{"id":4071,"date":"1951-10-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1951-10-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1951-vol-32-no-10-the-making-of-an-executive\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:50:13","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:50:13","slug":"october-1951-vol-32-no-10-the-making-of-an-executive","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/october-1951-vol-32-no-10-the-making-of-an-executive\/","title":{"rendered":"October 1951 &#8211; Vol. 32, No. 10 &#8211; The Making of an Executive"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">To be a business executive is the                     ambition of many a young man. The business executive is a                     central figure in the economic and social life of Canada.                     Our prosperity as a nation and as individuals depends in no                     small measure upon the successful functioning of industry,                     commerce and finance under the hands of capable men.<\/p>\n<p> Not everyone is a natural-born executive, but many                     can become good executives by training, by observing the methods                     and abilities needed, and by working toward self-development.<\/p>\n<p>Being an executive is not merely having a massive desk and                     a name-plate on a door. It makes many demands upon a                     man, demands of temperament and drive and health. An executive                     is always meeting challenges. He must know his job, make sound                     decisions, and direct the work of other people. He needs imagination                     and courage.<\/p>\n<p>The market value of an executive is determined by his special                     qualities. He is not paid for the thing he does, but for the                     moral content of his effort &#8211; his enthusiasm, his specialized                     abilities, his knowledge, his experience and his judgment.<\/p>\n<p>Naturally enough, there are intelligence requirements, though                     successful executives differ greatly in their ratings on tests.                     All of them have a high degree of ability to organize, and                     keen vision to see the path ahead. They are skilled in taking                     several seemingly isolated events or facts and detecting the                     relationships that exist between them.<\/p>\n<p>We might say that it is not superior mental ability or age                     or social background or family affiliations that count in                     these days. The executive has transferred himself to a new                     arena, one in which his development of good mental habits                     is the key to success.<\/p>\n<h3>Choosing Executives<\/h3>\n<p>The problem in business is to get the right men and women,                     keep them, and develop them into good leaders. Facts are better                     than opinions in this screening: what has this man done? how                     has he done it? what can he do today?<\/p>\n<p>Length of service alone does not qualify a man for executive                     rank. It is, undoubtedly, an advantage, but during it the                     man must have developed alertly. He must have learned to perceive                     meanings that do not appear on the surface. He must be almost                     psychic in his ability to steer safely through dangerous economic                     waters. He must be able to get on well with people above and                     below him in the firm&#8217;s roster of workers.<\/p>\n<p>Above all, the executive must be a leader of men. No business                     and no department will run itself. It needs a leader who keeps                     a jump ahead of the procession.<\/p>\n<p>A leader is not one who achieves by his personal powers,                     but one who inspires all those under his command. Morale is                     the child of good leadership. Men work best for the executive                     who holds his beliefs with confidence, who will stand up on                     Wednesday for the principle he believed in on Monday. The                     executive needs inner harmony, which shows itself in judgments                     based upon sound thinking and in his whole attitude toward                     his business and society.<\/p>\n<h3>Confidence and Control<\/h3>\n<p>The executive is a man who must trust his own judgment.                     Success will never be attained by a person who has to ask                     advice before doing anything important, or who leans on the                     boss, or who asks how to execute an order. A man&#8217;s self-confidence                     measures the height of his possibilities, and no man passes                     his own self-imposed limitations.<\/p>\n<p>Synthetic self-confidence will not do. The most painful                     tumble a man can take is to fall over his own bluff. The bluff                     may be caused by his conceit, or by a foolish and unproved                     belief in his ability.<\/p>\n<p>Next to confidence, built solidly upon knowledge, comes                     self-control. There never has been, and cannot be, a                     good life without self-control. It enables a man to adapt                     himself to the perpetual shifting of conditions, to meet unexpected                     challenges, and to deal effectively with crises.<\/p>\n<p>This is one of the most difficult of all qualities to attain.                     Men in more humble spheres may indulge in violence, engage                     in quarrels, express themselves in angry passions, but these                     are unbecoming in an executive; they undermine his authority                     and destroy the effectiveness of all his other virtues.<\/p>\n<p>Discretion is imperative in an executive. It is true that                     a man who never goes out on a limb may preserve the safety                     of his position, but he will never rise above it. That is                     not the kind of discretion we mean. The executive should have                     a hundred eyes to scrutinize a project before he calls upon                     his people to carry it out.<\/p>\n<h3>Courage<\/h3>\n<p>The executive also needs courage. Many a brilliant idea                     has been lost because the man who dreamed it lacked the spunk                     to put it across.<\/p>\n<p>The budding executive who finds that he is too conservative                     should practise taking chances in a small way until he gets                     the feeling of self-confidence that comes from exercising                     initiative. The courage he is seeking is not mere absence                     of fear. He who realizes clearly all the risks involved, and                     decides to go ahead with his plan, is a courageous man in                     the best sense of the word.<\/p>\n<p>Bravado is to be equally censured with cowardice. The ill-considered                     acceptance of any and every risk has no part in the essence                     of true courage.<\/p>\n<p>The executive must have the power of decision. Life is constantly                     confronting us with a series of choices. We cannot avoid deciding,                     because even to seem to make no choice at all is in itself                     to choose not to decide.<\/p>\n<p>It is not required that the executive make decisions in                     rapid-fire succession, though this seems to come naturally                     to some men. More crucial is the ability, to arrive without                     dithering at a decision that is wise.<\/p>\n<p>This is one of the traits watched in a man when he is being                     considered for promotion: does he come to his boss <em>with                     <\/em>decisions or <em>for <\/em>decisions? The man who says &#8220;Do                     you want to do so and so?&#8221; is trying to use the head of the                     man above him. Some weaknesses can be covered up by superior                     qualities in other spheres, but if a person is not certain                     and decisive he has only dim prospects of becoming a good                     executive.<\/p>\n<p>Administrative ability is taken for granted as a necessary                     quality. In a great many businesses it is more important than                     technical knowledge. The good administrator is able to develop                     an organization and keep it working purposefully and harmoniously.<\/p>\n<p>The good executive leaves his emotions at home, and only                     his family knows of his temperamental upsets. It is a sad                     day for the rising executive when his secretary warns his                     subordinates: &#8220;Don&#8217;t go near Mr. Blank today &#8211; he is in one                     of his moods.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Seasoned Youth<\/h3>\n<p>It may be that the need for so many perfections has contributed                     to the preference of men for executive positions who have                     attained a certain degree of co-ordination through years                     of experience. Age in itself is neither handicap nor benefit.                     Many men who occupy high places in industry are going strong                     at sixty-five, while others have wrecked businesses at                     half that age.<\/p>\n<p>It is only a feeling, not a fact, when the mature man experiences                     a twinge of envy in contact with younger people. He has not                     their light-heartedness, their casual manner, their air                     of living for today. But on the other hand he has poise, knowledge                     of the world, and understanding of people: assets which, in                     the very nature of things, younger men cannot yet have acquired.<\/p>\n<p>Whether a man ranks as youthfully immature or fixedly aged                     depends not at all upon his calendar age but upon his mental                     age and his flexibility of thinking. The expression &#8220;seasoned                     youth&#8221; covers all cases: the young executive may take a seasoned                     attitude toward life and make good; the older executive may                     take a mentally youthful attitude, with wide horizons still                     beckoning, and keep on making good.<\/p>\n<h3>The Firm&#8217;s Responsibility<\/h3>\n<p>The personal qualities of a man, however good they may be,                     are not made use of except in the proper environment. One                     of the bitterest situations for a qualified and eager executive                     is to be given a title without authority. Rank should not                     be looked upon as a reward for past services; it is given                     a man for the sole purpose of enabling him to meet responsibilities.<\/p>\n<p>Everyone in an organization should know precisely what he                     is responsible for, what his authority is, and who does what                     in directing effort. The executive has the right to be consulted.<\/p>\n<p>Many a firm would benefit by a stocktaking in this area.                     Progress in business, as in the making of the world, is the                     domination of chaos by mind and purpose. It can be achieved                     only when there is a basic philosophy and a good plan.<\/p>\n<p>Let us ask, have the objectives and policies of the firm                     been defined? This may sound academic, but unless there is                     a clear statement available, how are executives to mesh their                     efforts? How are they to obtain teamwork on their own or lower                     levels? How are they to be sure that their time and effort                     are being spent productively? How are they to avoid the all-too-common                     frustration that arises when projects are squelched because                     the firm doesn&#8217;t know whether it wants them or not?<\/p>\n<h3>The Human Problem<\/h3>\n<p>It is good policy for an executive to refrain from doing                     anything that can be done sufficiently well by a subordinate.                     If he hugs his job to his bosom down to the last trivial detail,                     he is being unfair to himself as well as to his people. He                     deprives himself of the opportunity to deal with more vital                     problems, to consider and plan expansion and improvement.                     He is, truly, working himself into an early grave.<\/p>\n<p>Of course, one must not go too far. No good executive tries                     to delegate everything, including his own responsibility for                     seeing that the job gets done well.<\/p>\n<p>Those who do so have probably come into their offices by                     inheritance or accident, and not by winning their spurs in                     the open field.<\/p>\n<p>Of all the problems faced by an executive, the human problem                     far exceeds the mechanical in difficulty.<\/p>\n<p>No predigested psychology will give the executive what he                     needs in human understanding. It is good to study, but theory                     must be tried out and applied so that the right response becomes                     habitual<\/p>\n<p>It takes a big man of superior quality to be capable of                     treating little men so as to gain and retain their respect                     and affection. He is the sort of man who, instead of climbing                     upon his fellow workers whom he has pulled down, sets himself                     to help everyone around him in order that he may go up with                     them. No man has true power, poise, charm or good personality                     unless he has a genuine interest in people.<\/p>\n<p>It is necessary to get along well with associates on the                     executive&#8217;s level. There is a temptation for the young or                     new executive to lean over backward rather than appear to                     be a &#8220;yes man.&#8221; Instead of that, he should accept gladly every                     gesture of friendship and help, seek to understand his associates&#8217;                     problems, give the feeling that he is genuinely interested                     in their work, and accept in good part even irritating things                     if his good sense tells him they are for his benefit.<\/p>\n<p>Only if morale is high in a firm will production be high,                     both in quantity and quality.<\/p>\n<p>Morale means more than an occasional staff party. It means                     that every man is interested in the success of the firm and                     works for it. Field Marshal Sir William Slim, Chief of the                     Imperial General Staff, is quoted in the <em>Canadian Army                     Journal <\/em>as stating this in a striking way: &#8220;An army must                     have Generals to lead it, but if the only men in it who have                     the mark of greatness are the Generals, it will win few victories.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Praising and Scolding<\/h3>\n<p>All great executives have turned away from inspiring fear                     and seek instead to increase devotion. The best way to arouse                     enthusiastic support is by expressing appreciation and encouragement.                     In giving praise it is not necessary to use a trowel, but                     on the other hand it is not wise to omit praise just because                     only a salt-spoonful is warranted.<\/p>\n<p>We need not wait for a perfect performance to bestow praise.                     Often when we praise an improvement in a man&#8217;s work we give                     him an incentive to seek perfection. The old idea that &#8220;everything                     is all right unless I tell you otherwise&#8221; is not good enough.                     The executive who lets his people severely alone unless some                     occasion calls for criticism is losing his grip on them.<\/p>\n<p>It is foolish to scold. Reproof should be grave, and not                     taunting. Able men take great pains to prevent others being                     humiliated, and back away from the barren triumph of forcing                     them to admit they are wrong. In short, the Greek playwright                     hit the nail on the head when he wrote: &#8220;Our high rank, with                     greatness long acquainted, knows to use its power with gentleness.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Anyone aspiring to an executive position will compromise                     his chances if he develops a habit of criticising his superiors,                     except to their faces. All men have faults and peculiarities,                     but those of high executives are especially apparent because                     these men are so much in the spotlight.<\/p>\n<p>It is wise, also, to refrain from the habit of criticising                     juniors. To be under a barrage of criticism is ruinous to                     a person&#8217;s peace of mind, and it destroys his will to do good                     work. When something is wrong, it is better to approach it                     in a helpful spirit. The only virtue in pointing out a fault                     in one job is to show how the next can be done better.<\/p>\n<h3>Training Assistants<\/h3>\n<p>The wise executive is on the look-out for men who can                     relieve him of detail, fill in for him when he is absent,                     and contribute to constructive planning.<\/p>\n<p>When a department ceases to function efficiently in the                     manager&#8217;s absence, management is bad. Every head of a department                     ought to be able to leave his desk, even in times of crisis.                     If he can&#8217;t, he hasn&#8217;t the right kind of men working for him,                     or he has kept them too much in leading strings.<\/p>\n<h3>A Time to Apply Brakes<\/h3>\n<p>There are some aspects of business life that call for carefulness                     in a man&#8217;s climb to the top of an organization.<\/p>\n<p>One of the great marks of a good executive is the appearance                     of ease with which he performs his duties. The man in a hurry                     shows that the thing he is tackling is too big for him. it                     is the lazy or inefficient man who is always too busy to listen                     to an idea.<\/p>\n<p>Hurry is wearing on the body and nerves, too. No matter                     how high the pressure may be, it is well, once in a while,                     to apply the brakes. Too many executives have the idea that                     their irresistible drive demands that they ignore questions                     of health, leisure and relaxation. They regard these as shifting                     values with which they may play, increasing them or decreasing                     them as the demands of their mare purpose allows. They pay                     an exorbitant price, one that need not be exacted at all.<\/p>\n<p>Only when the body is in splendid trim will the mind function                     at its highest efficiency. When the body is too tired to allow                     a man to read more than his evening paper, he is being deprived                     of mental sustenance in a way that will reflect itself in                     his work. When restlessness takes the place of directed activity,                     and a man starts to fidget, it may signify that he has been                     driving his machine too fast and should slow down.<\/p>\n<h3>Beware of Flattery<\/h3>\n<p>Another thing to look out for is the opiate of flattery.                     The higher our station in life the more care we should take                     to keep our thoughts within the compass of humility. That                     doesn&#8217;t mean degrading ourselves, or sitting quietly waiting                     to inherit the earth. It means what Edison meant when he said:                     &#8220;I haven&#8217;t any conclusions to give: I am just learning about                     things myself.&#8221; It means what Robespierre meant by his &#8220;prudent                     resolution to be satisfied with possessing the essence of                     power, without seeming to desire its rank and trappings.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>When he detects an incense-swinger in his office, let                     the executive be wary. He should examine with appreciation                     what is said in his honour, but reject whatever oversteps                     a certain line he has drawn. If he allows any and all flattery                     to make an imprint on his mind, he runs the danger of becoming                     self-satisfied, then lax in his self-discipline,                     and, finally, apathetic about putting forth the effort needed                     for further advancement.<\/p>\n<p>Resting on past laurels means fixation, of which some of                     the symptoms are delayed decision, sluggish judgment, and                     management procrastination. It is an insidious disease arresting                     development and starving personality.<\/p>\n<p>A balance is needed between the superior feeling likely                     to be cultivated by listening to flattery and the sense of                     inferiority that is coaxed into our systems by feelings of                     inadequacy. If we find ourselves self-conscious, self-critical,                     touchy, unpoised, and suffering from feelings of persecution,                     we should look for something that is making us feel inferior.                     Neither superior nor inferior feelings conduce to the success                     of an executive.<\/p>\n<p>Probably the nearest approach to an ideal for the executive                     is to combine humble and conquering feelings into what we                     might call healthy self-confidence, and to strike the                     happy medium between in-growing and out-giving that                     psychologists call ambiversion. To reach this desirable state                     one needs to build a personality made up of seasoned youth,                     knowledge, personal maturity, emotional stability and mental                     and physical alertness.<\/p>\n<p>This means continuing to learn. One great foe to efficiency                     in an executive is the thought that he knows it all. Experts                     in various activities may do jobs, but the direction and counsel                     and the organizing of big affairs are done best by men who                     are always learning.<\/p>\n<p>The executive should have part of both active and contemplative                     life. He should spend time thinking. His character can be                     nothing else but the sum total of his habits of thought. Enriched                     life demands an enriched mind. And, to speak on a very practical                     level, ten years of effort directed to one&#8217;s work may not                     be as effective as ten minutes of concentration backed up                     by an informed mind thinking in a disciplined manner.<\/p>\n<h3>On Measuring Up<\/h3>\n<p>The measure of success of an executive is the success that                     attends his efforts. He is not fighting on a static field.                     He is increasingly conscious of the extent of the territory                     yet unconquered, and his conception of the extent of territory                     conquered decreases with every year. His story is one of endless                     recommencements, of the dispersal and reforming of doubts,                     and of the need, every once in a while, to examine whether                     he is measuring up to his own standards and those set for                     him by society.<\/p>\n<p>No matter how far an executive travels on his upward path,                     his ability is put to serious tests. So long as his physical                     and mental health hold out, he revels in these challenges.                     He would rather accomplish something in spite of circumstances                     than because of them. He likes an atmosphere of collision                     and disturbance. As an honest workman he even welcomes a failure,                     because it teaches him something and gives him a new starting                     place.<\/p>\n<p>The opportunity to do worthwhile things crowds upon the                     man who is sensitive to it. Only weak men cry for &#8220;opportunity.&#8221;                     Sometime in his life &#8211; many times in some men&#8217;s lives &#8211; opportunity                     knocks imperiously at the door. It offers itself in proportion                     to a man&#8217;s ability, his will for action, his power of vision,                     his knowledge, and his readiness. All of these are virtues                     within the reach of everyone in this country.<\/p>\n<p>What counts in a man&#8217;s life is the number of opportunities                     he grasps. Small men waste their time looking for big opportunities,                     without preparing effectively to capture them when they come                     within reach. The big man uses his time taking advantage of                     the little ones as they come.<\/p>\n<h3>True Satisfaction<\/h3>\n<p>Complacency and self-satisfaction are dangerous traits.                     They cannot possibly lead to that sharp vision of higher and                     better things which is the mark and symbol of leaders. They                     mean, when we see them in a man, that he is content to flounder                     along on last year&#8217;s or last century&#8217;s knowledge, looking                     over his glasses severely and saying &#8220;no&#8221; automatically to                     everything new. He is a negative person, in whose way of life                     there is nothing to hope for, but only deterioration and destruction.<\/p>\n<p>If there is one point worth remembering more than another,                     both by the aspiring young executive and by the man who has                     been through the mill, it is this: the successful business                     leader gets more satisfaction from doing a job than from contemplating                     the finished product. Far more real than completion and ease                     and prestige is the stimulation that arises from the sense                     of accomplishment. It is not a &#8220;game&#8221;, as some like to call                     it, but a way of behaving and thinking that the executive                     finds rewarding, and in which he believes.<\/p>\n<p>As to the executive&#8217;s long view of his life and the purpose                     of it, he must have a certain idealism, a vision of what might                     be. He needs an honest purpose, founded on a just estimate                     of himself, and steady obedience to the rule of life which                     he has decided is right for him. He will, of course, have                     a sense of the perpetually unattained. He must be always trying.                     But so long as he succeeds in being every day just what he                     wants people to think he is on that day, he is perpetually                     attaining.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[31],"class_list":["post-4071","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-31"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v26.7 (Yoast SEO v26.8) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>October 1951 - Vol. 32, No. 10 - The Making of an Executive - 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\/october-1951-vol-32-no-10-the-making-of-an-executive\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"October 1951 - Vol. 32, No. 10 - The Making of an Executive - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"To be a business executive is the ambition of many a young man. 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The business executive is a central figure in the economic and social life of Canada. 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