{"id":3844,"date":"1959-07-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1959-07-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1959-vol-40-no-5-education-for-success-in-business\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:08:04","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:08:04","slug":"july-1959-vol-40-no-5-education-for-success-in-business","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1959-vol-40-no-5-education-for-success-in-business\/","title":{"rendered":"July 1959 &#8211; Vol. 40, No. 5 &#8211; Education for Success in Business"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Education has many experts, lay                     as well as professional. It is looked upon as being something                     like politics, in which one is supposed to have an intuitive                     knowledge. Theories abound on all levels from the class-room                     to the ministry of education. Even kindergarten pupils have                     opinions amounting to deep convictions.<\/p>\n<p> Some notions quoted in the newspapers are regarded by readers                     as a source of innocent merriment, but there is nothing amusing                     about any theory that encourages young people to be satisfied                     with anything less than an education that is the most complete                     and well-rounded available to them.<\/p>\n<p>Many a youth has been lured from school with only a part                     education. In terms of immediate physical satisfactions the                     importance of getting promptly on a payroll seemed compelling.<\/p>\n<p>After a few months the youth learned that his was a dead-end                     job, making use of only one skill, without opportunity to                     flex his mental sinews. His knowledge fell short of what was                     needed when the test came for promotion. He learned with some                     shock that no escape route has so far been found from the                     established discipline of education.<\/p>\n<h3>What education is needed?<\/h3>\n<p>An eminent business man may not be able to put into capsule                     form the secret of his progress. He may say that it is the                     over-energetic operation of a gland, or his competitive                     spirit, or some sort of second sight or sixth sense. Behind                     all that speculation there is one fact easily seen and understood:                     he knew things when the knowledge was needed.<\/p>\n<p>Even to get a decent start in business a youth needs a good                     basic education. A survey in Canada a few years ago showed                     that boys and girls who dropped out of school early had more                     difficulty than graduates in finding jobs, they took work                     of a lower grade, and they received less pay. Officials of                     the National Employment Service in Montreal announced in June                     that two out of every three unemployed people looking for                     work have had an education which stopped at grade eight. Even                     among boys looking for white collar jobs, the average grade                     level reached only 8.7.<\/p>\n<p>Evidence of the need for education makes itself felt more                     strongly in the succeeding years. Every thought for the development                     of business and for improvement in its methods has its origin                     in the mind of someone. Cultivation of the mind, therefore,                     is essential.<\/p>\n<p>During the past half century there have been great changes                     in the availability of resources and the amount of mechanical                     energy to develop them. Methods of production have been revolutionized.<\/p>\n<p>In the shadow of such changes it is futile to argue that                     the era of the narrow expert has arrived and that of the scholar                     has gone. Every product, process and job must be related to                     the whole picture. The timing of plant expansion or the marketing                     of a new commodity or the flotation of a loan: these require                     an intimate understanding of the state of our national economy                     within its world-wide setting.<\/p>\n<h3>Some business qualities<\/h3>\n<p>The personal qualities required in business, in addition                     to wide general knowledge, include these: an objective personality                     by which a man is enabled to work well with other people;                     accounting aptitude; creative imagination; structural visualization,                     by which a man thinks in three dimensions; reasoning ability,                     which enables him to form a logical conclusion from scattered                     facts; the power of observation, and a desire to do things.<\/p>\n<p>These are not developed by a man who is content to operate                     a comptometer or interpret a statement of affairs, important                     though these skills are. Something more is needed: something                     to liven and keep the whole mind alive.<\/p>\n<p>When he was opening a new technical college, the Duke of                     Edinburgh told his audience: &#8220;If the students here are to                     be of real value to industry you must foster in them an adventurous                     spirit and flexible minds. Without that you might just as                     well turn this college into a computing-engine factory.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Mere knowledge of techniques makes no contribution to the                     mastery of problems of human attitudes and human behaviour                     which so dominate the waking hours and thoughts of business                     men these days. A business man has to relate himself to other                     business men and to people in all sorts of occupations. He                     has to know the purposes and motivations of the society of                     which he is a part.<\/p>\n<p>Some business executives thought they had solved their problems                     of human relations by delegating them to specialists in personnel                     and public relations, but soon the executives found that there                     was no escape from their dilemma. They themselves had to cross                     the barrier and explore the mysteries of that great enigma                     known as public opinion.<\/p>\n<p>This meant new experiences in the art of communication.                     Facility in communication in business does not mean proficiency                     with electrical circuits or electronic devices or dictated                     memoranda: it does mean having the ability to express facts,                     ideas and conceptions in understandable language.<\/p>\n<p>In the days celebrated in Ossian&#8217;s poems the chief carried                     a shield with seven metal bosses, each having a different                     sound. When the chief struck a boss with his spear, he conveyed                     an order to his tribe.<\/p>\n<p>That was a simple sort of communication, and it was one-way.                     Today&#8217;s chief must have basic skill in the two-way use                     of language: reading and writing, listening and speaking.                     Every hour of the day, from the humblest clerk at his desk                     to the executive in his office, coherent language is the tool                     with which business works.<\/p>\n<p>Another quality needed in business is courage. A man going                     into business, whether as a clerk or a proprietor, must be                     prepared to suffer set-backs and wounds, but he can develop                     strength and character so as to confront the facts of life                     with confidence.<\/p>\n<p>This quality is not to be had through soft living, by evading                     issues, by escaping from tests. Examinations in school, decision                     making in personal life, and the first tentative steps alone                     in business: all these are conditioning factors. Much is said                     about &#8220;adjustment to life&#8221;, but the most important adjustment                     anyone can make is to learn to meet with resolution the inevitable                     challenges of his own existence.<\/p>\n<h3>Keep learning<\/h3>\n<p>Are there any short cuts? Is there any substitute for sound                     training in mathematics, in natural science, in grammar and                     composition, in languages and history?<\/p>\n<p>Easy methods seem to be a dogma on this continent, but the                     budding business man cannot reduce the principles of commerce                     to a game at cards, or the problems of management to puzzles                     and riddles. There is no way of inscribing a lesson on a pill                     that gives wisdom by swallowing it.<\/p>\n<p>Education is not for people who resent the disciplines of                     scholarship. It is a process stretching over years of diligent                     effort. It cannot possibly result from swotting up study outlines                     to pass examinations, or gorging digests of books so as to                     write essays.<\/p>\n<p>Because business needs creative people with broad knowledge                     and capacity for independent thinking, its apprentices need                     not only to progress from where they were on leaving school,                     but to make up what they left school without having learned.                     The difference between the relative success of enterprises                     is in the qualities of the people who work for them. These                     qualities do not come by inheritance or by chance, but by                     continued study.<\/p>\n<p>Whatever his background, the ultimate test of any man&#8217;s                     education is his capacity to carry forward his further education                     from where he finds himself at any moment. He will develop,                     little by little, the insight that gets him invited to join                     in general business counsels, the ability to marshal facts                     and the judgment to put the facts together into a meaningful                     pattern.<\/p>\n<p>No one will learn all he needs to know, or become all he                     wishes to be, merely by reading the twenty-six volumes                     of the Alexander Hamilton Institute <em>Modern Business <\/em>library,                     or taking a course in business administration, but he will                     have a better chance to learn and become than the man who                     does not read or study.<\/p>\n<h3>Other men&#8217;s lives<\/h3>\n<p>Some people deprecate reading biographies. They say &#8220;you                     have your own life to live: what possible use can it be to                     you in business to learn how somebody did things fifty or                     twenty years ago?&#8221; But men in business in all times, whether                     in Babylon the Great or Victorian London or today&#8217;s St. James                     street, have been first of all men. The techniques of business                     handling may have changed, but the basic problems of business                     are human problems, unchanged by the passage of years.<\/p>\n<p>Would it not be useful to the man of today to read how Andrew                     Carnegie solved the problem of a balky associate? How Donald                     Smith, one of the builders of the Canadian Pacific Railway,                     won over a hostile trapper? How Edward Bok, editor and builder                     of the <em>Ladies&#8217; Home Journal<\/em>, made his first impact                     on the business world by the letters he wrote? How Gerald                     Swope as a salesman, later to become President of the General                     Electric Company, learned by a mistake how to write a report?                     How Rockefeller, Marshall Field and John Wanamaker boosted                     business by tuning in on the people, listening to them talk?                     How Timothy Eaton learned practical public relations by standing                     at his store door? How George Westinghouse rescued his company                     from receivership by putting up a bold front?<\/p>\n<p>The young man starting business and the executive directing                     business may learn by the experience of others with far less                     pain and travail than by their own experience. They need not,                     if they will study case histories, walk down the blind alleys                     of the past. The skill they must cultivate is that of applying                     other cases to their own,<\/p>\n<p>No one can climb by staying on the same level. We need to                     rub shoulders with the elite in thought and expression, and                     though we do not grasp all of it, some will cling to us, and                     by that much we are the better.<\/p>\n<h3>Two points of judgment<\/h3>\n<p>By what are we to judge whether we need further education?                     The two tests in business are these: are you able to think                     clearly and to solve problems wisely?<\/p>\n<p>The capacity to think straight will put a man at home in                     any circumstances. But to think straight requires that the                     man have some standards against which to compare and judge                     propositions. Effective thinking is directed to some purpose                     worth the effort, logically carried out so as to arrive at                     sound conclusions.<\/p>\n<p>Honest thinking is based upon the fullest possible knowledge                     available at the moment. It is what holds together the mass                     of facts we accumulate and puts them to use. Our education                     should be directed toward cultivating our aptitude for action,                     moving us on from the gaining of knowledge to its expression.<\/p>\n<p>Education for business includes learning to weigh and consider                     without lost motion or waste of time, without bluster and                     argument. It should inculcate a capacity to discriminate between                     values, with an eye on ways and means and ends: it should                     train a man to put his problems into simple form, resolve                     them into manageable size, and then to formulate a hypothesis.<\/p>\n<p>An object lesson in solving problems may be gained from                     the photographer. Having set his camera on a commanding spot                     he may use three lenses. The first, the wide-angle lens,                     gives an over-all view, showing the relationship of the                     thing or event to its general environment. Next, he uses a                     normal lens to sharpen the picture of the thing or event in                     its immediate surroundings. Finally, he puts on his telephoto                     lens for a view of the thing or event segregated and detailed.<\/p>\n<h3>More than useful<\/h3>\n<p>The sort of education needed by the person in business is                     more than merely useful. Some people are carried away by a                     utilitarian philosophy which regards the sole purpose of knowledge                     and education as contributing to some &#8220;useful&#8221; purpose.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Men are men,&#8221; said John Stuart Mill, &#8220;before they are lawyers                     or physicians or manufacturers; and if you make them capable                     and sensible men, they will make themselves capable and sensible                     lawyers or physicians or manufacturers.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Without preparation other than a specialty, where does a                     man stand? If there is anything certain under automation it                     is that the job, even the bottom job, will change radically                     and often. Once a man has demonstrated his mastery of one                     job he must be ready to tackle something for which he was                     not trained. He needs fertility of thought and the ability                     to adapt himself to a world of fluid possibilities.<\/p>\n<p>How is one to avoid technical hypnosis or personal stagnation?                     Only by getting out of the narrow world of the specialist                     through general education.<\/p>\n<p>While a gardener looks upon the flower as the thing toward                     which everything else is subordinate, he has learned that                     the root and leaves are intrinsically of greater importance,                     because on them the evolution of the flower depends. He knows                     it would be folly if, in his eagerness to obtain the flower,                     he were to neglect the plant.<\/p>\n<p>It is general education that adds breadth and depth to technical                     skill and competence. Dr. Clarence B. Randall, Chairman of                     the Board of Inland Steel Co., said to graduating students                     at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology: &#8220;I employ men                     for their proven capacity to learn. And in the steel industry                     I care not whether the man masters metallurgy or the Greek                     classics as long as he has that final intellectual capacity.                     I want the precision found in the metallurgist but I want                     also the power to appreciate the logic and clarity of expression                     of the Greek philosophers, for both those qualities are required                     in business.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>General education is needed in general living, too. None                     of us can become expert in all fields of work, so everyone                     is compelled to trust the judgment of other people in most                     areas of activity. Everyone of us must rely upon the judgment                     of his doctor, lawyer, plumber, television repair man, building                     contractor, and so forth. Therefore he needs the sagacity                     by which to distinguish the expert from the quack, and the                     better from the worse expert. William James said that an educated                     person knows a good man when he sees him.<\/p>\n<h3>Liberal education<\/h3>\n<p>Liberal education is not justly to be regarded as something                     dry, withered and effete; it is as full of sap as a maple                     tree in spring.<\/p>\n<p>The best way to cultivate the bigness of mind needed for                     success in business is through the liberal studies.<\/p>\n<p>They enlarge the understanding and deepen the insight. They                     develop accuracy in observation, quickness and certainty in                     seizing upon the main points of a new subject, and discrimination                     in separating the trivial from the important in great masses                     of facts. They contribute to mental power in situations that                     cannot be predicted in detail.<\/p>\n<p>A business man can only discharge his responsibility to                     his job and to society and to himself if he knows what is                     going on around him and why it is happening. Public opinion                     surveys on matters vital to business, national and private                     life show large numbers of people who have no opinion. Analysis                     of the surveys reveals that the more education a person has,                     the more likely he is to avoid this demeaning role.<\/p>\n<p>Admitting the need for a liberal education, how is one to                     acquire it; what is one to study?<\/p>\n<p>The liberal arts, which were arts appropriate to a free                     man, were originally seven: grammar, rhetoric, logic, music,                     arithmetic, geometry and astronomy. The purpose in teaching                     them was not to stuff the memory with facts, but to train                     students to use their minds, to develop intellectual curiosity,                     taste, moral principles and imagination.<\/p>\n<p>The scope has broadened to include such disciplines as literature,                     languages and the fine arts, but the basic purpose behind                     their pursuit is still the same. Liberal studies equip a man                     with fundamental powers of decision and action, applicable                     not only to selecting a life-work and to choosing a firm                     with which to work, but to all the great and varied concerns                     of human life, including the ability to cope satisfactorily                     with events that were unforeseen.<\/p>\n<p>Through liberal education the accumulated thought and all                     the experience of mankind are ours for the taking. Out of                     these we evolve principles. We may define principles as personal                     rules of conduct which we have adopted after testing their                     validity.<\/p>\n<p>There must be something more behind principles than mere                     knowledge. Like the shepherd in Shakespeare&#8217;s <em>As You Like                     It<\/em>, we all know that it is the property of rain to be                     wet, and fire to burn, and that a great cause of the night                     is lack of the sun. Sooner or later we must progress beyond                     acceptance of bare facts and observations, and learn to extract                     ideas from two or more widely separated places or sources                     and cross-fertilize them. Then the simple shepherd will                     know that fire brightens the night, but if rain threatens                     he had better build his fire in a cave.<\/p>\n<h3>Business in action<\/h3>\n<p>Look at a business man in action. All day long there are                     passing across his desk the opinions of other people, every                     one of whom sees only one segment of the total picture. There                     are letters from customers and prospective customers, each                     worried by his own problems. There are memos from departments                     &#8211; production, shipping, purchasing, accounting. There are                     suggestions from department heads and complaints from shop                     foremen. The business man must evaluate these with an eye                     on the relationship each bears to all the others. And he must                     do it promptly, steadily, with a high batting average of accuracy.<\/p>\n<p>Behind his decisions stand the principles he has learned                     &#8211; the laws that govern his business life. Like everything                     else in existence, from atoms to the stars, business is governed                     by principles, not by chance. The business man must be able                     to apply old principles to new challenges. The aim of philosophy,                     said the Stoic teacher Epictetus, is to examine and establish                     the rules: and to use them when they are known is the task                     of a wise and good man.<\/p>\n<p>One of the greatest philosophers of our own century, Alfred                     North Whitehead, said it this way: &#8220;The really useful training                     yields a comprehension of a few general principles with a                     thorough grounding in the way they apply to a variety of concrete                     details. In subsequent practice the men will have forgotten                     your particular details; but they will remember by an unconscious                     common sense how to apply principles to immediate circumstances.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Summing up<\/h3>\n<p>The young man preparing for business should not regard his                     high school matriculation certificate or his university degree                     as a ticket to a job, but as evidence of education completed                     to the best of his ability and resources. Mere training for                     a job ticket does not produce a full man, ready for opportunity;                     it may, in fact, produce little more than a mechanical, unthinking,                     man, doomed to stagnate in routine.<\/p>\n<p>When he walks out of the school door for the last time,                     a young man should carry with him knowledge that enables him                     to stand up in life without a fence around him.<\/p>\n<p>He should know the answers to these three questions, and                     be prepared to go on from there: 1. Where am I? What sort                     of world have I got into? 2. Where am I going? What is my                     ambition for betterment of my material, intellectual and social                     state? 3. What had I better do under these circumstances?                     What special faculties have I to develop?<\/p>\n<p>The sort of education required in business is the kind that                     teaches men to meet real situations adequately. That sort                     of man will not think meanly of his job, but will think greatly                     of his function. He knows that wisdom, not a bag of tricks,                     qualifies him for his business.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[39],"class_list":["post-3844","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-39"],"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>July 1959 - Vol. 40, No. 5 - Education for Success in Business - 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\/july-1959-vol-40-no-5-education-for-success-in-business\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"July 1959 - Vol. 40, No. 5 - Education for Success in Business - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Education has many experts, lay as well as professional. 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It is looked upon as being something like politics, in which one is supposed to have an intuitive knowledge. Theories abound on all levels from the class-room to the ministry of education. Even kindergarten pupils have opinions amounting to deep convictions. 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