Read How to Win Friends and Influence People Online
Authors: Dale Carnegie
Tags: #Success, #Careers - General, #Interpersonal Relations, #Business & Economics, #Business Communication, #Persuasion (Psychology), #Communication In Business, #Family & Relationships, #Personal Growth, #Self-Help, #Applied Psychology, #Psychology, #Leadership, #Personal Growth - Success, #General, #Careers
and was now embarked on a new relationship
with his son, his daughter-in-law and the grandchildren
he had at last met.
Elbert Hubbard was one of the most original authors
who ever stirred up a nation, and his stinging sentences
often aroused fierce resentment. But Hubbard with his
rare skill for handling people frequently turned his enemies
into friends.
For example, when some irritated reader wrote in to
say that he didn’t agree with such and such an article
and ended by calling Hubbard this and that, Elbert Hubbard
would answer like this:
Come to think it over, I don’t entirely agree with it myself.
Not everything I wrote yesterday appeals to me today. I am
glad to learn what you think on the subject. The next time
you are in the neighborhood you must visit us and we’ll get
this subject threshed out for all time. So here is a handclasp
over the miles, and I am,
Your sincerely,
What could you say to a man who treated you like
that?
When we are right, let’s try to win people gently and
tactfully to our way of thinking, and when we are wrong
- and that will be surprisingly often, if we are honest
with ourselves - let’s admit our mistakes quickly and
with enthusiasm. Not only will that technique produce
astonishing results; but, believe it or not, it is a lot more
fun, under the circumstances, than trying to defend oneself.
Remember the old proverb: "By fighting you never
get enough, but by yielding you get more than you expected.”
PRINCIPLE 3
If you are wrong, admit it quickly and
emphatically.
A DROP OF HONEY
If your temper is aroused and you tell ‘em a thing or two,
you will have a fine time unloading your feelings. But
what about the other person? Will he share your pleasure?
Will your belligerent tones, your hostile attitude,
make it easy for him to agree with you?
“If you come at me with your fists doubled,” said
Woodrow Wilson, “I think I can promise you that mine
will double as fast as yours; but if you come to me and
say, ‘Let us sit down and take counsel together, and, if
we differ from each other, understand why it is that we
differ, just what the points at issue are,’ we will presently
find that we are not so far apart after all, that the
points on which we differ are few and the points on
which we agree are many, and that if we only have the
patience and the candor and the desire to get together,
we will get together.”
Nobody appreciated the truth of Woodrow Wilson’s
statement more than John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Back in
1915, Rockefeller was the most fiercely despised man in
Colorado, One of the bloodiest strikes in the history of
American industry had been shocking the state for two
terrible years. Irate, belligerent miners were demanding
higher wages from the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company;
Rockefeller controlled that company. Property had
been destroyed, troops had been called out. Blood had
been shed. Strikers had been shot, their bodies riddled
with bullets.
At a time like that, with the air seething with hatred,
Rockefeller wanted to win the strikers to his way of
thinking. And he did it. How? Here’s the story. After
weeks spent in making friends, Rockefeller addressed
the representatives of the strikers. This speech, in its
entirety, is a masterpiece. It produced astonishing results.
It calmed the tempestuous waves of hate that
threatened to engulf Rockefeller. It won him a host of
admirers. It presented facts in such a friendly manner
that the strikers went back to work without saying another
word about the increase in wages for which they
had fought so violently.
The opening of that remarkable speech follows. Note
how it fairly glows with friendliness. Rockefeller, remember,
was talking to men who, a few days previously,
had wanted to hang him by the neck to a sour apple tree;
yet he couldn’t have been more gracious, more friendly
if he had addressed a group of medical missionaries. His
speech was radiant with such phrases as I am proud to
be here, having visited in your
homes,
met many of your
wives and children, we meet here not as strangers, but
as
friends . . .
spirit of
mutual friendship,
our
common
interests,
it is only by your courtesy that I am here.
“This is a red-letter day in my life,” Rockefeller
began. “It is the first time I have ever had the good
fortune to meet the representatives of the employees of
this great company, its officers and superintendents, together,
and I can assure you that I am proud to be here,
and that I shall remember this gathering as long as I live.
Had this meeting been held two weeks ago, I should
have stood here a stranger to most of you, recognizing a
few faces. Having had the opportunity last week of
visiting all the camps in the southern coal field and
of talking individually with practically all of the
representatives, except those who were away; having
visited in your homes, met many of your wives and children,
we meet here not as strangers, but as friends, and
it is in that spirit of mutual friendship that I am glad to
have this opportunity to discuss with you our common
interests.
“Since this is a meeting of the officers of the company
and the representatives of the employees, it is only by
your courtesy that I am here, for I am not so fortunate as
to be either one or the other; and yet I feel that I am
intimately associated with you men, for, in a sense, I
represent both the stockholders and the directors.”
Isn’t that a superb example of the fine art of making
friends out of enemies?
Suppose Rockefeller had taken a different tack. Suppose
he had argued with those miners and hurled devastating
facts in their faces. Suppose he had told them by
his tones and insinuations that they were wrong Suppose
that, by all the rules of logic, he had proved that
they were wrong. What would have happened? More
anger would have been stirred up, more hatred, more
revolt.
If
a man's heart is rankling with discord and ill feeling
toward you, you can’t win him to your way of thinking
with all the logic in Christendom. Scolding parents
and domineering bosses and husbands and nagging
wives
ought to realize that people don’t want to change
their minds. They can’t he forced or driven to agree
with you or me. But they may possibly be led to, if we
are gentle and friendly, ever so gentle and ever so
friendly.
Lincoln said that, in effect, over a hundred years ago.
Here are his words:
It is an old and true maxim that "a drop of honey catches
more flies than a gallon of gall." So with men, if you would
win a man to you cause, first convince him that you are his
sincere friend. Therein is a drop of honey that catches his
heart; which, say what you will, is the great high road to
his reason.
Business executives have learned that it pays to be
friendly to strikers. For example, when 2,500 employees
in the White Motor Company’s plant struck for higher
wages and a union shop, Robert F. Black, then president
of the company, didn’t lose his temper and condemn and
threaten and talk of tryanny and Communists. He actually
praised the strikers. He published an advertisement
in the Cleveland papers, complimenting them on
“the peaceful way in which they laid down their tools.”
Finding the strike pickets idle, he bought them a couple
of dozen baseball bats and gloves and invited them to
play ball on vacant lots. For those who preferred bowling,
he rented a bowling alley.
This friendliness on Mr. Black’s part did what friendliness
always does: it begot friendliness. So the strikers
borrowed brooms, shovels, and rubbish carts, and began
picking up matches, papers, cigarette stubs, and cigar
butts around the factory. Imagine it! Imagine strikers
tidying up the factory grounds while battling for higher
wages and recognition of the union. Such an event had
never been heard of before in the long, tempestuous
history of American labor wars. That strike ended with a
compromise settlement within a week-ended without
any ill feeling or rancor.
Daniel Webster, who looked like a god and talked like
Jehovah, was one of the most successful advocates who
ever pleaded a case; yet he ushered in his most powerful
arguments with such friendly remarks as: “It will be for
the jury to consider,” “This may perhaps be worth
thinking of,” " Here are some facts that I trust you will
not lose sight of,” or “You, with your knowledge of
human nature, will easily see the significance of these
facts.” No bulldozing. No high-pressure methods. No attempt
to force his opinions on others. Webster used the
soft-spoken, quiet, friendly approach, and it helped to
make him famous.
You may never be called upon to settle a strike or
address a jury, but you may want to get your rent reduced.
Will the friendly approach help you then? Let’s
see.
0. L. Straub, an engineer, wanted to get his rent reduced.
And he knew his landlord was hard-boiled. "I
wrote him,” Mr. Straub said in a speech before the class,
“notifying him that I was vacating my apartment as soon
as my lease expired. The truth was, I didn’t want to
move. I wanted to stay if I could get my rent reduced.
But the situation seemed hopeless. Other tenants had
tried - and failed. Everyone told me that the landlord
was extremely difficult to deal with. But I said to myself,
‘I am studying a course in how to deal with people, so
I’ll try it on him - and see how it works.’
“He and his secretary came to see me as soon as he
got my letter. I met him at the door with a friendly greeting.
I fairly bubbled with good will and enthusiasm. I
didn’t begin talking about how high the rent was. I
began talking about how much I liked his apartment
house. Believe me, I was ‘hearty in my approbation and
lavish in my praise.' I complimented him on the way he
ran the building and told him I should like so much to
stay for another year but I couldn’t afford it.
“He had evidently never had such a reception from a
tenant. He hardly knew what to make of it.
“Then he started to tell me his troubles. Complaining
tenants. One had written him fourteen letters, some of
them positively insulting. Another threatened to break
his lease unless the landlord kept the man on the floor
above from snoring. ‘What a relief it is,’ he said, ‘to have
a satisfied tenant like you.’ And then, without my even
asking him to do it, he offered to reduce my rent a little.
I wanted more, so I named the figure I could afford to
pay, and he accepted without a word.
“As he was leaving, he turned to me and asked, ‘What
decorating can I do for you?’
“If I had tried to get the rent reduced by the methods
the other tenants were using, I am positive I should have
met with the same failure they encountered. It was the
friendly, sympathetic, appreciative approach that won.”
Dean Woodcock of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, is the
superintendent of a department of the local electric company.
His staff was called upon to repair some equipment
on top of a pole. This type of work had formerly
been performed by a different department and had only
recently been transferred to Woodcock’s section Although
his people had been trained in the work, this was
the first time they had ever actually been called upon to
do it. Everybody in the organization was interested in
seeing if and how they could handle it. Mr. Woodcock,
several of his subordinate managers, and members of
other departments of the utility went to see the operation.
Many cars and trucks were there, and a number of
people were standing around watching the two lone
men on top of the pole.
Glancing around, Woodcock noticed a man up the
street getting out of his car with a camera. He began
taking pictures of the scene. Utility people are extremely
conscious of public relations, and suddenly Woodcock
realized what this setup looked like to the man with the
camera - overkill, dozens of people being called out to
do a two-person job. He strolled up the street to the
photographer.
"I see you’re interested in our operation.”
“Yes, and my mother will be more than interested.
She owns stock in your company. This will be an eye-opener
for her. She may even decide her investment was
unwise. I’ve been telling her for years there’s a lot of
waste motion in companies like yours. This proves it.
The newspapers might like these pictures, too.”
“It does look like it, doesn’t it? I’d think the same
thing in your position. But this is a unique situation, . . .”
and Dean Woodcock went on to explain how
this was the first job of this type for his department and
how everybody from executives down was interested.
He assured the man that under normal conditions two
people could handle the job. The photographer put away
his camera, shook Woodcock’s hand, and thanked him
for taking the time to explain the situation to him.
Dean Woodcock’s friendly approach saved his company
much embarrassment and bad publicity.
Another member of one of our classes, Gerald H. Winn
of Littleton, New Hampshire, reported how by using a
friendly approach, he obtained a very satisfactory settlement
on a damage claim.
“Early in the spring,” he reported, “before the ground
had thawed from the winter freezing, there was an unusually
heavy rainstorm and the water, which normally
would have run off to nearby ditches and storm drains
along the road, took a new course onto a building lot
where I had just built a new home.
“Not being able to run off, the water pressure built up
around the foundation of the house. The water forced
itself under the concrete basement floor, causing it to
explode, and the basement filled with water. This ruined
the furnace and the hot-water heater. The cost to repair
this damage was in excess of two thousand dollars. I had
no insurance to cover this type of damage.
“However, I soon found out that the owner of the subdivision