matter to find that to get money from the business he had to get
+customers to come in and spend money; that to get customers to come in
+he must make his place look like a good place to come to; that to make
+his place look attractive he must spend money on equipment and thought
+on the arrangement and display of food.
+
+And there he had his big job cut out for him, with the other jobs
+following along in natural sequence. It altered the whole METHOD OF
+MANAGEMENT.
+
+How this METHOD OF MANAGEMENT is applied to your job is shown in the
+chart which follows. It's a skeleton of what the cafeteria man did.
+
+Indeed, it's more than that. For it shows what every manager--whether he
+manages a steel mill, a punch-press department or a time-study job--must
+do if he is to get an honest-to-goodness PERSPECTIVE OF HIS WORK.
+
+ +----------------------+
+ +------------+ +----------------------+ +-----------+
+ | The Work |__| The Means |__| The Final |
+ | to Be Done | | for Accomplishing It | | Objective |
+ +------------+ +----------------------+ +-----------+
+ +----------------------+
+
+It can be done very simply. Just a sheet of paper ruled in small
+squares--you can buy it at any stationer's--on which to fill in the
+steps you must take in between what you have to do and what you seek to
+accomplish by it--and some careful thought as to just what your job is
+and why it is to be done, will develop a true ANALYSIS of your problems
+which will beat reams and reams of typewritten words.
+
+Remember the words of the Chinese philosopher: "A picture is worth ten
+thousand words"--and reflect how clever these Chinese are!
+
+The MEANS FOR ACCOMPLISHING the final objective may be many or few. You
+have seen the cafeteria-manager's problems on the chart on page 24. Now
+turn to page 35 and see what a file clerk does beside powder her nose
+from nine to five.
+
+A bright young lady fresh out of high school went to work in an
+editorial office. There wasn't enough filing to do to keep her happy
+from nine to five, so she filled in with a bit of typing here and a
+trifle of routine clerical work there. Thursdays she hopped over to the
+neighboring bookstore and collected _Saturday Posts_ for the
+editors--now she'll have to do that on Tuesday. And Fridays she
+distributed _The New Yorkers_ to avid readers.
+
+Filing, though, was her main job. When she first came, the managing
+editor said "Here it is" or words to that effect, and she went to work.
+
+Those files had always been more or less of a sore point. An editor's
+mail is nothing if not voluminous. And every day Flossie the fascinating
+file clerk got a mass of data which she had to stick away. Her great
+trouble was finding it again after she'd stuck it away.
+
+Often she couldn't find it. And pretty soon she discovered that she got
+the blame no matter what was missing--whether an important inquiry from
+Peter B. Stilb or the editor's pipe cleaners.
+
+She couldn't do a thing about the pipe cleaners, but she made up her
+mind that since she was held responsible when a letter got lost, she
+would also have the responsibility of changing the filing system. The
+system, she felt sure, was to blame.
+
+One day when she was "on her lunch" and the editors didn't need
+cigarettes from the corner drugstore, she sat down and made an ANALYSIS
+of her problem. Curiously enough, she started at the end and WORKED
+BACKWARDS.
+
+She WORKED BACKWARDS, not because someone told her that was the right
+way to analyze her job, but probably because she was only a file clerk
+and no one ever told her anything.
+
+"Why," she asked herself, "do I file these old papers anyway?"
+
+"So I can find them again, quickly and surely, when they're wanted,"
+seemed to be the only answer to that.
+
+"What's the right way to file these letters and papers and data so I can
+find them quickly?" was her next question.
+
+"Arrange them like words in the dictionary--ONE PLACE, and ONLY ONE
+PLACE, where each can be," was only common sense.
+
+In the filing system which she had inherited, there were a dozen places
+for each set of data. There was a file on "Industries" with sub-files
+for "Automobiles" and all the rest; a file for data on "Railroads," with
+two or three sub-files. The file clerk had to use judgment and
+discretion in selecting the heading under which each letter or piece of
+data was filed. And she wasn't hired for judgment and discretion.
+Sometimes, too, the editors erred in their descriptions of the material
+they wanted.
+
+ +-----------------+
+ | Arrangement |\
+ | of File So That | \
+ | Title of Data | \
+ | Wanted Will Show| \
+ +----------------+ | Exact Spot to | +------------+
+ +----------+ | Only ONE Place | /| Look for It | | To Produce |
+ | Filing |__| to File |/ | +----------------+ |Any Desired |
+ | All Data | | Regardless | +-| Cross-Index of | |Data Without|
+ +----------+ | of Nature | | CLASSES | | Delay |
+ | of Thing Filed | |Showing for Each| +------------+
+ +----------------+ |Class the Title |
+ |of Each Piece In|
+ | That Class |
+ +----------------+
+
+One file, arranged alphabetically--ONE PLACE TO LOOK, regardless of the
+thing looked for--was the logical conclusion, viewed from the standpoint
+of _finding_.
+
+The managing editor was horrified. Mix "railroads" with "public
+service," and "manufacturing" with "agriculture"?
+
+"Why," asked the file clerk, looking back at her analysis, "why care how
+things are _kept_ so long as they can be _found_ quickly? When you send
+me for Camels, do you care, so long as you get them quickly, whether
+they're kept next to Chesterfields, or right beside the chewing gum?
+When the chief asks for data on 'C.P.R.' does he care, if he gets it
+right away, whether it was filed next to data on 'Coal' or beside facts
+about other railroads?"
+
+"All right," objected the managing editor, "suppose someone asks for all
+the data we have on railroads?"
+
+Not a bad question. It was from a _finding_ standpoint.
+
+"Have a separate cross-index by classes," was the answer. "That is,
+under 'Railroads' have a card showing the name of every----"
+
+"But look at the extra work."
+
+Back to her ANALYSIS went the file clerk. "Why file at all, except to
+make it easy to find what we file? If we were to set up a system for
+_easiest filing_, we'd simply put everything in boxes just as it comes
+to us. Our main objective is to make information easy to _find_, and
+anything that increases the work of filing but lessens the work of
+finding, is profitable."
+
+The result was a filing system that has made a great mass of data as
+accessible as the words in the dictionary. And it has taken the human
+equation out of the job. No longer does the file clerk have to stop and
+use her judgment as to where she shall file Mr. Stilb's letter. There is
+ONE PLACE AND JUST ONE PLACE.
+
+And the basis of the plan was the simple process of ANALYZING--of
+starting with the final objective and WORKING BACKWARD--not forward
+from the work to be done.
+
+In hundreds of business offices--in countless industrial plants--time,
+labor and money are being wasted today in outmoded methods which, like
+Topsy, "just grew." The manager who started them didn't stop to reason
+out first exactly what had to be done--or if he did, he failed to WORK
+BACKWARD from the final objective.
+
+One way is as bad as the other.
+
+In fact, it may even be better not to reason at all than fail to get to
+the very bottom and reason out the absolute right of what has to be
+done. At least it takes less time.
+
+A sure way, incidentally, to avoid making mistakes in your analysis is
+to do it on paper. A professor of mathematics in one of the large
+universities always tells his students that no problem should be
+performed in the head that can be done on paper. "Make pencil and paper
+do as much as you can, for your brain has enough to do to supervise the
+work."
+
+Until your mind is trained to the habit of QUICK, ACCURATE ANALYSIS,
+you'll find it helps to do the work on paper. Keep on hand a small
+supply of blank charts like the one on page 31, on which to sketch an
+analysis of new work or of important decisions. The constant performance
+of this detail will of itself train your mind to look at problems more
+analytically, and automatically to sift and classify them more
+logically.
+
+Perhaps you can improve on the chart shown on page 31. Surely you can
+adapt it better to your own needs. But force yourself to some such
+method. It will help you to cultivate the instinct of SHREWD, RAPID
+ANALYSIS--and at the same time it cannot help giving you a KEENER, SURER
+INSIGHT into the particular problem, no matter how complex or how simple
+it may be.
+
+Sometimes it is the apparently simple problems that need analysis most.
+For example----
+
+Did you ever hear of a sales organization that didn't have a
+stenographic problem?
+
+The New York office of a Western factory was no exception. The manager
+was broadminded--even liberal--with his salesmen. But when it came to
+stenographers, he was decidedly Scotch. Valuable men sat around the
+office mornings and evenings waiting for a chance to dictate to a staff
+of girls which was measured to fit the average load of the day, but not
+the rush load of the two hours a day when the salesmen were inside.
+
+Dictating machines seemed to be the answer. The sales manager figured
+they would not only solve the dictation problem, but would further
+reduce stenographic costs.
+
+They were installed. At the same time the stenographic force was cut to
+insure keeping all the girls busy all the day.
+
+Good. The salesmen were able to dictate when they felt like it. But
+often the letters dictated were a day or two late in being transcribed.
+
+Complaints increased. And the manager lost his temper: "What's the
+matter with this cursed letter-writing business?" he demanded. "Why the
+Sam Hill do we have typists and stenographers?"
+
+Well, why? He calmed down a bit, seized a sheet of paper and mapped out
+his problem.
+
+This is what he wrote:
+
+1. Salesmen's letters are to save salesmen's time and to give prompt
+service to customers.
+
+2. I don't begrudge half a day's time of a $20-a-day salesman to call on
+a customer. Then it's still profitable to waste half of the time of a
+$4-a-day stenographer in order to save a long trip for a salesman, or to
+get a quick answer to a question.
+
+3. What we need is enough typists to transcribe every letter of every
+salesman promptly, even if part of them have to be idle half the day.
+
+The increased use of sales letters, the greater freedom salesmen feel in
+their dictation, the number of selling details now promptly handled by
+mail without an expensive call--all are directly traceable to the
+manager's ANALYSIS which he made by using the final objective as a
+starting point.
+
+He's a convert to the pencil and paper method. Sales problems are part
+of his daily exercise. He goes to the bottom of them instinctively. But
+any problems that arise concerning office work, he settles only after
+analyzing from front to back--on paper.
+
+His method of charting his ANALYSIS differs in appearance from the chart
+on page 31, but it is identical in PRINCIPLE AND EFFECT. It works from
+final objective BACKWARD.
+
+One more application of the same KNACK OF ANALYSIS--and we are done. It
+is that of an Ohio manufacturer who recently put up a new building.
+
+Plans prepared by the architect called for four stories and a basement.
+When it came time to discuss arrangement of space, it was found that one
+department would have to go in the basement. There were objections from
+all sides.
+
+The manufacturer ended up by taking the problem home with him to TAKE TO
+PIECES and put together again.
+
+He began--fortunately--with the final objective. "What's this new
+building for?" Obviously, to provide more space for enlarged operations.
+
+"How much space is needed?"
+
+He went over the figures and plans and found the four main floors
+weren't enough.
+
+"Then why not a fifth floor?"
+
+As long as a bigger building was to be built, why not make it big
+enough? Why not another full story instead of a basement?
+
+Why not, indeed! Come to find out, no one knew just why a basement had
+been considered. The old building had one, and apparently that was the
+only reason for proposing one for the new building. A full story would
+give all the general storage space of a basement and also give regular
+working quarters for the department crowded out of the four upper
+floors.
+
+And when the architect was consulted, it was found that with the extras
+for excavation, waterproofing and the like, the cost of a basement was
+considerably more than the cost of another full story.
+
+Yet, but for the manufacturer's analysis of the building problem from
+the point of final objective, the basement would have gone in--simply
+because NO ONE HAD STOPPED TO THINK, and think clearly and logically.
+
+Logical thinking is a trait that can be cultivated. Every problem
+thought through by means of some such simple help as we have suggested,
+makes the mind more ready to tackle the next problem.
+
+Some men's minds grow so keen by practising that sort of thinking that
+they AUTOMATICALLY TAKE THINGS TO PIECES as they listen. Before you
+finish talking to them, they have already analyzed your statement and
+are planning on its execution--or are ready to reject it. Sometimes it's
+intuition. But rarely. Usually, it is nothing more than cultivated
+KNACK.
+
+Cultivate ACCURACY first. SPEED OF ANALYSIS will come of itself.
+
+_Don't start until you know exactly where you're going._
+
+There is no task so trifling, no business so large, that its management
+does not need to ANALYZE EXACTLY WHAT THERE IS TO DO.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+Planning
+
+
+In the preceding chapter we have been busily engaged in taking things to
+pieces. Now we've got to put them together again. Our house of blocks
+has been resolved into its component parts, not by aiming a swift kick
+at its midriff, but by starting at the top and working backwards. Now to
+REBUILD.
+
+Our first care, at this stage of the game, is to remember that ANALYSIS
+IS NEVER AN END but simply the MEANS TO AN END.
+
+The immediate end, this time, is to rearrange the pieces so that the job
+to be done can be done in the most effective way--the way that saves the
+most effort, the most time, the most money--the way which, in your
+business--and in _yours_ and YOURS--leads to NET PROFITS.
+
+Again it should be emphasized that NET PROFIT, in any job of managing,
+is the ultimate goal.
+
+Our danger, then, is that we may find ourselves down on the floor
+surrounded by our blocks--and with never a trace of a PLAN for
+rebuilding the house, and rebuilding it in the simplest, most economical
+way.
+
+In short, we must be sure we are taking things to pieces, not for the
+sake of taking them to pieces, but purely and simply _to find out what
+has to be done_.
+
+Like the golfer who played golf so much in order to keep fit for golf,
+we have here a good old-fashioned beneficent circle. ANALYSIS without a
+PLAN isn't worth a whoop in Hades. It's time kissed goodbye. Wasted
+effort. And, in like manner, a PLAN without an ANALYSIS isn't worth the
+paper it's typed on.
+
+Psmith in your office is a great "planner". He always has something on
+the fire. But somehow or other he never quite puts things over. His
+plans don't get across. Why not? Oh, just because he doesn't bother to
+analyze his problem--because he sets out to _do_ what has to be done
+even before he _knows_ what has to be done. He doesn't base his plan
+upon an actual need.
+
+Pbrown, on the other hand, is a keen analytical thinker. A student. He's
+a shark at taking things to pieces and finding out what has to be done.
+But when he's done that, he's all done. He lacks the initiative that
+starts things moving. He hasn't that divine spark of something or other
+that gets things done. A stick of dynamite wouldn't do a bit of good. He
+simply hasn't the knack of building a plan. He knows what has to be
+done. He doesn't know how to do it.
+
+Psmith and Pbrown--or Pbrown and Psmith--would make a fast team. But
+Psmith without Pbrown's analytical ability, or Pbrown without Psmith's
+capacity for planning how to get things done, isn't worth his weight in
+gold to _any_ business enterprise.
+
+A manufacturer friend tells an amusing yarn about a Pbrown he hired as
+sales manager.
+
+"He went around analyzing everything from soup to nuts--the gadgets in
+our line, our markets, our competition, our salesmen.
+
+"He was an analyzer _de luxe_. And all I ever got out of all his
+analyses was a distinct feeling that something was wrong with every
+gadget we made, that our markets were saturated, that our competitors
+had us backed off the map, and that our salesmen were a bunch of ribbon
+clerks.
+
+"So," he continues, "I did a little analyzing all my own. And analyzed
+him out of his job. Today he's managing a filling station where they
+drive in for the most part and take it away from him. But in his place I
+got a man who found out what was wrong with gadgets, markets,
+salesmen--and right away he built a plan which sold goods."
+
+Thus the futility of ANALYSIS without PLANNING.
+
+There's the danger, too, of getting away from the SIMPLICITY OF TRUE
+ANALYSIS.
+
+A job undertaken by an advertising agency for a rubber manufacturer
+supplies a case in point. Stripped of all the details, the task was to
+find out whether or not the manufacturer might profitably engage in the
+making of hard rubber tires for industrial trucks and trailers. If names
+are changed and products substituted, think nothing of it. The
+principle's the thing.
+
+The agency began by analyzing the business to a fare-you-well. Everyone
+and everything got cross-examined.
+
+It took three months. And when the analysis was done it told the
+manufacturer everything from where the rubber grew to where the money
+went to and came from. The trouble was, he knew all that before--or as
+much of it as he wanted to know. The report, in the words of a Chicago
+columnist, was just "64 dam pages." It didn't tell him one blessed thing
+he wanted to know. Or rather it was so full of plunder that he couldn't
+make head nor tail of it.
+
+It wasn't SIMPLE. And because it wasn't SIMPLE, it was a far, far cry
+from TRUE ANALYSIS.
+
+Well, well, the rubber manufacturer went out in the byways and got him a
+young man who was told to find out, if he could, whether or not there
+was any market for hard rubber tires on gas and electric industrial
+trucks, tractors and trailers, and allied equipment.
+
+He found, for example, that there were 40,000 trucks and tractors in
+service; that annual sales were about 3,200 units. He discovered that,
+of trailers and hand lift trucks, 125,000 each were in service; annual
+sales were 12,000 and 10,000 units respectively. But when he came to
+floor and hand trucks, conservative estimates showed 8,000,000 in use,
+while annual sales were in the neighborhood of 250,000!
+
+Next he found out, as accurately as possible, how many hard rubber tires
+were sold as original equipment. The 3,200 trucks and tractors had
+12,300 wheels. But 95 per cent of them were equipped with rubber tires
+at the factory. On the other hand, only 7 per cent of the floor and hand
+trucks were thus equipped!
+
+Outside of the truck and tractor people, he found the equipment makers
+opposed to hard rubber tires. Let's not go into the reasons. Yet
+representative manufacturers in a dozen different lines stated, when he
+asked them: "All future equipment purchased by us will be equipped with
+rubber tires."
+
+The whole report wasn't twelve pages long. And three tables, carefully
+compiled from available facts and figures, told the manufacturer
+everything he wanted to know.
+
+In short, upon this SIMPLE ANALYSIS, he was able to build a plan for
+manufacturing and merchandising solid rubber tires. Much good, though,
+it would have done him had he done his planning first and then found out
+there weren't enough wheels to wear the tires after he had made them!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So much for our "beneficent circle." Let us look into this thing called
+PLANNING and find out if there isn't some way of developing a knack of
+planning which will help us over the second major hurdle in our road to
+managing.
+
+There is, we shall find, a single problem with which the planner, the
+constructive manager, deals. Again, it doesn't make a particle of
+difference whether it's Mr. Schwab and Bethlehem Steel or Tonio and his
+peanut stand. No business is so "different" that the principles of
+management fail to apply.
+
+All right, then. The problem of every planner is first to determine what
+is the PRIMARY MOVING FORCE--the "initiative"--behind his job, and then
+to find the EASIEST PLACE TO APPLY THAT FORCE in order to set up the
+required MOTION or ACTIVITY with the LEAST AMOUNT OF EFFORT THAT WILL
+GET THE BEST RESULTS.
+
+A long sentence. Go over it again and you will find it is divided into
+four distinct parts:
+
+1. Deciding on the PRIMARY MOVING FORCE with which to set the wheels in
+motion.
+
+2. Applying this FORCE at the PROPER PLACE TO GET EASIEST ACTION.
+
+3. Directing this action along lines which either offer LEAST RESISTANCE
+or assure GREATEST ACCOMPLISHMENT.
+
+4. Bringing the activities to a focus at the place or time that will
+best carry the work to a SUCCESSFUL CONCLUSION.
+
+The PRIMARY MOVING FORCE may be the selection of media in an advertising
+plan; it may be the pushing of a button in the White House which opens a
+dam in Arizona, a Century of Progress in Chicago, or the Annual
+Convention of Whammit Manufacturers at Atlantic City; or it may be the
+memo from the big boss which gives the research department _carte
+blanche_ on a development project.
+
+To apply this initiative to a place where it will get QUICK ACTION may
+be to suggest an idea in the headline of an advertisement that will set
+the reader to thinking of salmon fishing at Mooselookmeguntic, or of the
+time the ice cubes gave out just when they shouldn't. Or it may be to
+classify the output of a factory before shipping so that freight cars
+can be packed to best advantage or so that lowest freight rates may be
+secured. Or it may be a simple method of sorting mail so that
+subordinates get the jobs they can handle and only the important
+business is brought to the president's attention.
+
+Directing this ACTIVITY along the lines that ASSURE GREATEST
+ACCOMPLISHMENT may be--in the advertisement--the presentation of facts
+or advantages which will persuade the reader that the fishing tackle you
+manufacture is desirable. Again, it may be the dovetailing of a thousand
+elements in a huge project like the Russian Five-Year Plan so that an
+adequate supply of ore will be available when the blast furnaces roar
+into operation; so that the steel will be on hand when production in the
+Cheliabinsk tractor works is stepped up to meet the requirements of the
+new agricultural regime. Or it may involve the simple sweeping of a
+floor in a manner which raises a minimum of dust.
+
+And bringing the activities to a SUCCESSFUL CONCLUSION may mean working
+up the arguments of the advertisement to the psychological closing of a
+sale--to the point where the ardent member of the Isaak Walton League
+figures he can live no longer without your fishing tackle and sets out
+gaily in the general direction of Abercrombie and Fitch's. Or it may be
+coordinating the entire production of a factory so that the Diesel
+generator set ordered by the Santa Fe can be delivered at the exact date
+specified in the original order. Or it may be handling the day's
+correspondence on the credit man's desk so that letters which must "make
+the Century" are ready to go at 11:45--so that the rest of the day's
+work is ready to sign, stamp and mail before the 5 o'clock whistle
+blows.
+
+FOUR ELEMENTS, then, in any job which is to be PLANNED. Every plan, if
+practicable, will follow them.
+
+There is, by way of further illustration, the story of the factory
+manager of a food manufacturing plant who laid out a PLAN for an
+operation no more intricate than the scrubbing of the floors at night.
+Now it can be told.
+
+And for two good reasons. First, because it was a practical plan which,
+even on such a lowly operation, saved quite a bit of money. Second,
+because in its construction the plan is, from the point of view of our
+four elements, what has sometimes been called a "natural."
+
+One night, it seems, the manager and his wife went to the movies. The
+town didn't have daylight time, so it was quite dark. They passed the
+plant, a large six-story building.
+
+"Why, Ed!" exclaimed the wife, "you didn't tell me the factory was
+working nights."
+
+Ed, like most husbands, was in the habit of telling friend wife 'most
+everything. For once he was at a loss. Sure enough, the lights were
+going full tilt on all floors. Hitting on all six, you might say.
+
+Then he laughed. It all came to him--"It's just the scrubwomen at
+work."
+
+One feature picture, one newsreel and one animated cartoon later, they
+walked past the plant again.
+
+"Look, the factory's still lit up," remarked the wife who turned off the
+living room lights religiously when she went out to get supper ready.
+
+This time Ed didn't laugh.
+
+In days like these one doesn't. Not, at any rate, at the thought of
+mounting electricity bills.
+
+The very next evening he was on the job. Time somebody found out what
+was what. In came the cleaners. They switched on the office lights--all
+of them--and two of the crew went to work. A couple of others went up to
+the second floor, switched on all the lights and pitched in with a vim.
+And so _ad infinitum_--or at least to the sixth story.
+
+And all the while the electric meter went round and round!
+
+Twenty-four hours later the janitor had a new plan of work.
+
+First the manager thought he'd start the whole crew at the top and work
+down. On second thought, a better plan was born--like the goddess of
+wisdom who sprang full grown from her papa's forehead. If I must go at
+this cleaning job, he thought, I might just as well make a first-class
+job of it and save not only on light, but on cleaners, too.
+
+We shall pass lightly over that part of his plan which had to do with
+releasing scrubwomen for other productive work, for in days like
+these--or in any other day--we just can't figure out that sort of thing.
+But goodness gracious, sometimes it's necessary.
+
+The emphasis, then, shall be on the electric current saved. The plan
+called for the entire crew's working together on one floor at a time--on
+the well-founded theory, of course, that teamwork would accomplish more
+in less time. Besides, since it was necessary to turn on all the lights
+on the floor, why not get the full benefit from them by having the
+entire gang at work?
+
+So far, so good. The surprise comes when you learn that he didn't have
+them start at the top and work down. He started them at the bottom and
+worked them up.
+
+"And I'll tell you why," explained the manager, "they have to climb six
+floors anyway, so they might as well work up as walk up. Besides, by
+leaving the stairs till the last, they can work their way down as well
+as up."
+
+In other words, they went to work right where they came in. And when
+they had finished, they were right back where they started--back where
+they went out on their way home.
+
+Simple, isn't it? An immediate reduction in lighting bills was
+noticeable. Even the amateur mathematician among you can figure that
+with one floor out of six lighted at a time, five-sixths of the light
+was saved. Besides, the work was done in less time--it wasn't long
+before two cleaners were reading the want ads. But why go into that?
+
+We aren't, for that matter, interested so much in the savings made,
+because it is exceedingly doubtful if many of us pass our factories or
+our offices on the way to the movies. We may never have an opportunity
+to put this particular plan to work.
+
+What we are interested in, though, is the fact that this cleaning plan
+utilizes the four basic elements which we've said must be present in
+every job of PLANNING.
+
+Look at the chart. It shows the movement of energy in the manager's plan
+for handling his crew. Starting the scrubbers on the ground floor--they
+had to begin there anyway, no matter when they began to scrub--was
+nothing but applying the primary force at the best point to get the
+easiest action.
+
+Working them up floor by floor was simply directing the activity along
+both the lines of least resistance and greatest accomplishment. And
+doing the stairs on the way down was just focusing the activity at the
+right point for making a successful conclusion--that is, winding up the
+job at the exit.
+
+ +------------------------------------+ +---------+
+ | | | Stairs |
+ | 6th Floor ------------- |
+ | /|\ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | | | |
+ | 5th Floor | | | | |
+ | /|\ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | | | |
+ | 4th Floor | | | | |
+ | /|\ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | | | |
+ | 3rd Floor | | | | |
+ | /|\ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | | | |
+ | 2nd Floor | | | | |
+ | /|\ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ | | |
+ | | | | | |
+ | Ground Floor | | | \|/ |
+ | /|\ | | |
+ +--------------------------------|---+ +---------+
+ |
+ +------------------------------+ |
+ | Application of Primary Force |--
+ +------------------------------+
+
+Turn back now to the FOUR ELEMENTS OF SUCCESSFUL PLANNING as we set them
+down on page 54. Try them out on any successful plan and assure yourself
+that not a point has been stretched. By using them we shall learn the
+constructive, creative KNACK OF PLANNING.
+
+Stripped of the "clothes" which every plan wears--it's only in the
+clothing that plans differ--this KNACK OF PLANNING may be quite simply
+visualized by some such chart as the one shown on the opposite page.
+
+There you see the PRIMARY FORCE--the INITIATIVE that sets the PLAN in
+action. Second, the POINT OF APPLICATION--where you must hit if you're
+going to win. Third, the various activities which bring about the
+SUCCESSFUL CONCLUSION. And fourth, all these activities headed up at
+the FOCUSING POINT.
+
+It's just like the sailor off the whaler who picks up the wooden mallet,
+hits the plunger a resounding crack, sends the weight hurtling up the
+pole, rings the bell--and gets a good 5-cent cigar. Or like the golfer
+who, putter in hand, strokes the ball firmly "in the direction of least
+resistance and greatest accomplishment," sees it hit the back of the cup
+and drop in for a par four.
+
+ |\
+ | \
+ | \
+ +--------------+ Various Activities | The \
+ | The "Primary | Point of Necessary to Bringing |"Focusing
+ | Moving Force"| Application about a Successful |Point"/
+ +--------------+ Conclusion | /
+ | /
+ |/
+
+Watch these four essentials. Knowing them and using them continually
+will enable you to break down every job of PLANNING into its component
+parts--will enable you to develop that important side of your managing
+faculties--whether your work is merely the carrying out of a job or
+shouldering the responsibilities of a huge business.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Remember the production manager in the shoe factory? Rather sketchy was
+the story of the ANALYSIS he made. Let's go a bit more into the details
+of the PLAN which was based on the ANALYSIS. And, at the same time,
+examine it to see if it checks with our FOUR ELEMENTS.
+
+You remember he was hired to find out why the so-and-so shoes didn't
+move out the door on time. And you'll remember that instead of clanking
+up and down from one department to another, he was seen one day picking
+out lasts from a bin in the assembly room. He had crept up quietly on
+the POINT OF APPLICATION. The INITIATIVE, you see, or the PRIMARY MOVING
+FORCE, was the boss's order to get shoes to moving.
+
+Here (in the lasting room) was his POINT OF APPLICATION. The biggest
+factor in slowing up shoes, he found, was failure to have lasts ready
+the instant the uppers came down cut and stitched from the fitting room.
+
+The shoes were entered into work with almost entire disregard of this
+vital point. Oh, yes, they knew they once bought so many pairs of lasts
+on this style or that in such and such sizes. And in a vague sort of way
+they tried to regulate the number of pairs sent to the cutting room with
+the number of lasts which they thought should be available the day the
+shoes reached the assembly department where uppers, insoles, bottoms and
+lasts met together--or should have.
+
+A single missing size could hold up a 36-pair lot which included a run
+of sizes all the way, say, from 7-1/2 to 12.
+
+Today it's all so different. A running inventory is kept of every active
+last. Each day the lasts which are released as shoes leave the finishing
+room are added to the supply on hand; at the same time, the lasts which
+are to be used that day in lasting incoming lots are subtracted.
+
+A job? No, a good girl of moderate intelligence simply added it to a
+dozen other office chores which she finds time to do daily.
+
+The running inventory, you see, is one of the various activities which,
+aimed at the focusing point--the moving of shoes out the door--are
+necessary to bring about a successful conclusion--the successful
+conclusion, in this particular instance, probably being the saving of
+the young man's scalp--for the boss was certainly out to get it the day
+he saw the young production manager pawing over the chunks of maple in
+the lasting room.
+
+Other activities might be mentioned. Plenty of them. An automatic
+conveyor which brought back empty racks to the point where they were
+needed. Semi-automatic elevators which made possible the rapid moving of
+shoes from floor to floor. Twelve-pair lots which simplified the
+handling problem, made the job of picking out lasts an easier one--and
+all in all did much to take the weight off management's shoulders. All
+these and more are the activities which were needed to bring about a
+successful conclusion. They were all part of the PLAN.
+
+Today, in that shoe factory, the production manager sits down for an
+hour in the forenoon and an hour in the afternoon and schedules the next
+half-day's work which will go to the cutting room. Two girls have been
+moderately busy getting him the information he needs. Sales have been
+brought up to date within half a day. He knows how many kid shoes he can
+cut, how many calf. He knows which patterns can be cut by machine,
+which must be cut by hand. He knows that certain patterns take longer to
+go through the fitting room. There's extra stitching or fancy
+perforations. He must lay off those. And last of all, he knows what he
+can count on in the way of lasts when the shoes hit the lasting room.
+
+With his two girls, the young production manager does all the work of
+scheduling.
+
+Actually, there isn't much work. Management, you see, has done an
+awfully nice job of PLANNING.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Picture now the manufacturer of small electrical appliances who sought
+to lay out new avenues of growth. His was pretty much a seasonal
+business. Electric fans constituted most of his bread-and-butter
+production. Early in the year and well on into the spring his plant ran
+full blast getting out merchandise for sale during the warm, muggy days
+when Sirius is in the ascendant.
+
+And then along in the summer and fall his production curves went into a
+serious decline.
+
+To level them out would have meant carrying a load of finished inventory
+which he could ill afford. Other appliances, such as hair curlers and
+driers which might conceivably find a ready sale during the holiday
+season, helped considerably--but not enough. The rough places were by no
+means made plane.
+
+Why not, thought he, a line of toys which would enable him to utilize
+his present production set-up profitably during the slack summer and
+fall? Why not, indeed?
+
+So he set out to chart a plan of action beginning, as you will see from
+the figure, with the furnishing of amusement as the PRIMARY FORCE. His
+POINT OF ATTACK was through the 15,000,000 American boys who love to
+build something. On he went to the various ways of getting parents
+interested as the ACTIVITIES WHICH SHOULD LEAD TO A SUCCESSFUL
+CONCLUSION--to the linking up of those activities with the retail store
+as the job of FOCUSING THEM on the final achievement--SALES.
+
+ +---------------------------------+
+ |Wholesome Amusement and Education|
+ +---------------------------------+
+ |
+ \|/
+ +---------------------------------+
+ | 15 Million Boys Who Want to Play|
+ | and Love to Build |
+ +---------------------------------+
+ |
+ \|/
+ +---------------------------------+
+ | Bought for by 7,500,000 Parents |
+ +---------------------------------+
+ |
+ \|/
+ +-------------------+
+ | Can be Reached by |
+ +-------------------+
+ |
+ \|/
+ +---------------+---------------+---------------+
+ | | | |
+ +---------+ +-----------+ +----------+ +-----------+
+ |Magazines| | Attention | | Window | | |
+ |They Read| | Caught in | | Displays | | The Boy |
+ +---------+ | Stores | +----------+ | Himself |
+ | +-----------+ | | |
+ +---------+ | | +-----------+
+ | List of | +--------------+ +--------------+ |
+ |Magazines| |Description of| |Description of| |
+ |Carrying | |Demonstration | | Window Advg. | |
+ |Our Advg.| | Offer | | Offer | |
+ +---------+ +--------------+ +--------------+ |
+ \ | | |
+ \ | | +-------------------+
+ \ | | | |
+ \ | | +-------------+ +--------------+
+ \ | | |List of Boys'| |Description of|
+ \ | | |Papers Advsd.| |Prize Contest |
+ \ | | | In | +--------------+
+ \ | | +-------------+ /
+ \ | | | /
+ \ | | | /
+ +-------------------------------------------+
+ | All Leading to |
+ +-------------------------------------------+
+ |
+ \|/
+ +-------------------------------------------+
+ | The Store That Sells Our Toys |
+ +-------------------------------------------+
+
+Only the bare headings on the plan are shown in the chart. Nevertheless
+it shows clearly the same knack of using the FOUR ELEMENTS which we have
+been at such pains to discuss.
+
+The chart proved helpful, not only in guiding the management in its
+efforts to enlarge the scope of manufacturing activities, but also in
+giving the office and the sales force a true picture of the business. So
+helpful, indeed, did it prove that it was blueprinted. And today every
+salesman has one pasted in his selling portfolio. It's the first thing
+the dealer sees. And it has gone far in arousing the latter's interest
+and confidence.
+
+If you were a dealer, would you buy from a factory that was run by
+guess and by gob when you could give your business to a concern which
+you knew was functioning in accordance with a sound, well-formulated
+plan?
+
+There, if you please, lies the answer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is not within the purpose of this chapter, incidentally, to play any
+favorites. Time must be taken out at this point, therefore, to return to
+the messenger boy who, when we left him, had just finished analyzing his
+job.
+
+Let's see now how his plan of action is based upon what the analysis
+taught him. Let's examine this elementary job of managing, not because
+it may make better messengers of us, but because the examination will
+show how universal this thing called management is--because it will
+afford one more proof of our general axiom that the principles of
+management are ever the same, no matter what particular paraphernalia
+of business may be used to cover up its old bones.
+
+Did, then, the messenger boy work out his plan in accordance with our
+FOUR BASIC ELEMENTS? He did, if he was really managing his job--and from
+the careful analysis he made, we may assume he was.
+
+If his trip meant riding a street car, then going to the cashier for
+carfare is his primary force. If he can walk, then the primary force is
+simply getting under way. Hastening as directly as possible to the car
+line is applying the force at the easiest place to get results. Perhaps
+he might have to choose between a slow street car which would carry him
+right to his destination for seven cents, and a fast elevated which, for
+a dime, would make better time but leave several blocks to walk at the
+other end. Deciding between the two is directing the activities along
+lines of greatest accomplishment. And getting his transfer, leaving the
+car, and going straight to the address on the message, are nothing more
+nor less than focusing his activities at the POINT OF ACHIEVEMENT.
+
+You see? The Colonel's lady in her Parisian peignoir and Judy O'Grady in
+her sleazy slip were sisters under the skin. So, if we may stretch a
+physiological point, are our messenger boy and the man who made the
+toys.
+
+The plans of both were built on the same foundation.
+
+Or take the plan by which the new general manager of a tap and die
+concern rehabilitated his company's business.
+
+"Why," he said, reaching for a pad of paper and roughly sketching
+something that looked like a funnel and must have been because he said
+it was, "our manufacturing plan looked about like this. Up here at the
+top we poured in a lot of orders and hoped to high heaven some of them
+would finally trickle through at the bottom.
+
+"Some of them did drop through. Others dropped because we poked sticks
+up the flue. That is to say, an army of stock chasers did their level
+best to keep everyone happy.
+
+"It was bedlam around the shop. It took three months on an average to
+complete an order.
+
+"I found much of the delay was due to certain Victorian notions about
+set-up time. The prevailing idea was to give an operator a good big job
+to minimize that item of expense.
+
+"Sometimes the job was so big it took 60 days to run it through a single
+operation.
+
+"Oh, me! oh, my! the inventories of finished goods that piled up. The
+tote boxes full of work in process that cluttered up the scenery.
+
+"And the complaints from customers who were waiting for orders!
+
+"Funny thing about our business, you can't get a customer to accept a
+couple of 1/4-in. taps in place of the 1/2-in. one he's ordered.
+
+"So I had to revamp the whole shooting match. First on the program was
+to find out what was made and what was making. Then we withdrew from the
+shop all work in process except what actually applied on orders in the
+house or what was needed to fill out our stock on an item on which we
+had no order, but on which past experience had taught us we'd get one in
+the course of the next 30 days.
+
+"You should have seen the pile of tote boxes we stuck under the boilers.
+
+"Well, the next job was to figure out the most economical lots to send
+through the works. That figure was arrived at simply by choosing such a
+size that no single operation could possibly take more than a day. In a
+word, I made sure that every single lot would move every single day.
+
+"Do you get the picture? A steady flow of manufacturing. No funnel. No
+poking around with sticks. Today there aren't any stock chasers. None is
+needed. Work reaches the stockroom on time. Orders are filled complete
+the same day they come in. Inventories are lower. Oh, heck, need I go
+on?"
+
+No, he needn't. For already he has shown us how the motive force was
+applied at the right point to get results. Take this plan apart--or any
+other plan that really works--and you will see that it is built upon the
+FOUR ELEMENTS OF PLANNING.
+
+They make the PLANNING wheels go round.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now it's time to take your own job of planning to pieces and see if it,
+too, does not meet the test.
+
+Here, again, as when the ANALYSIS was made, it helps to set things down
+on paper. In charting, you will find that by painstaking application of
+our four principles along the lines diagrammed in the figure on page 65,
+you can LAY OUT A WORKING PLAN depending for its approach to perfection
+only upon the amount of thought put into it, and upon the degree of
+accuracy with which the analysis of the job was made.
+
+The chart you make may be only a guide to the complete plan. Some plans
+require details which utterly preclude any form of expression so simple
+as a chart. Other plans can be laid out on the actual chart shown.
+
+In any event, the very attempt to put your plan into diagrammatic form
+will develop PRACTICABILITY AND ACCURACY OF ARRANGEMENT. The very
+necessity of having to indicate and to select the primary force back of
+your job or business; having to trace that force through the various
+activities necessary to completed work; and then having visibly and
+physically to concentrate all these activities at one point--those very
+acts which making a chart compels you to perform, enforce a mastery of
+the essential details of your business and a grasp of their relations
+which every manager should have.
+
+Perhaps the plan you have isn't as hot as you think it is.
+
+An office manager friend of ours was pretty proud of his system until
+one day he charted it.
+
+His company was famous for the quality of work turned out. But the
+service it gave was wretched. Special instructions were often ignored.
+Delivery dates were overlooked. All that sort of thing.
+
+The system looked good enough. The office manager said the mistakes were
+due to carelessness. And it looked as if he were right. So when
+something went wrong, the nearest employee got a handsome bawling out.
+
+At last the sales force jumped on him with both feet. Too many promises
+had been broken.
+
+So the office manager was forced to do something about it. And, quite by
+accident, made a chart of the ACTUAL PLAN OF WORK.
+
+Hello, what was this? Half a dozen responsibilities were standing
+around absolutely unchaperoned, you might say. Someone might come along
+and pick them up, or then again----
+
+For example, if a customer on the West Coast ordered a bill of goods,
+and then, while the order was in work, decided he wanted half the goods
+shipped by boat through the canal and the other half by fast freight,
+maybe he'd get his shipments that way and maybe he wouldn't. Under the
+prevailing "plan" that particular sort of job didn't fall inside any one
+man's bailiwick. No one man was responsible for seeing that such orders
+were executed. No "machinery" had therefore been provided for taking
+care of them.
+
+That's only a sample of some of the duties which landed--in his
+diagrammatic representation of the actual plan of work--somewhere off
+the map. For all the action they got, they might as well have been
+painted ships upon a painted ocean.
+
+Methods in general, you see, were pretty much all right. But there was
+no recognized initiative back of the plan. Activities were set in motion
+more or less spontaneously. As a result, certain parts of the business
+were left without managerial supervision.
+
+Nothing is surer to expose such a condition than actually to chart a
+plan. In this instance, it was simple to recognize "following customers'
+instructions"--no matter when, why, or how they came--as the logical
+primary force. Then the whole trouble was taken care of by centering the
+responsibility upon the chief of the order department. From then on, all
+instructions regarding any order cleared through him.
+
+Thus it will be seen that the idea back of charting a plan is not to get
+something you can work to as an ideal in carrying on a job, but rather
+to get a PRACTICAL FRAMEWORK on which the work can actually be done.
+Then it is at once evident whether the "clothes" of the business are
+hanging on the right limb or whether they have been hung up somewhere
+on the ground where, like as not, nobody will bother to pick them up.
+
+Too often the plan turns out to be a "sketch."
+
+The builder waits until the architect's first sketch has become a plan.
+
+In business it's like that, too.
+
+When finally you know, from ANALYSIS, _what you want to accomplish_, it
+is not difficult to plan the procedure if you start right and forget
+nothing. You start right if you take time to figure out the primary
+initiative. You forget nothing if you take the trouble to set things
+down in black and white.
+
+And finding the motive force and figuring out where to hit with it, is
+nothing more nor less than charting the moves of the game until you find
+a succession of activities moving along without back-tracking, without
+duplication, without wasted effort or supervision.
+
+Thus cultivating the KNACK OF PLANNING is a long step in the direction
+of becoming a good manager. If you were going to try to tell someone
+else how to cultivate the knack of planning, the story of the two men
+shaving in the Pullman washroom serves to illustrate the point.
+
+Both men seemed to be in a hurry. The first hustled over to one of the
+wash basins, scrubbed his face and hands, dried them on a towel. Then he
+began to shave. That finished, he washed the lather from his face, dried
+himself again on another towel, and put away his razor. Next came his
+teeth. He brushed them, washed away the traces of tooth paste, and dried
+himself on a third towel.
+
+All this time the other fellow was going through the same motions--but
+in a much different order.
+
+He began with his teeth. After he had brushed them, he lathered his
+face. After he had shaved, a single wash was enough and a single towel
+did the drying job. He had finished his canteloupe and was well along
+with his eggs before his companion reached the diner. Number two didn't
+do a better job of brushing his teeth, of shaving, of washing. But he
+_did_ do a better job of PLANNING.
+
+He started where each operation would lead directly and naturally into
+the next, performing each at the proper time.
+
+After all, isn't that precisely what you do in planning any part of your
+business?
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+Organizing the Work
+
+
+Remember Psmith and Pbrown? One could analyze, but didn't know what to
+do with his analysis after he got it. The other was an expert planner,
+but alas! his plans were never based upon the solid foundation of actual
+necessity. He planned to do something before he knew what had to be
+done.
+
+Psmith and Pbrown, together, looked like a grand pair when we introduced
+them in the chapter on PLANNING. Now, after taking particular pains to
+give that impression, we shall have to break right down and confess in
+open meeting that they are but two numbers of the MANAGEMENT TEAM.
+Probinson is the third.
+
+Probinson ORGANIZES THE WORK. Psmith may analyze to a fare-you-well;
+Pbrown may plan till he's blue in the face--their best efforts are as of
+nothing worth unless Probinson is on hand to organize the work of the
+business. For as surely as there is a knack of analyzing and a knack of
+planning, just so surely is there a knack of organizing the work.
+
+Thus we approach the third phase of the job of managing.
+
+So far we have seen how the successful manager starts from the top,
+working backward, to chart his job--and then, having found out what has
+to be done, builds his plan for doing it. Analysis and planning,
+however, will carry him just so far. Unless he acquires the knack of
+organization, he will never make a howling success of his job--he will
+fall just short of being an outstanding manager.
+
+The office manager for an Eastern concern affords the needed
+illustration.
+
+P. C.--those aren't his initials--knew office management from A to
+Izzard. First to arrive in the morning, last to leave at night, he had
+a tremendous capacity for hard labor. But he never seemed to make a hole
+in the pile of work on his desk. It grew no smaller fast. Why? Because
+he never, in all his years of managing, learned to arrange the division
+of his work. He never learned to deputize it. When his mind should have
+been free for the more or less important decisions which crop out now
+and then even in an office manager's life, it was all bound around in
+the necessity of performing some silly little routine job which any girl
+of moderate intelligence could have done.
+
+His idea of organizing his job was to try to do everything himself. And
+within his physical limitations he was a valuable man to the company.
+But how much more he'd have been worth had he, at some time in his
+career, acquired the KNACK OF ORGANIZATION!
+
+Don't jump to the conclusion, now, that the successful organizer is one
+who merely divides up his work and parcels it out among a flock of
+assistants. Don't think for a moment that it is nothing but
+deputization.
+
+Effective organization is far more than that.
+
+It is the distribution of work, according to its character or urgency,
+among the facilities at hand for doing it according to their capacities
+or cost. And it makes no difference whether those facilities happen to
+be men, money, or machines--or simply your own available time.
+
+You deputize work when you use an adding machine instead of your head to
+total last month's sales--when you turn the job of packaging breakfast
+food over to an automatic machine--when you jot down in your notebook
+information which would otherwise tax your memory--when you telephone
+the purchasing agent instead of making your legs take you to his
+office--when, instead of using your own funds, you do something on
+borrowed capital.
+
+Deputization may be any one of these just as easily as it may be asking
+your assistant to find out why So-and-so's order for boys' pants wasn't
+shipped on time, or making him responsible for working out a new
+prospect list.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The office manager of a shoe concern found, right after the war, that
+much of his day was spent telling dealers in Kalamazoo and Keokuk to be
+patient, please, and they'd get their shoes.
+
+Those were the halcyon days, you'll remember, when salesmen went out
+twice a year and told their customers how many shoes or ships or sewing
+machines they could have--and when they could have them.
+
+As a result, this particular shoe factory was loaded to the guards with
+orders. Orders were shipped when, as and if they struggled from cutting
+room to fitting room--and from then on down to the packing department.
+
+Complaints were numerous. They weren't exactly complaints, either.
+Queries, rather. Where are my shoes? Can't you ship March 15 instead of
+April 1? And so on--until, as we started to say, the sales manager was
+spending a great part of his time dictating replies to his stenographer.
+And she didn't have time for any of her other duties.
+
+Analysis proved that the letters were, in the main, of three types.
+Three letters were therefore prepared, and each day the sales manager
+went through the inquiries and indicated which letter should go to which
+customer. In that way the latter got a prompt and courteous reply, as
+well as certain vague information explaining why he'd have to wait
+another month for his shoes.
+
+And he was moderately happy. Personal attention from the sales manager
+could have accomplished no more. Thus a certain part of an executive's
+and his stenographer's time was deputized to a system.
+
+Could the sales manager have gone a step further and had his letter
+mimeographed, he would have been DEPUTIZING TO A MACHINE the same amount
+of his own and a much larger part of the stenographer's time. But, while
+the customers accepted plausible excuses in place of shoes, it is
+doubtful whether the cleverest imitation would have taken the place of a
+real typewritten letter.
+
+With the manufacturer of a proprietary medicine, however, things are
+different. Women from every part of the country write in describing
+their ailments. It is not difficult to classify these letters into a
+dozen groups. And form letters, done in skillful imitation of real
+typing, do the trick quite nicely.
+
+That is DEPUTIZING--just as it is DEPUTIZING when the "big boss" calls
+in his assistant and says: "You run this shebang from now on. I've got
+to see if I can't get the K. C. plant out of the red."
+
+And it's DEPUTIZING when a manufacturer, forced to increase the size of
+his plant, goes to a real estate operator and gets him to buy a piece of
+land, put up a building and rent it to him at a certain figure, while he
+uses his own capital to equip and operate the new plant, because he can
+make 15 per cent, say, on his capital himself, whereas he has to pay out
+as rent only an amount equal to 8 per cent of what land, building,
+insurance, and so on, would tie up.
+
+Fundamentally, then, DEPUTIZING is taking something away from the
+"principal" of the job or business and assigning it to a "deputy."
+Principal and deputy may be a manager and his stenographer, a department
+head and a filing system, or a corporation's capital and a bond issue.
+
+The first stumbling step toward organization, therefore, is to RECOGNIZE
+and DEFINE the PRINCIPAL and the DEPUTIES in a given task.
+
+A good manager, though, can't simply go and deputize every detail of his
+job. That might be nothing more than the trick of a lazy man.
+
+Yet a rising young executive (on our list of casual acquaintances) has
+done exactly that. He has carried it to such a fine point that he is
+able to spend three afternoons a week with Col. Bogie. He is still
+rising, although some of us have abiding faith in the old adage that
+what goes up must come down. In other words, he's rising to a fall.
+
+No, organizing is not deputizing in that sense of the word.
+
+In EFFECTIVE ORGANIZING, it will be noted from the examples cited, work
+is deputized _only when the "principal" is left free to do something
+else more important or more profitable_.
+
+The "big boss" didn't hand the plant over to his assistant until he knew
+his undivided attention was needed elsewhere--until he knew he could
+spend his time more profitably in another phase of the business.
+
+Analyze the conditions under which the sales manager delegated part of
+his dictation to a system, and part of his stenographer's typing to a
+duplicating machine. You will see that the work deputized fulfilled two
+conditions:
+
+It was work the system and the machine could do to advantage--
+
+And work which he and his stenographer could do only at the expense of
+more important work.
+
+Wherever there is delegation of responsibility in any true job of
+managing, the same two fundamentals will be seen.
+
+Too often a manager says: "Never do anything your subordinate can do for
+you." But it is not good management when turning a job over to a
+subordinate leaves the manager idle and unproductive--with nothing on
+his mind except his hat.
+
+The good manager, whatever may be his particular job of managing,
+follows two rules when he deputizes or distributes work to man, money
+or machine. Such work, he knows, should be:
+
+1. Work which that other person or other thing can do to good advantage.
+
+2. Work which the manager would do himself only at the expense of
+something more important.
+
+Deputizing your work so that your days are free for golfing or yachting
+is far from the spirit of true organization. When a Schwab deputizes,
+another job profits by the increased time he is able to give to it.
+Every time he passes on a bit more responsibility, the whole enterprise
+profits through his greater freedom for the big sweep of the business.
+And when a manager fails because he has never learned to share
+responsibilities, we shudder at his folly--never stopping to think that
+the sole reason it was folly was because there was a bigger job for him
+to do. Deputizing his work would have left him free to exercise big,
+broad judgment in a way that only leisure and calmness could afford.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A few years ago, two young men went into business in a small Illinois
+town. They were honest, industrious, well liked. Austin was a born
+salesman; Black was a shrewd buyer. It looked like a good combination
+and the local banker gave them a line of credit.
+
+One year went by. Two years. Austin and Black were just skinning by. A
+fair living was all they were getting out of the business. Volume--which
+was what they needed--was increasing, oh, so slowly.
+
+A salesman came along about that time and told them some things they
+didn't know. A little more skill in watching the stock; cutting out
+lines which weren't paying; trimming purchases on slow-moving stocks;
+pushing specialties before they went bad on their hands--those were some
+of the methods which meant added profits.
+
+It certainly looked like good business to hire another clerk so that the
+partners' time would be free for these new phases of the business.
+
+The clerk was taken on--and things began to hum. Soon Austin and Black
+saw other steps they ought to take. More attention must be given to
+advertising. That meant another clerk. Next came a bookkeeper, an
+assistant bookkeeper.
+
+Trade was increasing, you see, and net profits were increasing. Extra
+clerks were needed all right, but the proprietors went the whole hog and
+put on so many that they themselves no longer had to stand behind a
+counter. They were both badly bitten by the bug of supervision.
+
+Finally the tide turned. It usually does.
+
+And when Austin and Black went to the bank one day to get an extension
+of credit, the shrewd old retired farmer on the other side of the desk
+laid down the law.
+
+They got the extension--but only on certain conditions.
+
+The chief condition was that they do LESS MANAGING and MORE
+MERCHANDISING.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+And that's what they are doing today.
+
+There were two managers who organized their work, increased their
+profits. Up to a certain point, every time they deputized their work,
+it was an advantage, because it left them more time for better
+merchandising.
+
+But they weren't ORGANIZING according to our TWO FUNDAMENTALS.
+Literally, they were _deputizing all the work that others could do_--and
+not confining the work deputized to _work they themselves could do only
+at the expense of something more important_.
+
+How well the chart tells the story! The great big white piece of pie
+marked "IDLE" shows exactly where Austin and Black went wrong. The worst
+thing that ever happened to them was the day they went home from Chicago
+and tried to run their business the way they thought Mr. James W.
+Simpson runs his large retail emporium.
+
+Somewhere along the line they tripped over the point of vanishing
+returns and kept right on going.
+
+And thus we come to the Scylla and Charybdis of our job of ORGANIZING.
+Remember we are not interested in the mere knack of getting someone else
+to take over every last responsibility that can be borne by another.
+Perhaps that may be good management for a Schwab--in so far, at least,
+as it leaves his mind free for the exercise of the broad judgment we
+mentioned a while ago. Nor are we interested in the sheer industry and
+application involved in doing without assistance everything that can
+possibly be so done, although doing it may be equally good management
+for, say, a file clerk. Rather is our interest in the KNACK OF SENSING
+THE DIVIDING LINE between WORK to PERFORM and WORK to DEPUTIZE. It is
+that ability which is the mark of the successful manager.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Where is this DIVIDING LINE? How shall we know where to DEPUTIZE and
+when to PERFORM? What kind of work shall we turn over to subordinates?
+What shall we reserve for ourselves?
+
+Again, whatever the job or business we are engaged in organizing, there
+are simple rules to follow.
+
+But first an illustration which will help to make the point.
+
+Consider the credit man for a large concern which sold machines on a
+monthly payment plan.
+
+He was always in a jam with the sales department. It took too long,
+complained the sales manager, to get credit rulings. It was no fun to
+put a whole lot of work into selling the customer, only to have the
+order turned down by the house because of poor credit. Why couldn't the
+credit man give them a ruling before they attempted to close a sale?
+Sometimes it took so long to get an O.K. that the prospect got all cold
+and went somewhere else.
+
+The treasurer of the company was drawn into the picture when the sales
+manager openly declared he'd "get" the credit man.
+
+And it certainly looked as if the sales manager had a good case.
+
+"But," protested the credit man, "I've made mighty few mistakes. As for
+delays--well, I don't know how I could work any harder."
+
+"Maybe you work too hard," the treasurer ventured.
+
+"Hm, if I didn't do what I do, I don't know who would."
+
+"Hold on, now, let's get this thing straight. You're valuable to the
+company because of your long experience and good judgment on credits.
+When you have all the dope on a man, I'll bet my last dollar on your
+decision. The only mistakes you ever make are when you hurry your
+decisions.
+
+"But--and here's the point--you aren't any better at digging out the
+facts than either of your two assistants. Yet here's what you do. You
+divide salesmen's requests for credit rulings into two groups. You take
+those that run over $500; your assistants get the others. Each of you
+does his own investigating and digging--and except in puzzling cases,
+you practically let your two men make their own decisions.
+
+ Myself Assistants
+ $500 Up Under $500
+ Mercantile Reports
+ Bank References
+ Special Investigations
+ "Briefing" Data
+ Final Ruling
+ Correspondence
+
+ $500 Up Under $500
+ { Mercantile Reports
+ Assistants { Bank References
+ { Special Investigations
+ { "Briefing" Data
+
+ Myself { Final Ruling
+ { Correspondence
+
+"Why, listen. You, the best man we have on _decisions_, spend more than
+half your time _digging_, while your assistants spend much of their
+time making decisions. What's the result? Delay, the department in a
+jam, some decisions made in a hurry, some by your assistants.
+
+"The trouble with you is, you haven't organized your department right."
+And the treasurer sketched the diagram reproduced in the upper chart on
+page 105.
+
+"Why, man, your job is to keep _all_ bad credits off the books--not just
+the big ones. A bad risk--whether it's $5 or $5000--is a mistake. You're
+an expert credit man--but as a MANAGER, you're a WASHOUT.
+
+"This," he added, "is the way you ought to set up your department. Then
+you, the best man on decisions, will do all the deciding. Your two
+assistants, who are just as good as you are at digging, will spend all
+their time getting you the facts." And as he spoke he sketched in the
+lower chart.
+
+The credit man had erred in the other direction from the two retail
+merchants. He wasn't doing _enough_ managing. He was keeping too much
+work for himself. And he was _deputizing the wrong kind of work_.
+
+The merchants were deputizing work they should have done themselves--the
+general supervision of stocks, advertising and sales did not require
+their undivided attention--and the volume and profits of the business
+wouldn't stand so much unproductive expense.
+
+Our credit man, on the other hand, was doing work which others could
+very well do for him--the time he spent on such work should have been
+devoted to other and more important responsibilities.
+
+In the story of the credit man, however, another fundamental of good
+organization comes to light. Remember how the treasurer classified the
+character of the work to be done? Not only was the credit man trying to
+do too much work, but even when he _did_ assign work to his assistants,
+he assigned the wrong kind. He deputized, true enough--but he erred in
+regard to the KIND OF WORK HE DEPUTIZED. He thought he could deputize
+small credits. It didn't take the treasurer long to show him that the
+amount made no difference--it was the character of the work that
+required consideration.
+
+Plenty of managers make that same mistake. They judge the importance of
+the task by its physical bigness--or by the amount of money
+involved--instead of deciding according to the character of the work.
+
+Before work can be safely deputized, then, it must be MORE INTELLIGENTLY
+CLASSIFIED. And the key to better classification is found by dividing
+the job or business into two elements.
+
+One is ENTERPRISE. The other is ROUTINE.
+
+_Enterprise_ is an arbitrary term which we shall choose to indicate
+those factors of work which involve the use of judgment, initiative,
+experiment or speculation.
+
+_Routine_ we shall apply to those factors which follow settled
+precedents or rules or come within the range of known ability to
+perform.
+
+Analyze your own job with these two terms in mind. The various duties
+you perform will fall readily into one or the other of the two
+classifications.
+
+The things which come under the head of routine you have a right to
+deputize if, when you chart both classifications--in as accurate a
+proportion as possible to the capacities of the "principal" and the
+"deputies"--you find you are not overloading the business with
+unproductive management. A simple rule of thumb works here about as well
+as anything: Base the division of work on how much or how little of the
+routine the _principal_ can afford to carry.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You may safely deputize only so long as, by so doing, you leave yourself
+free for the more important, more profitable decisions.
+
+Don't forget for a moment, then--if you would organize
+effectively--that there is a tremendous difference between enterprise
+and routine work. Don't waste energy on the one. DON'T DEPUTIZE THE
+OTHER--unless you can effectively organize a deputy's capacity for doing
+it, and then only if it pays.
+
+Don't be like the manager who got a taste of the savings to be made
+through the application of mechanical handling equipment. He bought
+conveyors--and more conveyors. He was DEPUTIZING the handling job to
+machines. So far, so good. But the first thing you know he had a 50-ft.
+conveyor connecting two points in his shipping room. It took one man to
+load it, another to unload it. Previously one man with a hand truck had
+moved the packages very nicely, and had a lot of time left over for
+other duties. And here he needed an extra man--and owned a costly piece
+of equipment to boot. Under such circumstances the conveyor became very
+expensive scenery--not nearly so nice to look at as Yellowstone Park or
+the Riviera--and the money invested in it would have bought a trip to
+either.
+
+Thus all savings through deputization don't pay. Many a machine will
+save time and labor, but the interest on the investment, and upkeep and
+the depreciation will more than eat up the saving--UNLESS THE TIME AND
+LABOR SAVED CAN BE PROFITABLY TURNED TO SOMETHING ELSE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No attempted exposition of the KNACK OF ORGANIZING can be complete
+without something more than passing mention of a phase which may be all
+too easily slid over or completed.
+
+When work is deputized, the responsibility of the manager does not end
+with the act of deputization. It is the manager's responsibility to see
+that the work is done in the simplest and most effective manner.
+
+A sales executive had allowed a bunch of call reports to accumulate.
+There were several hundred of them. So he called in a stenographer whose
+time was hanging fairly heavily on her hands, and asked her to put them
+into alphabetical order preparatory to filing.
+
+Fifteen minutes later he happened by and was startled to see that she
+had covered two desks with the call reports and seemed to be making
+haste very slowly indeed.
+
+She had made a pile for every last letter in the alphabet. And every
+time she picked up a report, she had to hunt for the proper pile to put
+it in.
+
+So he showed her how to sort first in five major piles--A, B, C, D in
+one pile and so on. And then to sort each pile again into five piles,
+one for each letter--and finally to sort each individual pile
+alphabetically.
+
+It sounded like more handling. And perhaps it was. But the job of
+classification was greatly simplified. There was no more hunting for
+the missing pile. The work proceeded quickly and accurately.
+
+A rough illustration. He might have gone a step further and deputized
+part of the girl's task to a machine instead of to the primitive system
+described. That is to say, he might have seen that she was provided with
+one of the preliminary filing baskets which file clerks often use. Then
+the task of sorting alphabetically could have been done in a single
+handling of each report.
+
+But whatever the method he made available for the girl's use, the
+illustration still serves to indicate that the manager's responsibility
+does not end when he turns a job over to a subordinate. It remains his
+care to see that the job is done by the most effective method--not
+necessarily the speediest, but the one which gets the best results for
+the effort involved.
+
+To find this "one best" method, industry has evolved a complete
+technique of time and motion study. And merely to hint at what may be
+accomplished by breaking down an operation into its elementary
+operations and observing the time required to perform them, becomes part
+of our task in setting down the ways and means of organizing.
+
+First we shall find that any job, simple or complex, may be divided into
+three parts: make ready, do and put away.
+
+Shaving, for example. First we get everything ready--razor, brush,
+shaving cream, hot water. Then comes the actual operation of shaving.
+And last, cleaning up--rinsing the brush, wiping the razor, and putting
+things back where they belong.
+
+Perhaps you're in the same boat as the old farmer who, approached by the
+subscription salesman of an agricultural magazine, allowed he wa'nt
+farmin' now half as good as he knew how.
+
+Or perhaps you already hold speed records at giving your face the
+once-over. But, you see, the whole point in studying the job is not
+aimed at faster shaving, but at simplifying the "make ready" and "put
+away" phases of the operation.
+
+For example, the next time you shave, try picking up the tube of shaving
+cream with one hand and unscrewing the cap while you're wetting your
+brush with the other. It will be awkward as the dickens the first time
+you try it. But try it again and again and again. It won't be long
+before you'll be an expert at doing the job that way. Finish up that
+part of the operation by screwing the cap back on while you are
+lathering your face with the right hand. Does it require a stop watch to
+point out the saving in time that you've made? Oh, it won't be easy the
+first few times, but before you know it, you'll have taught yourself
+good work habits.
+
+Take a simple job like the assembly of a license bracket in an
+automobile factory. An analysis of this operation (see "Micromotion
+Technique," by F. J. Van Poppelen, _Factory and Industrial Management_,
+Nov., 1930) showed that the right hand was busy all the time, while the
+left did nothing most of the time except hold the piece.
+
+At the risk of getting too technical--for after all we are interested,
+not so much in the details, as in certain broad principles of organizing
+the work--let us see how the operation was performed.
+
+First the operator assembled a number of screws and leather washers by
+picking up a screw with the left hand, a washer with the right, putting
+them together and laying the assembly aside. Then he picked up a bracket
+with the left hand and a screw and washer assembly with the right,
+placing the screw through a slot in the bracket--continuing to hold
+assembled pieces in his left hand while the right was picking up a flat
+washer and assembling it to the screw; picking up lock washer,
+assembling it to the screw; picking up acorn nut and starting it on the
+screw; and finally picking up an open-end wrench and tightening the nut.
+Then he assembled screw, washers and nut to the other side of the
+bracket, whereupon wrench and bracket were laid aside, completing the
+cycle.
+
+An analysis of these motions, by right and left hands, is given in the
+table on page 120. It illustrates the important point that the right
+hand was busy all the time, but for a considerable part of the time the
+left was doing nothing but holding the piece.
+
+On pages 118 and 119 are shown drawings of the old and the new assembly
+methods. Likewise, the lower table on page 120 analyzes, by right and
+left hands, the motions required by the new method. Note first that
+fewer elements--17 as against 26--are required. And note that both hands
+are productively employed with shorter distances to travel for stock and
+with decreased effort.
+
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ Analysis of this assembly job shows ...
+
+ ... that the right hand was busy all the time....]
+
+
+[Illustration:
+
+ Comparison with the old method
+
+ ... shows both hands productively employed....]
+
+
+TABLE 1
+
+ LEFT HAND RIGHT HAND
+
+ 1. Pick up screw Pick up leather washer
+ 2. Assemble Assemble
+ 3. Idle Lay aside
+ 4. Pick up bracket Pick up screw and washer assembled
+ 5. Hold bracket Assemble
+ 6. " " Pick up flat washer
+ 7. " " Assemble
+ 8. " " Pick up lock washer
+ 9. " " Assemble
+ 10. " " Pick up nut
+ 11. " " Start on thread
+ 12. " " Pick up wrench
+ 13. " " Tighten nut
+ 14. " " Lay wrench aside
+ 15. " " Pick up screw and washer assembled
+ 16. " " Assemble to other side of bracket
+ 17. " " Pick up flat washer
+ 18. " " Assemble
+ 19. " " Pick up lock washer
+ 20. " " Assemble
+ 21. " " Pick up nut
+ 22. " " Start on thread
+ 23. " " Pick up wrench
+ 24. " " Tighten nut
+ 25. " " Lay wrench aside
+ 26. Idle Lay bracket aside
+
+
+TABLE 2
+
+ LEFT HAND RIGHT HAND
+
+ 1. Pick up screw and transport Same
+ 2. Position on block Same
+ 3. Pick up leather washer and transport Same
+ 4. Position on screw Same
+ 5. Pick up new bracket and transport Pick up assembled
+ bracket; lay aside
+ 6. Position bracket on block Same
+ 7. Pick up flat washer and transport Same
+ 8. Position on screw Same
+ 9. Pick up lock washer and transport Same
+ 10. Position on screw Same
+ 11. Pick up nut and transport Same
+ 12. Start nut on screw Same
+ 13. Position driver Same
+ 14. Tighten nut Same
+ 15. Position driver to 2nd nut Same
+ 16. Tighten nut Same
+ 17. Release driver and move assembled
+ bracket 2 in. forward on block Same
+
+The new set-up consists of a hardwood block, shaped to fit one side of
+the bracket when assembled, and nailed to the bench. The open-end wrench
+was replaced by a screw-driver with a socket wrench to fit the acorn
+nut, suspended on a spring in front of the operator. The miscellaneous
+containers for holding the small parts were replaced by a supply of
+sheet-metal duplicate trays, so that the various parts could be located
+in the most convenient position. (This arrangement was not used in the
+accompanying illustrations because it obscured the view.)
+
+In a word, then, the number of elements was decreased by one-third--and
+practically all of the elements in the new method require less time than
+the similar or corresponding element in the old method. The distance of
+travel for stock has been shortened, parts are grasped more easily,
+better and faster tools are provided, effort is decreased, and both
+hands are productively employed.
+
+Need the imagination be stretched to the breaking point to see how a job
+involving the work not of one man, but of several, may be similarly
+organized and similarly improved?
+
+A second illustration will serve to show the application to group work
+(see "Motion Study Applied to Group Work," by J. A. Piacitelli, _Factory
+and Industrial Management_, April, 1931, page 626).
+
+The operation studied here involved cycles of approximately eleven
+seconds' duration, performed by a group of seven men. The material
+handled consisted of rolls of roofing weighing about 50 lbs. each. Many
+of the elements in the cycle were obviously fatiguing. The rolls had to
+be lifted, during transfers from one worker to another, and rolled along
+a horizontal runway. The trucker lifted the completed roll and placed it
+on his truck. While the rate of production was limited by process and
+speed of equipment, the chance to cut cost and fatigue prompted the
+study.
+
+Examine the equipment layout before the study was made (it is shown on
+page 124), and follow the operation. A roll of roofing paper
+approximately 8 in. in diameter and 36 in. long was wound about the
+mandrel of a winding machine by one of the workers. The roll was taken
+off and passed to another worker who wrapped a sheet of paper about it
+and pasted it in place. When the roll was wrapped, he had to lift the
+roll, turn and deposit it on the runway. The next man inserted a bag of
+nails, a can of cement and an instruction sheet into the core of the
+roll. To do this, he was forced to turn and bend almost to floor level
+to get his supplies.
+
+Next the roll was passed along to two men who, from opposite sides of
+the runway, placed protectors and muslin caps on the ends of the roll.
+It was then rolled along to another man who placed gummed paper bands
+about the ends and pushed the roll to the end of the runway where the
+trucker placed it on a truck and wheeled it into storage.
+
+[Illustration: EQUIPMENT LAYOUT BEFORE STUDY]
+
+[Illustration: EQUIPMENT LAYOUT AFTER STUDY]
+
+The movie camera, which is gradually finding wider industrial use in the
+search for the "one best" method, was used to record the work of this
+group. It supplied not only a photographic record of the working place
+and surrounding conditions, but also a simultaneous record of time and
+method employed by each worker regardless of speed. It was then possible
+to study overlapping cycles and to analyze the methods to the desired
+degree of accuracy--and thus to transfer parts of the cycle of one
+operator to that of another, thus effecting a better distribution of
+work and shortening the cycle of the person on whom the production of
+the group depends--thereby increasing the productivity of the entire
+group.
+
+These analyses showed immediately an unequal distribution of work.
+Again, from the equipment layout made after the study, let us follow
+through and see what changes were effected.
+
+First the wrapper was freed from turning and lifting the roll from his
+table by the introduction of an elevator which lifted the roll to an
+inclined runway. The roll then moved from place to place by gravity
+when released by foot-operated trips. The pasting problem was solved by
+using a trough the length of the paper, open on the bottom and equipped
+with squeegee lips like the mucilage bottle on your desk. A pile of
+wrapping paper with the far edges of the sheets inserted under the
+trough supplied a pasted sheet every time one was drawn toward the
+operator. The trough was covered with a hinged plate which permitted the
+roll to pass over it to the elevator. It was found, by eliminating the
+fatiguing elements in this man's work and simplifying his cycle of
+motions, that the time would be so reduced that he could easily take
+over the work of the man who placed the cement and nails in the core of
+the roll. The instruction sheet was placed in the roll by the winder,
+who had ample time for this additional task. The pile of sheets was
+placed at his right under a date stamp so that he could date each sheet
+and slip it into the roll just before it stopped.
+
+Simplifying the cycle of the men who placed the caps on the ends of the
+roll enabled them to take over with ease the work of the man who had
+placed the gummed-paper bands around the ends. Thus each man capped and
+banded his own end, whereas formerly the bander had had to assume an
+awkward and fatiguing position to reach the far end. And last, by
+placing a redesigned truck at the end of the incline, the completed
+rolls landed in the truck, and the trucker was able to care for two
+machines.
+
+The method finally established was recorded on instruction sheets, and
+the existing premium was modified to provide additional incentive.
+Although, as stated at the outset, the rate of production was limited by
+the machine, substantial savings resulted from the study. Production has
+been maintained with 4-1/2 men instead of 7; fatigue has been greatly
+lessened; cost has been reduced about 26 per cent; average earnings of
+the group have increased about 19 per cent.
+
+Thus the search for the "one best" method becomes an important factor in
+organizing the work.
+
+We might go on and show how this group work was organized in accordance
+with our two fundamentals, but the purpose of introducing this
+illustration and the one preceding it was, after all, to show that the
+_principal's_ responsibility, after deputizing work, ends only when he
+has shown the _deputy_ the most effective method of doing it.
+
+Besides, we must hasten on to the task of handling the "help." We have
+seen that the entire FABRIC OF MANAGING rests upon the knack of
+ORGANIZING; that organizing the work must be preceded by PLANNING; and
+that planning must be based upon ANALYSIS. And now, having organized, we
+must learn how to handle the "help"--which is a task met in every job
+involving managing.
+
+And what job, big or small, does not involve MANAGING?
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+Handling the "Help"
+
+
+There used to be a good old golden rule of thumb that was plenty good
+enough for the good old rule-of-thumb days. It was: _If you would be
+fair, treat all your men alike_.
+
+As a matter of fact it wasn't a bad rule in those halcyon days for man
+wanted then but little here below.
+
+And he got it.
+
+Those were the days when a certain plant of a certain electrical concern
+was known affectionately among the employees as "Siberia."
+
+With good reason, too, for it was the dreariest, bleakest place in
+winter you can imagine. And a transfer to it was like nothing so much as
+a sentence to Siberia.
+
+Well, well, their plant today is as comfortable a place to work in as
+you'll find anywhere in the country; that concern today sets a high
+standard of employer-employee relationships; those same workers who,
+thirty years ago, shivered at the bare thought of pulling on their pants
+and trekking over the barren wastes to "Siberia," are today comfortably
+retired on modest pensions which don't do a thing but help keep the wolf
+from the door.
+
+Yet the management, in those days beyond recall, would have shown you
+that _all men were treated alike_.
+
+Perhaps that was the trouble. Anyway, if you asked the management today
+how to handle "help," dollars to doughnuts the answer would come closer
+to being: To be fair, TREAT EVERY MAN DIFFERENTLY.
+
+A suggestive statement--significant because it is indicative of
+tremendous change in the relationships of capital and labor, of employer
+and employee.
+
+Fifteen years ago a lad graduated from an Eastern university. His folks
+were poor but proud--as Mr. Alger used to say--but managed to see Phil
+through. Phil had made a good record in school--and some good friends.
+Through one of them he got a letter to Mr. H--, the head of an old
+established firm of stockbrokers--and the letter got him a job.
+
+The job paid $5 a week. Even in those days there wasn't much left over
+after carfare and lunches had been deducted.
+
+But Phil was "learning the bond business." He wouldn't be worth even $5
+a week the first six months. After that, maybe.
+
+He stuck. Graduated from "running the street" to a stool in the stock
+clerk's cage. Came the New Year and Phil found an extra dollar in his
+pay envelope. He asked the cashier if there wasn't some mistake. There
+wasn't.
+
+Two days later he got a job in a factory near his home at $12 a week.
+Told Mr. H-- he was leaving. Was offered $15 to stay. Wouldn't.
+
+Mr. H-- confessed later that he had let the most promising prospect in
+years slip through his fingers. All--if you ask us--because it was a
+fixed policy of the house to treat all alike.
+
+For years it had been doing just exactly that. Each June it took on a
+new crop of young men to "learn the business." Each young man got $5 a
+week. No favorites. But nine out of every ten came from prosperous, even
+wealthy families. That $5 bill was nothing in their young lives. Their
+families were glad to have them work for nothing, for they were getting
+an insight into the investment business--and some day, whether they
+became bond salesmen or just plain manufacturers and solid bankers, that
+knowledge would be worth its weight in gold.
+
+Phil was the tenth man. Mr. H-- knew well enough that he couldn't get by
+on $5 a week. _But there was the rule._ It couldn't be broken.
+
+No, we can't wind up by telling how Phil did well in the pants factory,
+married the boss's daughter and owns the business today. That would be
+wandering far from the truth. He couldn't "see" the boss' daughter for
+one thing--and besides the pants factory wasn't such a much.
+
+No, you'll find Phil today doing a bang-up job in an Ohio plant. It says
+"General Manager" on his door. And as far as he is concerned, it was the
+best thing that ever happened when Mr. H-- treated him like all the
+rest.
+
+Mr. H--, though, is still taking them on, still paying them $5 a
+week--or maybe it's $10--still treating them all alike. He gets a lot of
+bright young fellows into the business. But every so often he passes up
+a chance to get an exceptionally promising boy--because he is fair and
+treats them all alike. What's a rule for, anyway, except to break?
+Mr. H-- will never know that it's the _exception_ that proves the
+rule--particularly when you are dealing with human values.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But more later of the newer viewpoint. For the moment we are talking
+about handling the "help"--and making it sound as though it were solely
+the problem of the big employer.
+
+Not so. It is a problem with every one of you in business--unless you do
+nothing but sit in one spot and do one job from nine to five, five
+days--we hope--a week.
+
+The editor who wants a manuscript typed; the salesman who must get long
+distance; the man at the machine who has to get tools from the toolroom;
+the errand boy with his bundle to carry--all have the same problem. To
+all of them it is just as important in relation to their own scale of
+things as it is to the manager of a business with ten or a hundred or a
+thousand employees. It is the eternal problem of GETTING OTHERS TO
+COOPERATE.
+
+Some men are good at it; others are total failures.
+
+Many a man on the bench or at the machine has the ability, knowledge
+and experience which qualify him for a job as foreman or even
+superintendent. But he can't hold down a foreman's job because he hasn't
+the knack of getting hearty, whole-souled cooperation from others.
+
+Foremen, too, have changed, you see. Today the successful foreman is
+less often the hard-boiled driver, more often the student of his job, of
+his men, of himself. He has learned that, _to be fair, he must treat
+every man differently_.
+
+Often we hear of Bill's losing his job as a mechanic, not because he
+didn't know his job, not because he couldn't run every lathe in the
+shop, but because he "couldn't get along" with the other men. And we
+think, Poor Bill! it's too bad he's so quick-tempered.
+
+Generally we blame it on "temperament." Yet some of the very best
+handlers of men are the crabbiest, crankiest gents in seven states.
+Others are as cold as steel. And like as not the warm-hearted, generous
+man is a monumental failure at handling his "help."
+
+No, when you check specific methods of handling people--methods which
+are successful for the most part--something much more fundamental than
+temperament will be found.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mrs. Thompson was in charge of the information desk and switchboard in a
+medium-sized New England factory. A well-bred Englishwoman in her late
+thirties, the boss liked her for her pleasant voice over the phone, for
+her unfailingly courteous treatment of visitors.
+
+But if the boss liked her, almost no one else did. Salesmen particularly
+complained of her crankiness and of the unsatisfactory service they
+got. Young Bacon was an exception, though. He always got what he wanted.
+
+One day the office manager asked him how on earth he did it.
+
+Bacon thought he was being taken for a ride, but finally answered: "Why,
+that's a cinch. I take Mrs. Thompson's job seriously."
+
+Pressed for details, he supplied them.
+
+"I never try to kid her. I never bawl her out. When I want a number I
+treat her as though the switchboard were her own particular business and
+I a customer. Just as if she had something to sell, and I something to
+buy. When I ask for some special service, she gives it to me. Or she
+tells me why she can't."
+
+Afterwards the office manager took the trouble to look into the
+situation. The switchboard job was a life saver to that woman of 38. She
+needed the money in the first place. And besides the job gave her a
+sense of responsibility. She was proud of her job, proud to know that
+the men in the business depended upon her for certain important
+services. She couldn't understand, then, when a salesman picked up his
+telephone and barked a command at her as though she were a piece of
+office furniture, or patronized her as if she were a child, or kidded
+her as if she were a 20-year-old flapper. It made her cranky to be
+treated like that. And when someone like Bacon came along with his
+method of treating her work as a responsible piece of business, it put
+her on her mettle.
+
+The solution was obvious. The office manager talked Mrs. Thompson and
+Mrs. Thompson's job over with the salesmen. It wasn't long before they
+changed their tactics, with resultant improvement in the quality of the
+telephone service they got.
+
+Sounds like a case of knowing the foibles of the person involved,
+doesn't it?
+
+It's more than that.
+
+Edna is a switchboard operator, too. She is pretty and agreeable. And
+you couldn't blame the boys for liking to hang around.
+
+No one thought much about that until some of the more serious-minded men
+discovered they couldn't get a thing out of Edna. She was too busy
+listening to Joe's latest exploit with one hand, and plugging Jack in
+with the other. She played favorites in putting through long distance
+calls, took advantage of the friendly feeling everyone had toward her.
+The telephone service in that office just folded up and died. There
+wasn't any.
+
+The obvious remedy was to fire Edna. But the manager was a cagey old
+codger. Beneath a rough exterior beat a heart of gold, and somehow he
+felt that maybe it wasn't all Edna's fault. Why, blast it, she'd been
+treated like a pretty, petulant girl. Why shouldn't she act like one?
+
+A memo was the result. It announced the creation of a new department.
+"Telephone Service" was its name--and Edna Blank was its head. It was
+just as much a part of the business as the accounting department, or
+any other.
+
+He had sense enough to PUT DEFINITE RESPONSIBILITIES UPON EDNA'S
+SHOULDERS. He did it not only to instill in her a sense of duty, but
+also to impress her with his confidence in her ability to perform those
+duties. Then, under the rose, he instructed the men to treat her just as
+they treated the capable woman in charge of the accounting end of the
+business. They did. And Edna rose to the occasion, took pride in her
+work, discouraged the hangers-on, played no favorites in putting through
+calls, and became as good an operator as ever you'd hope to see.
+
+Now, then, scratch the surface and what do you find? Not that it was
+simply a case of understanding Mrs. Thompson's and Edna's foibles. Not
+at all. Mrs. Thompson stopped being cranky and became accommodating,
+Edna dropped her irresponsible ways and became an alert, attentive
+operator WHEN THEY GOT THE FEELING OUT OF THEIR WORK THAT THEY WERE
+TRANSACTING BUSINESS FOR THEMSELVES.
+
+And need we look for further proof of our postulate that TO BE FAIR, YOU
+MUST TREAT ALL YOUR ASSISTANTS DIFFERENTLY? You must know them, know
+yourself, if you would get whole-hearted cooperation. That is
+fundamental in any attempt to acquire the KNACK OF HANDLING THE "HELP."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For there _is_ a KNACK of handling the help. It _can_ be acquired. This
+we say despite the difficulty of analyzing the relations of one person
+to another, despite the seeming impossibility of setting down a rule
+which will work universally.
+
+Take a man running a peanut stand, a hosiery mill, or a steel plant.
+There are three things he wants for himself: (1) to build up and hold a
+good trade; (2) to please his customers; (3) to get a fair profit.
+
+Remember these three wants when you're dealing with your help.
+
+Get your "help"--it may be the switchboard operator or it may be a
+thousand automobile workmen--in the position of wanting those same three
+things. The help's job is his "trade," you are his customer; and his
+compensation is his profit.
+
+When you do that, you have an employee or helper who is going to give
+you the hearty cooperation you're looking for--just so long as you are a
+good customer, and his compensation for helping you is a fair profit.
+
+Next time you go into a store, try to keep that thought fixed in your
+mind. Everyone working in a business, you see, is selling his
+services--and when you use those services you are the buyer. Perhaps you
+pay in money for the services rendered--perhaps you simply repay him by
+making his day's work easier. In either event, treat your requests for
+service as though you and he were transacting a business that is
+mutually, but individually, profitable, and the cooperation which is
+otherwise usually begrudged will be automatically forthcoming.
+
+But that, you say, is PERSONALITY. Then how do you account for this?
+
+A. is a big, breezy salesman. He busts into a hotel, calls the "greeter"
+behind the desk by name, asks for 1209 "same as last time"--and gets all
+kinds of real service from porters, bell-hops and waiters.
+
+It looks as though it might be personality.
+
+Yet right behind him walks B. He's a horse-faced bird who never
+smiles--wiry, monosyllabic--asks brusquely for a $4 room--gets it. And
+gets everything else he asks for--just as promptly as A. does.
+
+No, it can't be personality. For there's C. and there's D. C. is A's
+twin--and B. and D. were cast in the same mold. Their tips are no
+smaller; their demands no more unreasonable. Yet C. gets the poorest
+sample room in the house. And D's trunk is always the last one the
+porter brings up.
+
+These aren't exaggerated cases. Hotel men will tell you they happen
+every day.
+
+Why, then, did A. and B. rate such good service while their fellow
+knights of the road got none? Because when A. and B. asked for
+something, there was about the transaction a well-defined air of "you've
+something you can do for me--I've something I want done--what say we
+trade?" Whereas, when C. and D. came along, regardless of the personal
+manners involved, there was created the atmosphere of a one-sided
+business deal. C's breeziness had in it a touch of condescension, or D's
+brusqueness was the brusqueness of assumed superiority.
+
+Thus is it seen, when we forget all about personality and study effects,
+that cooperation is gained by trading with the "help" according to the
+"help's" business.
+
+Trade with an elevator man as though running an elevator were his own
+business--trade with the chief chemist as though the laboratory were his
+store--and they'll trade with you and be eager to make a satisfactory
+deal of it.
+
+Under this fixed policy--or rule--the proper attitude to take towards
+this or that class of "help" becomes a matter of automatic selection.
+
+And that is how we begin to acquire the KNACK OF HANDLING THE HELP. Thus
+do we step high, wide and handsome on our road to the KNACK OF MANAGING.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now enters the business of COMPENSATION. There must be compensation in a
+trade if all hands are to be satisfied.
+
+Everyone is in business because he wants something. Everything that
+will help him to get what he wants, he will like to do; everything that
+hinders him, he will dislike to do.
+
+When you get ready to "trade" with someone, therefore, consider what the
+other man wants--that is, if you want to get the most help or
+cooperation out of the transaction. Then consider what you can give in
+return--balancing his wants.
+
+ +----------------------------------------------------------+
+ | +-------------+ +--------------+ |
+ | |What YOU Want| | What YOUR | |
+ | +-------------+ | "HELP" Wants | |
+ | \ /+--------------+ |
+ | +---------------------+ |
+ | |What You Can Give and| |
+ | |He Can Take That Will| |
+ | | Leave Both Parties | |
+ | | Satisfied | |
+ | +---------------------+ |
+ +----------------------------------------------------------+
+
+There must be that balance in every satisfactory deal.
+
+Examine the chart on this page. It will save a lot of paper and ink
+because it shows diagrammatically what must happen if there are to be
+satisfactory arrangements between you and your "help".
+
+A word or two by way of interpretation may serve to show how it works
+out.
+
+When the "help" is in your employ, the compensation--what you can give
+and he can take, leaving both parties satisfied--is his monthly pay
+check or his weekly envelope. Or it is the rate of commission. And
+bearing upon it are such things as local living conditions, and so on.
+When the "help" is someone not in your direct employ, then the
+compensation is regulated by the effect which performing the service you
+require, has on the success of the "help's" regular day's work.
+
+For the moment, let's us return to the messenger boy whom we left in
+Chapter III just as he was about to deliver a message.
+
+Or, at least, let's talk about another messenger boy whose task of
+managing his job differs in no wise from the first's--or, for that
+matter, from any other job of management.
+
+This boy worked in a large Chicago building and his job was carting
+light but bulky packages back and forth between his company's quarters
+and its customers'. There were a dozen other boys, and most of them
+complained of having trouble getting up and down in the elevators. It
+seemed that the starter took delight in making the boys wait for the
+freight elevator--even when there was plenty of room in the others.
+
+But this particular boy--an impudent youngster with a "fresh" way about
+him--had no trouble at all. So the office manager was anxious to know
+"how come."
+
+He posted himself where he could observe without being seen. And sure
+enough, in came the fresh messenger boy with a bundle almost as big as
+himself. Down he set it, favored the starter with an impudent military
+salute and leaned nonchalantly up against the wall--well out of the
+way.
+
+"Hello, feller," said he breezily; "lemme know when there's room. And
+don't keep me waiting too long, or I'll be out on my ear."
+
+Picture the manager's astonishment when the starter replied:
+
+"Git in here, then, and git in quick," and let him in the first car
+going up.
+
+Somewhere, somehow, that impudent youngster had struck a responsive
+chord. Instinctively--or else because of past experience with elevator
+starters--he had put the problem of that particular starter's service on
+a business basis. He had put it in the starter's power to perform his
+own work without trouble, and to feel at the same time that he was "a
+man of affairs."
+
+He was able to show his authority without taking it out on the boy.
+
+Analyze this "trade" with the "compensation" chart in mind. Do you not
+see the "balance" of interests? Do you not see the starter's feeling
+that the service he rendered was his own business, that the boy was one
+of his customers, that the avoidance of trouble was his compensation or
+profit?
+
+Is there not in this very unimportant transaction the BALANCE OF
+INTERESTS suggested by our little chart?
+
+
+At this stage of our approach to the KNACK OF MANAGEMENT, a ready
+objection comes to mind. We are now dealing in human values and
+relationships--and you can't chart them. Analysis, planning,
+organization--certain rules may be set down which will enable one to
+attain some degree of effectiveness in carrying them out.
+
+But human nature? You can't deal with it by rule.
+
+The objection is well founded. You can't chart human nature--but you
+_can_ study the approaches to it and chart the laws that appeal to it.
+
+Our chart on page 146 is based upon what successful managers have
+learned about finding the wants of the human element when it works, and
+is constructed to supply a method of supplying those wants with as much
+productiveness and as little friction as possible.
+
+When you buy a new car and "put it to work," your first care is to find
+out its wants--how much you must give to get what it has to "sell"--what
+parts need oil and grease and so on.
+
+So, IF YOU WANT TO GET WORK OUT OF A HUMAN BEING, your best bet is to
+find out what that human being needs and must get in return for the work
+he performs or the service he gives.
+
+Some men seem to be born with an instinct for finding this out. But if
+you aren't built that way, there is no reason why you can't drill
+yourself to the same end by deliberately studying each case.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+See, for example, how a study of this sort gets the most out of men in a
+large New England plant where modern management methods are making
+serious inroads into the old rule-of-thumb ways of doing things.
+
+This concern was confronted with the very serious problem of maintaining
+a steady flow of product from one manufacturing department to another.
+Because of the nature of the product, skids and power trucks had been
+chosen as the equipment best suited for the job.
+
+Skids and lift trucks are effective handling units. No argument about
+that. Their introduction into any factory which has been using more
+primitive handling methods should automatically cut costs. But they save
+precious little time and money when they aren't working, or when they
+are being worked uneconomically.
+
+The problem, then, as this concern saw it, was how to be sure that Big
+Ed hadn't shipped off for a quiet smoke far from the maddening crowd--or
+that Little Joe wasn't arranging his work so that there'd be a handful
+of skids left over at closing time--moves that called for overtime pay.
+
+In other words, to get 100 per cent efficiency out of very efficient
+handling equipment, the management realized that it must take out some
+sort of insurance which would guarantee Little Joe's and Big Ed's and
+all the other truckers' being engaged in gainful occupation eight
+hours--count 'em--each and every day.
+
+The best insurance seemed to be a central dispatching system. No need to
+go into the details of its operation. Suffice it to say that it went a
+long way toward directing the efforts of the truckers along gainful
+lines. There came to be an orderliness which had never existed before.
+When a foreman put in a call for a trucker, he knew that the move would
+be made without unnecessary delay. In fact, orders were placed into the
+truckers' hands within three minutes of the time the foreman picked up
+his telephone to call the central dispatching department.
+
+BUT--no attempt had been made to sell this system to the truckers. It
+met with some little resistance, just as anything new does. And there
+are ways, as who does not know, of beating any "game" designed to get
+more work out of human beings.
+
+So the management--after many a huddle over this particular
+situation--decided upon a bonus plan.
+
+And they set about selling it to the truckers--somewhat in the fashion
+about to be narrated.
+
+"See here, men," said the manager in effect, "I'm going to put this plan
+right up to you and let you decide for yourselves. We've looked into it
+carefully. You men average 30 moves a day. So we've chosen 40 moves as
+the starting point. We're sure you can make 40 moves a day without
+tearing your shirts--and from there on, you begin to collect. For the
+next five trips you get a bonus of a nickel over and above your day
+rate; for the next five trips your bonus is 6 cents; and so on.
+
+"So, if a man makes 50 trips, his day's pay is not $4.50, but $5.05
+because he has earned 55 cents in bonus. Do you get it?"
+
+"Yeah, we get it all right, all right. We do twice as much work for 50
+or 60 cents more a day. How come? Why don't we get paid extra for _all_
+the moves we make over 30?"
+
+"Because we're just like you. The company wants to make more money.
+We've shown you how it can be done and we'll split pretty much 50-50.
+But we won't give you all the extra profit any more than we'd think of
+keeping it ourselves. Now think it over tonight and if you want to make
+$5 or $5.50 a day instead of $4.50, come 'round in the morning and we'll
+talk some more about it."
+
+Came only the dawn.
+
+The truckers were pretty sure that they were being had, although they
+couldn't figure out just how. 'Tis ever thus when the old order yields
+place to new.
+
+There was nothing left to do but try a new tack. So the manager talked
+to his fifteen or eighteen truckers again. And this time he proposed
+taking two of them and putting them on the new plan. After a little
+conversation to assure themselves that there was no skullduggery afoot,
+the truckers consented. And Little Ed and Big Joe (sic!) were nominated.
+
+Little Ed made 62 moves the very first day and was as fresh as a daisy
+when the 5 o'clock whistle blew. Big Joe made 56 trips and looked none
+the worse for it. Ed's bonus was $1.98; Joe's was $1.28. If you check
+up, we're sure you'll find those figures are wrong. But cheer up, we
+aren't nearly so much interested in the exact amounts of Ed's and Joe's
+earning as we are in the ultimate results and in the principles
+involved.
+
+We may pass quickly over the former. Of course the men were convinced.
+And Big Ed would have beaten any trucker to a gentle pulp who wouldn't
+have been convinced. In a week's time, those truckers were making nearly
+twice as many trips a day--and their earnings had increased by something
+like 35 per cent.
+
+If you don't believe it, look at the figure on page 158. See what
+happened to production? Yes, that pretty dotted line--the one with the
+big dip in it--marks labor costs per trip.
+
+The manager, you see--and now we come to the principle involved--had
+MADE HIS HELP SEE THAT THE BONUS PLAN AMOUNTED TO GIVING THEM WHAT THEY
+WANTED. And of course, that was more pay. At the same time it got the
+company what it wanted--more production.
+
+[Illustration: CHART OF RECORDS OF DISPATCHING ELECTRIC TRUCKS
+1922-1929]
+
+Fundamentally, the manager's system was precisely like the messenger
+boy's. And you can prove that in a trice by charting it on the same old
+basis.
+
+Try it. It won't take you more than a couple of minutes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This might go on for a long, long time. Innumerable examples might be
+introduced into this text to illustrate this balancing of wants and its
+importance to the successful conduct of this business of MANAGING--to
+illustrate that your own personal method of seeking cooperation or
+service is more a matter of reason than innate ability to "size up the
+other fellow."
+
+There is, in a word, method back of this "KNACK OF HANDLING THE HELP."
+
+The method is this. Ask yourself each time this simple question: What
+does your "helper" want?
+
+Does your stenographer want to leave promptly at five so she can get
+ready for an evening of whoopee? Or does she have to catch a particular
+train in order not to find a cold supper waiting for her at home? Then
+why not fix things so she can work during the hours she is paid to
+work--and so she can leave at the hour when pay stops?
+
+Can your truckers live in the style to which they are accustomed on
+$4.50 a day? Or will $5.50 enable them to put away a bit for a rainy
+season? Then why not arrange a wage payment method which will help them
+to do it?
+
+And above all, tell them WHY.
+
+To do such things is not philanthropy. Successful managers will tell you
+IT IS NOTHING MORE NOR LESS THAN GOOD BUSINESS. Strip from their methods
+the individual characteristics required by the individual conditions
+involved. What do you find? EVERY LAST ONE OF THEM IS BASED ON OUR
+PRIMARY RULE. That, you remember, is to find out what you want from your
+"help" and what your "help" wants from you; then a way to make the two
+meet on a ground of mutual satisfaction--the compensation you can give
+and the compensation they can take--and BOTH OF YOU GET WHAT YOU WANT.
+
+Don't you see, to grasp the real KNACK OF HANDLING "HELP," the necessity
+for making what you want from them balance with what they want from you?
+If there isn't that balance, there won't be whole-souled COOPERATION. To
+paraphrase what Henry Ford once said--or what one of his collaborators
+made him say: "See that each man in doing the best he can for you is
+also doing the best he can for himself."
+
+Thus, by digging in and finding out what everybody involved in the
+situation wants, it is possible to get the utmost in cooperation and
+loyalty. Where one man does so instinctively, another gets equally good
+results by making a deliberate study along the lines we have pointed
+out.
+
+Hundreds of jobs don't get done promptly and enthusiastically for no
+other reason than that they aren't interesting. They can be made
+interesting if you get the right line on what your work requires, what
+your "help" wants, and then make a common meeting ground.
+
+Mark Twain knew all about the KNACK OF MAKING WORK INTERESTING AND
+ATTRACTIVE.
+
+Remember his description of Tom Sawyer's whitewashing the fence? Even if
+you do, it won't hurt to read it again.
+
+Poor Tom. It was on a summer's morn just made for swimming or
+fishing--and he had to work.
+
+Along comes Ben, one of his cronies. Tom begins to do some tall
+thinking. But let's not try to improve the original:
+
+"He took up his brush and went tranquilly to work....
+
+"Ben said: 'Hello, old chap, you got to work, hey?'
+
+"Tom wheeled suddenly and said: 'Why, it's you, Ben! I warn't
+noticing.'
+
+"'Say--I'm going in a-swimming, I am. Don't you wish you could? But of
+course you'd ruther _work_--wouldn't you? Course you would!'
+
+"Tom contemplated the boy a bit, and said: 'What do you call work?'
+
+"'Why, ain't that work?'
+
+"Tom resumed his whitewashing, and answered carelessly: 'Well, maybe it
+is, and maybe it ain't. All I know is, it suits Tom Sawyer.'
+
+"'Oh come, now, you don't mean to let on you like it?'
+
+"The brush continued to move.
+
+"'Like it? Well, I don't see why I oughtn't to like it. Does a boy get a
+chance to whitewash a fence every day?'
+
+"That put the thing in a new light. Ben stopped nibbling his apple. Tom
+swept his brush daintily back and forth--stepped back to note the
+effect--added a touch here and there--criticized the effect again--Ben
+watching every move and getting more and more interested, more and more
+absorbed.
+
+"Presently he said: 'Say, Tom, let _me_ whitewash a little.'
+
+"Tom considered, was about to consent; but he altered his mind. 'No,
+no--I reckon it wouldn't hardly do, Ben. You see, Aunt Polly's awful
+particular about this fence--right here on the street--you know--but if
+it was the back fence I wouldn't mind and she wouldn't. Yes, she's awful
+particular about this fence; it's got to be done very careful; I reckon
+there ain't one boy in a thousand, mebbe two thousand, that can do it
+the way it's got to be done.'
+
+"'No--is that so? Oh, come now--lemme just try. Only just a little--I'd
+let you, if you was me, Tom.'
+
+"'Ben, I'd like to, honest Injun; but Aunt Polly--well, Jim wanted to do
+it, but she wouldn't let him; Sid wanted to do it, and she wouldn't let
+Sid. Now don't you see how I'm fixed? If you was to tackle this fence
+and anything was to happen to it----'
+
+"'Oh, shucks, I'll be just as careful. Now lemme try. Say--I'll give
+you the core of my apple.'
+
+"'Well, here--no, Ben, now don't. I'm afeard----'
+
+"'I'll give you all of it!'
+
+"Tom gave up the brush with reluctance in his face, but alacrity in his
+heart. And while the late Steamer Big Missouri worked and sweated in the
+sun, the retired artist sat on a barrel in the shade close by, dangled
+his legs, munched his apple, and planned the slaughter of more
+innocents. There was no lack of material; boys happened along every
+little while; they came to jeer, but remained to whitewash. By the time
+Ben was fagged out, Tom had traded the next chance to Billy Fisher for a
+kite, in good repair; and when he played out, Johnny Miller bought in
+for a dead rat and a string to swing it with--and so on, and so on, hour
+after hour. And when the middle of the afternoon came, from being a poor
+poverty-stricken boy in the morning, Tom was literally rolling in
+wealth. He had, besides the things before mentioned, twelve marbles,
+part of a jew's-harp, a piece of blue bottle glass to look through, a
+spool cannon, a key that wouldn't unlock anything, a fragment of chalk,
+a glass stopper of a decanter, a tin soldier, a couple of tadpoles, six
+firecrackers, a kitten with only one eye, a brass doorknob, a dog
+collar--but no dog--the handle of a knife, four pieces of orange peel
+and a dilapidated old window sash.
+
+"He had a nice, good, idle time all the while--plenty of company--and
+the fence had three coats of whitewash on it! If he hadn't run out of
+whitewash, he would have bankrupted every boy in the village."
+
+Mark Twain didn't have the worker on the modern assembly line in
+mind--nor the stenographer tapping her typewriter--but he _did_ see that
+THE WORK MEN CAN DO BEST IS THE WORK THAT IS MADE ATTRACTIVE TO
+THEM--either through the money in it or the sheer success in doing it.
+Find out what's wanted to make your work attractive, then find out what
+you can give that will meet those wants. Then you get not only good
+work, but loyalty in it and enthusiasm for it.
+
+But you can't fool your "help"--at least not for long. If you play upon
+the desire for responsibility, you must give it up to capacity. If it is
+promotion you hold out as a reward, you must give it when it is
+deserved. If you play upon the desire for good pay, you must give it as
+far as the job will allow.
+
+And the nearer you come to giving all you can afford for the service
+received, in as nearly as possible the form that is wanted, whether in
+courtesy or in coin, in reasonable hours or in rapid advancement, in
+self-respect or in reciprocal service, THE MORE COOPERATION YOU MAY
+EXPECT.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+Safeguarding the Business
+
+
+Now for the last lap. Our journey has run four-fifths of its course. We
+have passed through the successive stages of analysis, planning,
+organization and handling the "help." They have all been child's play
+compared with the most important part of the manager's work--the task of
+GUARDING THE WELFARE OF A BUSINESS OR A JOB. All other managerial cares
+fade into insignificance before the necessity of conserving the general
+good of the business.
+
+A business rises. A business falls. Its life must be protected. And, as
+has been said so often, "the bigger they are, the harder they fall."
+
+A certain concern in New York State had been enjoying prosperity for lo!
+these many years. Established 'way back in the "Roaring Forties," it
+had passed through three generations of the same family.
+
+Each morning at nine the president was at his desk opening the mail into
+three piles--taking great care that no checks fell into the waste
+basket--as might easily have happened had the task been delegated to the
+office manager or to his assistant.
+
+It was unfortunate, of course, that no orders reached the stockroom
+until ten o'clock. But a president must earn his salt. Besides, is there
+a better way to keep one's finger on the pulse of the business than to
+know what's in the mail?
+
+Let's take a look at those three piles, though. Here is the daily
+"take"--a fat pile of checks--with the big one from San Francisco laid
+carefully aside so that it can be admired a couple of extra times before
+being placed on the top of the heap.
+
+Reverently the president carries the receipts to his head bookkeeper.
+With slow and majestic tread, almost.
+
+And over here are the orders.
+
+It's a fat pile, too.
+
+The president casts one last lingering glance at the 1/2 doz. of
+something or other ordered by a famous name--and, secure in the
+knowledge that Fifth Avenue shoppers are still clamoring for his
+product, hands the sheaf to his office manager who has been pretty
+fidgety for the past hour and a half because he knows the stock
+department is going to have a heck of a time making the afternoon
+express.
+
+Ho, hum! It's a busy life, this being the president of a successful
+concern doing over a million a year. Why, when grandfather started in,
+he didn't have a----
+
+But that's another story, and there's that third pile.
+
+A slim little pile scarcely demanding a president's attention--or a
+sales manager's. A few complaints. A retailer out in Butte. That San
+Antonio jobber Winchester had such a hard time landing. What's this?
+Didn't get the buttons he ordered? Stuff and nonsense--well, Henry will
+write nice, consoling letters and those will be those.
+
+Now Henry is a good kid. Just out of school. Learning the business.
+Writes a bang-up letter.
+
+But the San Antonio jobber doesn't want nice, consoling letters. He
+wants to know how come his pants came without the special buttons he
+ordered. And those special buttons are so important in his life that he
+has written to the head of the firm--whom he'd met at the Atlantic City
+convention--and he expects the head of the firm to tell him what he
+wants to know.
+
+"Come, come," the president would have said to him, had he walked into
+the inner sanctum, "you know I can't give my time to such petty
+details--I've got department heads who attend to such matters. When you
+want an extra thirty days--or want to talk over handling our goods
+exclusively in the Southwest--why, those are the things for you and me
+to spend our time on."
+
+But the San Antonio jobber, had he been there, and had he been asked,
+would have rejoined:
+
+"I, too, have my department heads. I, too, leave many of the trivial
+details to them. But if a customer came to me with a complaint, I
+wouldn't care a rap what it was about. It wouldn't be that particular
+complaint which would interest me. It would be the mere fact that he had
+a complaint at all. A dissatisfied customer is a dissatisfied customer,
+and there isn't anything in my business that would get quicker and more
+personal attention from me."
+
+Well, well, businesses come and businesses go. Our imaginary
+conversation will never take place between the president and the San
+Antonio jobber. The San Antonio jobber took his business elsewhere some
+five years ago. The president still comes in at nine and opens the mail.
+He never drops a check in the wastebasket. There are still three piles
+in front of him. Three slim piles. Even the pile of complaints is slim.
+There isn't enough business left to produce many complaints.
+
+Henry? Oh, he got to writing letters to an heiress who was wintering on
+the Riviera. And when her daddy died, he wrote such a nice, consoling
+letter----
+
+But we wander far afield. We're out in the rough somewhere, and it's
+going to take a real recovery to get us back on the fairway if we don't
+watch out.
+
+For one thing and for instance: _Is_ the customer always right?
+
+A one-time shoe salesman reports the following incident in a Chicago
+department store. He was talking with the head buyer in the middle of
+the sales floor when up marched a thoroughly angry woman with the shoe
+adjuster tagging on behind.
+
+"These shoes," she pointed to a pair of satin pumps in the adjuster's
+hands, "are too small."
+
+"And she wants a new pair after having worn them half a dozen times,"
+added the adjuster.
+
+"Who sold them?" asked the buyer.
+
+"Jones."
+
+"Go get him."
+
+Came Jones. "But, madam," he protested, "don't you remember I warned you
+that you needed a 5-1/2? And don't you remember that I also suggested an
+A instead of a double A? And when you felt certain you wanted the 5AA,
+didn't I suggest that you try them again at home before having the
+cut-steel buckles sewn on?"
+
+Well, yes, that was all quite true. But it didn't offset the fact that
+the shoes were too small and she couldn't wear them.
+
+Two guesses as to what she got. And if each guess is a satin pump you
+may step quickly and quietly to the head of the class. She got a new
+pair of shoes.
+
+"Well," sighed the buyer, when peace and quiet had been once more
+restored, "they tell me upstairs the customer is always right. Certainly
+it's true that one dissatisfied woman has more effect on our business
+than four or five satisfied customers. Oh, no, she won't go and tell
+her friends about the fair treatment she got here, but oh, man, if we'd
+let her get away! What a story that would have been--in spite of
+admitting she was wrong!"
+
+Innumerable examples of that sort of thing might be introduced. There is
+the story of the North Shore matron who had an expensive rug sent out,
+kept it three months and then decided she didn't like the color. In its
+place she wanted a certain oriental, but oh, dear, it was just a bit too
+big for her purpose.
+
+Of course the rug was cut to fit. And when she decided a week later that
+it, too, wouldn't do and went and bought another rug somewhere else, the
+management thanked her kindly and credited her account with the full
+amount. It knew that the life of the business had to be protected, and
+every now and then found it distinctly worth while to take time out to
+LOOK AFTER THE WELFARE OF THE ENTERPRISE.
+
+And here we face another question: "Must the manager occupy his time
+with every minor complaint, just because it happens to be one which
+comes from a good customer?"
+
+To answer it, we must go back to our New York State manufacturer and
+strip the scenery from his particular enterprise.
+
+His is a business of few customers. Except for a half-dozen famous
+retailers whose accounts cost more than they earn, but to whose stores
+he may point the finger of gesticulating pride as being among his
+outlets (it would be better for him if they were among his souvenirs),
+his business is handled through thirty or forty jobbers. Naturally each
+of his customers is a very important unit in the business.
+
+The loss of one account is serious.
+
+So a customer to him is an outlet for business greater than the trade a
+big department store gets from a hundred good customers. One customer to
+him is as a score of customers to the manufacturer who sells to the
+retail trade.
+
+To him, then, a complaint from a San Antonio jobber that the buttons on
+his pants aren't right has all the importance that the same complaint,
+echoed by a hundred different customers, would have to the retail
+merchant. Looked at in this light, is it not logical that any
+complaint--no matter how trifling its nature--should have his prompt,
+personal attention? Had he but known it, the letters he turned over to
+Henry were danger signals. They warned of the need for GUARDING THE
+WELFARE OF THE BUSINESS--LOOKING AFTER ITS GENERAL GOOD HEALTH.
+
+And that task, as we have said, overshadows in importance every other
+task which the successful manager, in his daily business of managing,
+may have to perform.
+
+The maintenance foreman in a New England mill walked into the agent's
+office one day--why the manager of a mill is called an agent is just
+one of those things--and said:
+
+"Something's got to be done about that freight elevator over in Building
+C, Mr. Dearle. I've monkeyed with it and monkeyed with it. It's just
+worn out, and one of these fine days, it's going to drop a couple of
+floors and pile up in the basement."
+
+And one fine day it did. You see, the manager was all tied up in a labor
+controversy. Labor squabbles aren't any fun. And presumably their speedy
+settlement is far more important to the business than the matter of what
+to do about a tired freight elevator which has seen far better days.
+
+So Frank the maintenance man had to run along and sell his papers. And
+the elevator kept on working.
+
+The day it quit, Henry Fitts was aboard. And when the elevator man
+picked himself up off the cellar floor, Henry couldn't.
+
+But why go into that? Henry's broken leg and Henry's lost time cost the
+company more than a new elevator. And Henry was one of the company's
+best technical men. Lots of bum sheets and pillow cases got made and
+shipped and returned while Henry was laid up. The damage done by that
+falling elevator could hardly be measured in dollars.
+
+Now, then, settling the differences of capital and labor was a big job
+to the mill agent. Saying "No" to Frank was merely postponing a trifling
+detail. Yet what a heap of difference a "Yes" would have made. That
+defective elevator, because it endangered lives, overshadowed all else
+in importance, had the agent viewed his job from the standpoint of
+CARING FOR THE BUSINESS. THE KNACK OF SAFEGUARDING ITS WELFARE lies not
+merely in doing tasks that preserve the safety of the business or job,
+but also in the ability to discern when such tasks are really mere
+trifles, and when, because of their potential effect, they are details
+vital to the life of the business.
+
+How is a manager to know when he shall devote his entire attention to
+settling wage rates, and when listen to the maintenance man's song? How
+can the president of a million-dollar concern tell when it is good
+business to drop a tremendously important managerial task and listen to
+a customer's tale of woe about pants buttons--and personally set the
+complaint right?
+
+How, on the other hand, are you to know when to lay off such tasks?
+
+Some few men--seventh sons of seventh sons--may be born with that
+instinct or knowledge. The rest of us must cultivate a true knack of
+conserving the business--a knack which carries with it the finest sense
+of discrimination and the best of business judgment.
+
+And not until we have acquired this important knack and added to it all
+the other knacks we've been talking about, can we consider ourselves
+successful managers. Not until then shall we have acquired THE TRUE
+KNACK OF MANAGING.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I've learned how to pick out the tasks that are vital to the business
+and make them my own special responsibilities," a successful newspaper
+publisher once said, "by setting up a sort of yardstick to judge every
+job that comes along.
+
+"My paper was in the 'red' when I bought it. It was a weak sister. It
+carried the least advertising, had the least circulation and exercised
+the least influence. Today its lineage is nearly one-third more than its
+nearest competitor's--and circulation has more than doubled in four
+years, so now it tops all the rest.
+
+"I analyzed my job something like this: I bought the paper because I
+thought I could make money with it. To make money, I must carry a large
+volume of advertising. To get advertising, I must show results to
+advertisers. To show results, I must make my paper a real "home"
+paper--a paper really read and appreciated--not merely a paper with
+which people are only satisfied. To get that kind of circulation, I must
+put into the paper what people who read a paper at home wouldn't 'miss
+for anything.'
+
+"What did this analysis show me? Simply this: That while more
+advertising and more circulation meant more profits, the attitude of
+_my_ readers toward _their_ paper meant even more--it meant business
+life or death.
+
+"So my yardstick is never to let anything get by me that might change
+our standing with our readers. The toughest business problem is shoved
+aside when something comes up that means loss of respect among our
+public.
+
+"I made it my first business to get to know our type of reader. Never
+was a good hand at guessing. So had to learn about human nature.
+
+"After a lot of hiring and firing, picking and sorting, coaching and
+drilling, I got me four women who could go out and get exactly the kind
+of information I had to have.
+
+"Each of the four took a section of the city. Each section represented a
+distinct type of home-dweller--and it takes all kinds of people to run a
+world, you know--or to buy a newspaper.
+
+"Every week those four women canvassed close to a thousand homes between
+them. Their method was to tell the housewife that we were going to
+deliver our paper free for a week--and hoped they'd take it in and read
+it. A week later they went back over the same ground, soliciting
+subscriptions, of course, but also gathering information for me.
+
+"More important than getting a subscription was finding out why a woman
+subscribed--or why she wouldn't subscribe. They asked what the women
+thought about certain special features.
+
+"I got a lot of good pointers. For instance, I'd been a bitter opponent
+of the 'funnies.' But I put them back when I learned that people really
+wanted them. You see, I was getting a good cross section of the likes
+and dislikes of all my customers and my prospects.
+
+"After the 'funnies' were in--and after various other changes had been
+made--I sent my four scouts back once more to tell of the improvements.
+Then we checked the new reports with the old ones. There was plenty of
+deadwood. I knew there would be. But there was enough good live stuff to
+furnish food for thought.
+
+"Some needed changes couldn't be made right away. Many people preferred
+a competing paper because it carried more department store ads. Well, I
+couldn't do anything about that for the moment. But I could and did
+improve the sports page, put in more home-stuff for the women, more
+society news, funnier 'funnies' and so on. Those were things our readers
+wanted which I could gradually give them.
+
+"Then it was time to tackle the advertising problem. I had my
+ammunition. Carried a bunch of reports around with me. Told the
+merchants frankly what I was up to. Showed them the reports from women
+who said they'd subscribe if we had more advertising as well as the
+reports from those who did subscribe for certain good reasons.
+
+"And I quoted a rate on what we were worth at the time, not on what I
+knew we could do in the future. I didn't begrudge a full day spent in
+one small store, if that small store advertised the stuff I felt was
+wanted by the people I wanted for readers.
+
+"Well, they came 'round one by one--the stores and the people. And I
+think the results prove that I was keeping busy on the right tasks--the
+tasks on which the welfare of my business depends--and not on the tasks
+that mean only increased _volume_.
+
+"How does it affect my readers? That is my yardstick for measuring
+everything about my business. That is my guide to whether or not I
+should worry. If a little error in last night's paper has the power to
+affect my readers' opinion of the paper, then it's my job to run it down
+to earth, find out how it happened--and see that it never happens again.
+But if there's a big advertising contract in the offing which won't
+affect the permanent standing of the paper in any way whatsoever--except
+to increase the number of dollars that come clinking into the coffers--I
+don't give thirty seconds of my time to it. I hire a sales manager to do
+that. That's his job. The other's mine.
+
+"I'll spend a week with my managing editor trying to figure out a way to
+get our afternoon editions on the street a few minutes earlier. It may
+involve some minor change in the pressroom running into only a few
+hundred dollars--but it does affect our permanent place in the sun. On
+the other hand, the managing editor can go ahead and spend $5000 of my
+good money on something that has nothing to do with our readers'
+interest, and all I'll do is okay the expenditure. He'll do the worrying
+this time."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You and I aren't interested in the way this publisher went about
+building up his newspaper. That is to say, we don't care anything about
+his female quartette who went around and sang the paper's praises. His
+methods were sound, of course, and merit attention. But our interest
+right now is in his division between the tasks he watched personally and
+the tasks he left his business manager or his managing editor to work
+out for themselves.
+
+Strip off the publishing scenery--just as a moment ago we stripped off
+the individual characteristics of a totally different business--and you
+find that HIS DIVISION IS APPLICABLE NOT ONLY TO ANY BUSINESS, BUT TO
+ANY SINGLE JOB. Which means once more that that's the way the successful
+manager of a steel mill or of a peanut stand will divide the tasks
+which confront him from nine to five every day.
+
+Who are your "readers"?
+
+Every business, every job has its "readers"--some element which, once
+injured or neglected, affects the welfare, the health, the profits, or
+the ultimate success of the business or job.
+
+A file clerk may acquire tremendous speed in putting letters away in
+drawers, but if she can't get you the correspondence you need at a
+moment's notice, what good is all her speed? Your stenographer may keep
+up with you in your best and fastest moments of dictation, but if her
+finished letters don't say what you said, her facility isn't worth the
+proverbial thin dime. An accountant may work out a cost system that
+reflects conditions like a mirror, but what of it if his reports come
+out so late that they're ancient history by the time the plant manager
+gets them? A miller may produce a flour that contains more vitamins than
+any other flour on the market, but if the dough won't rise properly, it
+isn't much use. A small-town banker may have splendid reserves and a
+strong cash position, but he's going to lose your business if he asks
+6-1/2 per cent interest and 3 per cent commission to extend your
+mortgage when the big-city bank offers you the same loan at 6 per cent
+interest and 2-1/2 per cent commission. That messenger boy of ours--no
+chapter is complete without him--may run all the way from the Tribune
+Tower to State and Madison, but what if in his haste he loses the
+message?
+
+There is, then, in every business or job a VITAL ELEMENT. And no one can
+do a good job of managing unless he finds out definitely what that
+element is, and then proceeds to guard it through all the hustle and
+bustle of cost cutting, labor saving and so on.
+
+One manager put it pretty plainly to his billing clerk. The latter tried
+out some short cuts. They were splendid from the billers' point of
+view. Saved time and money. But the customers weren't used to any of
+this new-fangled stuff and kicked like steers. They couldn't check the
+invoices. Or wouldn't.
+
+"They just won't use their heads. It's all as simple as ABC," protested
+the billing clerk when the manager called him in on the carpet. "All
+they've got to do is check the numbers on the cartons against the
+numbers on the invoices. There's no need of all the description we've
+been giving them."
+
+"Right you are, Johnson," replied the manager. "But sometimes you bump
+up against a stone wall when you try to educate the trade. Oftentimes
+life's too short. Your system saves us money. It's good up to a certain
+point. That point is where your labor saving and cost cutting begin to
+have an adverse effect on sales or sales satisfaction.
+
+"I've seen you playing bridge at noon," he went on. "You score honors
+above the line, don't you? Below the line you keep your game score. If
+you hold 80 or 90 honors in your hand, it affects your play. But you
+can't give your entire attention to scoring above the line, for after
+all it's the score below which determines who wins games and rubbers.
+
+"You can score your job in pretty much the same way. All this work
+you're doing along cost-cutting lines is fine. Those things determine
+the size of your department's profits. Sketch them out on a card and
+check them over and add to them. But below the line put down the main
+object of your work--to have your invoices correct and to have them so
+plain that no customer can fail to understand them. Keep plugging away
+above the line. Don't let me discourage any effort that will reduce
+costs. They're all-important. But at the same time keep your eye below
+the line and make sure your game score is piling up. That sort of
+thinking and playing wins in business just as it does in bridge."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It's a long time since we've drawn any charts. Let's study the newspaper
+publisher's policy and see if he wasn't doing mentally just what the
+manager recommended that his billing clerk do on paper.
+
+You remember he made it his business to find out all about the error in
+last night's paper and to prevent its occurring again. That was
+something which, to his way of thinking, affected the permanent standing
+of his paper. When the department store stood ready to start a big
+institutional campaign which meant nothing more to his business than a
+big increase in volume, he left the job of closing the contract to his
+hired help. But when, in another newspaper, the same department store
+advertised a new type of radio which he thought his readers ought to
+know about, once more he made it his own business to go out and get a
+few lines for his own paper and his own readers.
+
+Then, if we keep tally--and consider whether they "score" above the line
+as increased profits, or below the line as permanent success, our card
+will look something like the chart on this page.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The handling of the error in last night's paper is something that will
+score down where the success of the business lies--and to lose on it
+means losing a vital point. In short, it affects the permanent standing
+of the business enterprise. So does the securing of the radio
+advertisement. It's business news and something his readers must know
+about. So after it he goes. On the other hand, the institutional
+advertising will add only to the revenue of the newspaper. Don't mistake
+the point. He wants that contract, too. It will add materially to his
+profits. But getting it or not getting it will in no way affect the
+standing of the paper with its customers. School will keep just the
+same. So that particular job is on the other side of the line. That's
+why he has a sales manager.
+
+To illustrate once more, let's attempt to "score" the work of a credit
+man. What is the "vital element" in his work? What determines whether
+his work is worth doing, or whether it's worthless? Offhand, you might
+say: "Preventing losses on bad debts." But is it that? Surely not, when
+we analyze the job. The final objective of the credit department is to
+enable the house to sell more goods by extending credit wherever it is
+justified. On that basis it is easy to see that the "vital element" in
+the credit man's job is "to not lose a good sale"--and we know we're
+splitting an infinitive to say it. If it weren't, why have a credit man
+at all? It would be far simpler not to extend credit to anyone who could
+not prove his worth.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Now look at the credit man's score card. Such a chart might not help an
+old, experienced hand, but would it not help a beginner to get a grip
+on what his job is all about? Would it not enable him to see his job
+from the angle of CONSERVING THE BUSINESS?
+
+Hold on, though. Lining up the various jobs according to whether they
+score "above or below the line"--that is, whether they affect the
+essential well-being of the business or simply swell its profit--does
+not mean that he shall neglect all tasks above the line any more than
+give his constant attention to those that score below the line. The
+chief value of such an outline of your job or business is to KEEP
+ACTIVELY IN MIND A SENSE OF THE VITAL SPOTS TO GUARD--the spots to keep
+an eye on--the tasks for which you are always ready to plunge in and
+defend, once they are threatened.
+
+Wherever you find a successful manager, whether running a big business
+or just handling a small job, you will see that he has a clear
+understanding of the elements that mean the life of his work. And
+further observation will show that he is always protecting them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The head miller in a small flour mill was smart and aggressive--a bit on
+the "go-getter" order, to be sure, but very, very competent none the
+less. It seems he had worked out some method of increasing the nutritive
+value of the mill's best grade of flour by adding something or other--it
+doesn't matter what.
+
+Naturally he was enthusiastic.
+
+Why not? He had persuaded the manager to have this new product analyzed
+by experts--and the analyses had proved extremely favorable.
+
+He wanted to go ahead.
+
+But the manager moved slowly. "It may make a good flour and the bread
+made from it may be good for the digestion," said he, "but will the
+bread taste as good?"
+
+Finally, after trying out the flour in his own home, he refused to go
+ahead with the project. The miller, knowing how good the bread would be
+for people, fired up his job, went into business for himself and put his
+trick flour on the market.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+It never sold.
+
+The bread baked from it didn't taste good.
+
+The mill owner, you see, had kept his eye on what the miller had
+neglected--the big, vital element of the business--that people bought
+flour to make bread, and that anything affecting the quality and taste
+of the bread must therefore be handled very carefully.
+
+What the miller needed, to take the place of the boss's years of
+experience, was a chart like the one on the opposite page--a graphic
+outline in skeleton form of his work's vital element.
+
+What a different aspect could be put on many an employee's work if the
+employer, instead of depending on the man's own-farsightedness in seeing
+the main items of value in his work, would graphically put them before
+him by some such chart as this one!
+
+Right here, however, we must guard against one important characteristic
+of this vital element.
+
+It CHANGES--or at least it _may_ change as the business develops.
+
+Ask the manager of the circularizing department of a certain mail-order
+house. He will tell you it's VOLUME. All his other problems have been
+stabilized except the single job of getting out enough circulars every
+day to keep the required volume of orders flowing in. Again, go to the
+circularizing room of an Eastern financial house and the manager will
+tell you that the vital element in his work is QUALITY--quality
+addressing, quality folding and so on. Here the whole success of the
+department depends upon reflecting the dignity and prestige of the
+house. The danger point with this manager is therefore touched by
+anything that might affect the quality of the work.
+
+Many a manufacturer starts with limited capital. For the first year or
+two the vital element in his business is finance. He may have to
+sacrifice attention to production and sales problems in order to guard
+the slender balance in the bank. Sometimes he may have to pay higher
+prices for materials because he must buy in small quantities; he may
+even have to check sales because he hasn't the capital with which to
+finance them. Later, though, as a reserve is built up, or when better
+credit is established, he will find the vital element has shifted to
+manufacturing, buying, or maybe sales.
+
+A certain shoe manufacturer--we seem to gravitate toward shoes every so
+often--found manufacturing the vital element of his business a scant
+dozen years ago. His big job was to see that shoes went out the door. He
+doubled the size of his plant. In the short space of three years his
+problem had shifted to one of sales--he was no longer getting enough
+volume to fill his plants. And today his greatest concern is his
+shrinking bank balance.
+
+The same tendency toward change will be found in individual jobs.
+
+The traffic manager of an electrical supply house deposes that the vital
+element in his department's work changed completely in less than two
+years.
+
+"When I first came here," he declares, "the business had grown faster
+than our manufacturing facilities. We were always working close up to
+the contract date for delivery. I was hired simply because I had a
+reputation for being able to speed up shipping, pick the shortest routes
+and rush things through at the last minute.
+
+"Later on, we got in better shape in the factory. The goods began to
+come through to us further in advance of the promised delivery dates. I
+noticed this and changed my methods. Where I had previously watched
+after speed alone, slapping things into any old case to get them packed,
+hustling them out by any route which would save a day, regardless of
+rates, I now began to pack more carefully, to sort mixed shipments in
+order to get the lowest classification in freight rates, to pick the
+cheapest routes, and so on.
+
+"One day the chief called me in and gave me a raise.
+
+"'Warren,' said he, 'I thought I'd have to fire you when we got past the
+rush stage. I had you down as just a speed demon. But you have been
+wise enough to change your methods as conditions changed. And I want you
+to know we appreciate it.'"
+
+A similar shift is noted by the managing editor of a well-known business
+paper.
+
+"When I took hold five years ago, it was a constant fight against time.
+We never had quite enough material on hand. There was always a mad
+scramble at the last moment to put the book to bed. Night after night I
+stuck around writing fillers--a column here, half a column there.
+
+"Today it's quite a different story. We have a carefully selected
+inventory from which we make up our schedules at least 60 days ahead of
+publication. We have figured out close production dates--and we stick to
+'em. There's no longer the problem of digging up enough eleventh-hour
+material to get out an issue. The job is one of selection. My biggest
+care is to find room for all the things I know our readers are
+interested in."
+
+A constant check is the safest way to note in time the conditions that
+govern the conservation of the welfare of your job or business. Check
+the POINTS ABOVE THE LINE and watch the POINTS BELOW THE LINE.
+
+That constant effort to measure the importance of all the things that
+come up before him by their effects above and below THE DANGER LINE will
+do much to keep a manager practical. For summed up, the "practical" man
+is the one who combines with his progressiveness and vision the knack of
+never letting his progressive ideas puncture the vital element of his
+business and bleed it to death.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Make your score in any form that fits your needs or your tastes, but
+MAKE IT--WATCH IT--ACT ON IT. Some men can do the scoring in their
+heads. Most of us, even in so simple a procedure as keeping our golf
+scores, find it's better to carry it on paper.
+
+On paper? Can a man with real work to do, spend his time plotting curves
+and making pie charts? Does the Knack of Managing depend upon a man's
+ability to draw pictures?
+
+Not at all. If that's the impression you have gained from reading this
+little book, go back to the beginning and start all over again.
+
+If, from time to time, charts and diagrams have been suggested, it is
+only because the successful manager has somehow or other to go through
+precisely those same motions. His job--if he is to understand it and
+manage it successfully--must be analyzed somehow, sometime. We have
+merely suggested ways in which the ANALYSIS can be made more easily and
+intelligently by means of charts.
+
+His operations must be planned--in his head or on paper--if he is to
+perform them with the least lost motion, lost time and lost money. The
+Knack of Managing has simply gathered from other men's methods a form
+of chart by which PLANNING can be done more accurately.
+
+Again, his work must be organized--if it is to be done in the simplest
+and best way. An attempt, then, has been made to sift the organization
+methods of successful managers and firms to develop a chart which at
+least indicates how to go about ORGANIZING THE WORK.
+
+"HELP" MUST BE HANDLED. So, from the experiences of shrewd managers, we
+have dug out the gist of their ideas and put it in the form of a chart
+that gives a basis on which to work.
+
+Above all, a business or job must be CONSERVED AND CARED FOR. The
+charting method suggested is but the method used by every successful
+manager--though he does not take the time to reduce his plans to paper.
+
+And last, in our search to acquire THE KNACK OF MANAGING, have we not
+learned that the fundamental principles of management are universally
+applicable?
+
+More than anything else we have seen why the manager who has made a
+success in one business can step right into another and make the same
+brilliant record. His business, after all, is not ships or shoes or
+sewing machines. It's MANAGING. And that job, in its fundamental
+principles, is the same, whether it's running the U. S. Steel
+Corporation or operating a peanut stand.
+
+That's our story--and we'll stick to it.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KNACK OF MANAGING***
+
+
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