{"id":3618,"date":"1949-04-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1949-04-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1949-vol-30-no-4-this-matter-of-efficiency\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T14:45:20","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T14:45:20","slug":"april-1949-vol-30-no-4-this-matter-of-efficiency","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1949-vol-30-no-4-this-matter-of-efficiency\/","title":{"rendered":"April 1949 &#8211; Vol. 30, No. 4 &#8211; This Matter of Efficiency"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\"> No one can tell individuals exactly what                     to do to be efficient, because situations and conditions vary                     so greatly, but there are certain efficiency principles it                     will do none of us any harm to review.<\/p>\n<p>While this Monthly Letter is written first of all for business                     men, it can be read with some benefit by others, merely by                     reading &#8220;home&#8221; or &#8220;school&#8221; instead of &#8220;business, industry&#8221;                     and the like. The principles of efficiency are equally applicable                     to business executives and workmen, to housewives and stenographers,                     to political leaders and the officers of associations.<\/p>\n<p>Each of these is using his intellect and his hands to fashion                     out of his environment better living conditions than he now                     enjoys, physically, mentally and spiritually. In doing this,                     he risks loss and looks for gain, and these are two factors                     which completely describe business enterprise.<\/p>\n<p>There never has been a system under which there were not                     ups and downs. However primitive or advanced a society may                     have been, it was subject to scarcities and abundances. It                     is, if not a rule, at least a fact in all nature, that there                     are cycles and phases and currents. The advantage that human                     beings enjoy over the rest of creation is that they have power                     to reason, the ability to remember, and the urge to do something                     besides following instinct.<\/p>\n<h3>What to Do<\/h3>\n<p>There is a great deal to be done. The worst thing a society                     or an individual can do is to sit back in easy optimism, thinking                     that because a situation is merely temporary it is better                     to let things drift until they sort themselves out.<\/p>\n<p>The first thing is to find out just how our affairs stand,                     so that we may form plans about what to do. Everyone knows                     that profit consists of what is left out of earnings after                     paying expenses. Before there are any profits we reach a point                     called by business men the &#8220;break-even&#8221; point, where                     income just balances expenses. It is important to know what                     that is, and to separate items on the expense side of the                     ledger so that we know how many days we are working for the                     landlord, how many days for the government, and so on, before                     we even start to build up a disposable profit.<\/p>\n<p>This exercise is an education in the facts of life. It will                     put us on our guard against overstocking, over-expanding                     and overreaching ourselves. It will go a long way toward revealing                     whether we are getting out of life the values we most desire.                     It will tell us whether we are paying so much for inconsequential                     things that we have a meagre profit left over for advancement.                     Then we can start looking to the future.<\/p>\n<h3>Having an Objective<\/h3>\n<p>There are two main divisions in conducting a war, and they                     may be applied to carrying on a business. Strategy is the                     over-all plan, and tactics is the detailed carrying-out                     of the plan. The whole art and science of strategy and tactics                     depends on selection of the right objective, and the proper                     distribution of effort.<\/p>\n<p>A man without an objective clear in his mind may be very                     busy and active and have all the external appearances of a                     hustler, but his dispersion of effort is as inefficient as                     that of a romping dog, because it is aimless.<\/p>\n<p>Just as we need objectives, so we require principles. The                     principles of business are those that have been used successfully                     by great executives throughout history. They are tools which                     management can use in the solution of problems.<\/p>\n<p>There is a difference between principles and rules. A principle                     is something inside one; a rule is an outward restriction.                     A rule, as the philosopher Crane wrote, &#8220;supports us by the                     armpits over life&#8217;s mountain passes, while a principle makes                     us sure-footed.&#8221; Principles are for leaders who do their                     own thinking; rules are for people who just wish to obey.<\/p>\n<h3>Keeping Out of Ruts<\/h3>\n<p>Men are inclined to contract habits. They learn the routine                     way of doing their tasks, and then plod along patiently, faithfully                     and conscientiously. People often say in the offhand way we                     use proverbs and nonsense phrases: &#8220;Nobody likes to get into                     a rut&#8221;, but it isn&#8217;t true. The rut, said Dr. J. F. Johnson                     in a book he called <em>Business and the Man<\/em>, &#8220;the rut                     woos the young man most seductively. &#8216;Just come to me,&#8217; it                     says, &#8216;and I will make you comfortable. See how easy I make                     things for those who love me. If you will only walk upright                     in my beaten path you will never worry or get wrinkles or                     break your legs, and your salary will be automatically increased                     on every New Year&#8217;s Day. That is the siren call of the rut,                     and 90 per cent of young men think it sweet music.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>That was written 30 years ago, but only this year two executive                     officers of this Bank took occasion to call attention to a                     similar failing. The President said: &#8220;I deplore the increasing                     trend among a portion of the younger generation today to think                     too much of security and not enough about going out and really                     accomplishing something for themselves.&#8221; The General Manager                     remarked: &#8220;No country on earth has a future that promises                     to surpass or even to equal ours&#8230;We could cause this country                     to be developed to its maximum extent from within itself by                     the application of our own enterprise and ingenuity, and by                     the investment of our own monetary and human resources.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Practical Efficiency<\/h3>\n<p>Inefficiency is due to one of two causes: either the principles                     of efficiency are not known, or they are not applied. The                     first may be due to ignorance or to the presence of a manager                     who &#8220;knows it all&#8221; and is the greatest enemy to efficiency.                     The second may be traced to carelessness or irresponsibility.<\/p>\n<p>There are, in addition, men who think they are applying                     efficiency principles when they are merely imposing rituals.                     It has often happened that visitors to efficiently-run                     factories confuse system with efficiency. They collect cards,                     forms and devices, supposing that they have the secret of                     efficiency. That is as if a man should read a bank&#8217;s book                     of rules and Patterson&#8217;s book on <em>Canadian Banking <\/em>and                     think this makes him a proficient banker.<\/p>\n<p>One place to start building efficiency is in the careful                     planning of operations. Management and operations are so closely                     linked that to separate them is to kill any chance of success.<\/p>\n<p>Planning involves many things, but first of all good planning                     demands that the executive who is planning should do so realistically.                     He shouldn&#8217;t expect the impossible. He should make sure that                     all the equipment necessary to the task is available to his                     lieutenants and men.<\/p>\n<p>Alexander and Montgomery had this in mind when they steadfastly                     refused to advance the date of attack at El Alamein. They                     insisted on having the material at hand to enable their plans                     to be carried through successfully. Perhaps they had in mind                     as a warning the battle of Isandula fought in 1879, when two                     British regiments were totally destroyed, partly because there                     were no screwdrivers to open the ammunition boxes.<\/p>\n<h3>Efficiency in Costs<\/h3>\n<p>Every waste of material and time has its effect on the cost                     of conducting business, and we recall that the end result                     of a business is expressed in profit, which is what is left                     after deducting costs from income.<\/p>\n<p>Cost accounting is not a matter only of looking at the total                     result of a year&#8217;s work. A bank is not satisfied unless each                     account, as well as the general ledger, balances. No business,                     however small, should be content unless it knows just what                     departments are making money.<\/p>\n<p>The difference between income and cost in any department                     shows the margin of safety at which that department is operating,                     and the total will show the margin of safety of the business.                     For example, if income were $1,250 and costs amounted to $1,000,                     we should know that the business is 25 per cent over its break-even                     point, and we had that much lee-way.<\/p>\n<p>It is necessary to make everyone in the business cost-conscious,                     and this can be done by showing them that in the long run                     they serve themselves best by serving the company well. The                     saving made through the prevention of mistakes, through the                     elimination of waste, and through increasing production, will                     show up in the balance sheet. It is on the result shown in                     this balance sheet that the company decides to expand or contract,                     and whether it can pay more or less in wages and salaries.<\/p>\n<p>The path of business is littered with the wreckage of companies                     that have failed to keep account of their costs in relation                     to their products. Keeping records may be a nuisance, but                     so are many of the other things you have to do in running                     a business or managing a home. Records make available to you                     the lessons of the past, and enable you to project them into                     the future. They increase the scope and number of warnings.                     They show up wastes.<\/p>\n<p>It may be impossible to eliminate all waste, but everyone                     has something to learn about the value of trying. When the                     forty-niners panned gold in California they rejected                     any ground that did not contain $20 of gold to the cubic yard;                     invention of the cradle made $5 dirt profitable; the sluice                     box made $1 dirt worth while, and in hydraulic mining the                     value may be as low as five cents to the cubic yard.<\/p>\n<p>That kind of waste-elimination is brought about by                     initiative in inventing better ways of doing things. There                     is another kind of waste, more common, which is due to sheer                     carelessness or irresponsibility. Emerson tells in his book                     on the <em>Twelve Principles of Efficiency <\/em>about an engineer                     who poured out a gallon of 40-cent oil in order to have                     the tinsmith solder a leak in the 15-cent can. A transcontinental                     railway in the United States eliminated a gravity grade at                     a cost of $5 million, saddling itself with a fixed charge                     of $1,000 a day forever. The operating cost of the helper                     engines able to handle all the traffic up that grade did not                     exceed $100 a day.<\/p>\n<h3>Efficient Labour<\/h3>\n<p>Problems connected with labour are integrated into other                     management problems because productivity, which is the chief                     end of business, is a matter of combining men, management                     and machines.<\/p>\n<p>It used to be a common saying that in every trade the best                     workman is the man who can effect most with the least effort.                     It is equally true today that nobody wants to know how hard                     you have worked but what you have produced. To carry it into                     a broader sphere, let us say that the country&#8217;s prosperity                     does not depend upon the number of men employed but upon what                     they produce. This is an important truth for union men: increased                     output can have as great an effect as increased wages in raising                     living standards, and, in fact, workers can further enhance                     their standard of living only by increasing their productivity.<\/p>\n<p>The essence of efficient management is not so much &#8220;handling&#8221;                     men as it is getting people to do things. For this, it is                     necessary to understand people, to have vision, to co-ordinate,                     and to use judgment. Infinite patience is needed. Information                     should be given so that the worker feels a sense of real participation                     through understanding what his firm is doing and what are                     the causes of its profits and losses.<\/p>\n<p>Workers should be initiated into the facts of competition.                     It is significant that the standard of living for workmen                     remains highest in countries where there is the least restriction                     upon competition, which is the essential characteristic of                     private enterprise, and where there is the greatest freedom                     from the deadening hand of collectivism.<\/p>\n<p>Competition does not consist of price-cutting and advertising.                     It involves quality, a good name, and dependability. It demands                     constant research, so as to develop maximum quality at the                     minimum price.<\/p>\n<h3>Essence of Efficiency<\/h3>\n<p>Efficiency cannot be achieved for a business by one man                     alone. It demands teamwork, which is the antithesis of being                     dragged forward or driven forward.<\/p>\n<p>Teamwork implies the right kind of top organization, combined                     with mutual confidence, knowledge of the powers, limitations                     and aims of all the people and departments participating.                     It requires combined training so as to cause men and departments                     to co-operate with each other for the common end. A baseball                     team provides a ready example. Without high individual standards,                     without team codes enthusiastically lived up to, without severe                     penalties to enforce obedience to the umpire and peace between                     the teams, the modern game would be impossible.<\/p>\n<p>To manage the team, the executive needs the help of general                     staff. He will surround himself with helpers who can be of                     most use to him, and provide them with a clear-cut organization                     pattern which gives them responsibilities and clearly outlined                     authority in certain duties.<\/p>\n<p>It will be his standard rule never to do anything himself                     that can be done well by subordinates. There are enough things                     they cannot do sufficiently well to keep him busy.<\/p>\n<p>The good executive will not insist on seeing every report.                     So long as the machine runs smoothly, he will be a looker-on.                     In fact, he will recall Solon, the great law-maker of                     ancient Athens. After enacting his laws, Solon bought a vessel                     and went away for ten years.<\/p>\n<h3>Confer and Consult<\/h3>\n<p>The successful executive will originate, direct and scrutinize,                     but before he reaches decisions he will confer and consult.                     He knows that in his high position co-operation is not                     a virtue, but rather its absence is a crime. He cannot win                     or keep people&#8217;s good will unless he consults them on subjects                     in which they are interested. Machiavelli tells us in <em>The                     Prince <\/em>that the emperor Maximilian consulted no one,                     yet never got his own way because he kept his plans secret                     and found them obstructed by those he should have won over.<\/p>\n<p>Consultation is a great factor in building morale. When                     the men in a firm, from top to bottom, are working for its                     success and advancement, that firm has good morale. They need                     to know exactly what they are doing and why they are doing                     it this way rather than another. They need to believe in the                     sincerity of their chief, and in their own personal importance                     in his plans.<\/p>\n<h3>Being an Executive<\/h3>\n<p>To be an efficient executive does not demand high education,                     but it does require common sense, keen intelligence and qualities                     of judgment, temperament and drive. You must enjoy the call                     to combat that difficult problems impose. The successful executive                     holds his success only as a challenge cup.<\/p>\n<p>You must pay a price, too. The higher you climb in the scale                     of success, the harder you will have to work to hold your                     position, and the more you will have to put up with. That                     is one reason why there are not more people up where you are.                     It is folly to think of being able to avoid criticism, and                     weakness to be affected by it: the only defence is obscurity.<\/p>\n<p>The executive must be a doer of things. The opportunities                     he sees from his high place have no meaning unless they are                     buttressed by activity. We learn that men who get things done                     are those who in the most effective manner go about the job                     of getting things done, and that putting off until tomorrow                     what ought to be done today kills business. Dr. Donald A.                     Laird, writer of books on applied psychology, gives this advice:                     &#8220;Let others coddle you now and then if they want to, but never                     coddle yourself if you expect to get things done.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Efficiency Attributes<\/h3>\n<p>There are a few attributes to be developed by the efficiency-seeking                     executive under every circumstance, but they are particularly                     needed when all is not smooth sailing.<\/p>\n<p>Most important, probably, is the power of decision. The                     executive who hesitates is lost. No matter how clever he may                     be in his profession, if he wobbles about making up his mind                     he is branded a man of weak will and irresolution. When a                     decision cannot longer be deferred, he jumps at one, hopes                     for the best and worries himself fearing the worst.<\/p>\n<p>There is no room for split ideals or conflicting aims in                     the makeup of an executive. Sir William Howe was appointed                     Britain&#8217;s commander-in-chief in North America partly                     on his undoubted merits as a soldier and partly with a vague                     idea of conciliation. It is always dangerous to attempt a                     combination of two so widely separated functions, and Howe                     felt compelled to resign his appointment. America claims one                     of the most odd of natural oddities, the pocket gopher, which                     can run forward or backward with equal speed, but that is                     not an ideal for the business man to emulate.<\/p>\n<p>For efficient management, one needs courage. Many men decline                     to undertake anything unless they have positive assurance                     of success. In youth they look for employers who promise steady                     advancement, so that they feel sure of an annual increment                     in salary. Later on, as they see others passing them in material                     gain, they do not blame their lack of courage but &#8220;conditions&#8221;                     or &#8220;lack of pull&#8221; or some other scapegoat.<\/p>\n<p>The successful man wins his place in the world as old playgoers                     used to get into the theatre on first night: by making for                     the thickest of the crush and resisting the tendency to edge                     out into the place of ease. He follows Napoleon&#8217;s system of                     sacrificing a11 secondary views, and incurring all lesser                     hazards, to secure what he considers the main object of his                     campaign.<\/p>\n<h3>Make a Wise Alliance<\/h3>\n<p>At the same time, the efficient executive is careful. His                     courage does not consist in ignoring difficulties and perils,                     but in seeing them and mastering them. He can calculate odds                     very closely to begin with, and then add, almost mathematically,                     the element of chance, which always remains a sealed mystery                     to average minds.<\/p>\n<p>Some of the precautions observed by the business man when                     embarking upon an enterprise are: enter no undertaking without                     reserves; discount heavily your appreciation of the stupidity                     of your opponent; make your base secure, so that you have                     a strong fixed point around which to manoeuvre.<\/p>\n<p>Success cannot be won by passive defence, which merely serves                     to avert defeat, but even in his most blazing enthusiasm the                     efficient business man will have everything carefully calculated,                     weighed and measured. He is ready, then, to make a wise alliance                     with circumstances so as to follow up a success or screen                     a retreat.<\/p>\n<p>The business executive must be confident. People do not                     like to work for a pessimist. Having appraised the risks and                     dangers carefully, the leader will act as if there were no                     doubt of the outcome.<\/p>\n<p>A man engaged in business, in top position, needs time for                     both an active and a contemplative life. Only in that way                     can he keep command. His thinking puts him out in front of                     the crowd, and the public expects of its leaders that they                     should keep a step ahead and a notch above.<\/p>\n<p>He needs, pre-eminently, initiative, coupled with flexibility                     that enables him to meet chances and changes. The ability                     to improvise quickly and effectively is an indispensable part                     of efficiency.<\/p>\n<p>No man of feeble imagination can maintain his place as an                     important executive. This is why you will find 10,000 men                     guarding the past for every one who pushes forward to a new                     horizon. The executive type of man is not satisfied with having                     and resting, but is filled with a passion to grow and become.                     Initiative means the ability to think and do new things.<\/p>\n<p>Finally, in this list of qualities of an executive, he must                     keep on learning. All our worthwhile knowledge of the world                     is based upon theory. Our factories with all their thousands                     of kinds of machines have been constructed in harmony with                     theories that have been carefully thought out and tested.                     If an executive stops learning, his business stagnates.<\/p>\n<h3>Dealing with People<\/h3>\n<p>Efficient leaders are careful in dealing with people. They                     take many precautions which are neglected by lesser men, because                     they know that only through other people is it possible for                     them to succeed.<\/p>\n<p>Public relations consists of a great many little things,                     most of them arising out of thoughtfulness on the part of                     the business man. For example, Timothy Eaton saw an old lady                     having difficulty in climbing the step into his first Toronto                     store: next day the step was replaced by a sloping walk.<\/p>\n<p>There are no persons so insignificant but may some day have                     it in them to be of use to you, and to quote Edmund Burke                     on the other side of the matter: &#8220;There are critical moments&#8230;when                     they who are too weak to contribute to your prosperity may                     be strong enough to complete your ruin.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In short, the business man must think more of others than                     of himself, because he can earn his profit only through his                     ability to please others. He may have queer ideas and theories                     about politics, religion, the Chinese, or the state of the                     universe, but in his business life he must have the common                     sense to be guided by the wishes of his customers.<\/p>\n<p>That, of course, is one of the marks of our economic system.                     No plan of coercion by the state will result nearly so well                     in giving people the things they want as will the efforts                     of private enterprisers to give people what they desire.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[29],"class_list":["post-3618","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-29"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>April 1949 - Vol. 30, No. 4 - This Matter of Efficiency - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/april-1949-vol-30-no-4-this-matter-of-efficiency\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"April 1949 - Vol. 30, No. 4 - This Matter of Efficiency - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"No one can tell individuals exactly what to do to be efficient, because situations and conditions vary so greatly, but there are certain efficiency principles it will do none of us any harm to review. 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