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
PRINCIPLE 7
Let the other person feel that the idea is his or
hers.
A FORMULA THAT WILL WORK
WONDERS FOR YOU
Remember that other people may be totally wrong. But
they don’t think so. Don’t condemn them. Any fool can
do that. Try to understand them. Only wise, tolerant,
exceptional people even try to do that.
There is a reason why the other man thinks and acts
as he does. Ferret out that reason - and you have the key
to his actions, perhaps to his personality
.
Try honestly to put yourself in his place.
If you say to yourself, “How would I feel, how would
I react if I were in his shoes?” you will save yourself
time and irritation, for “by becoming interested in the
cause, we are less likely to dislike the effect.” And, in
addition, you will sharply increase your skill in human
relationships.
“Stop a minute,” says Kenneth M. Goode in his book
How to Turn People Into Gold,
“stop a minute to contrast
your keen interest in your own affairs with your
mild concern about anything else. Realize then, that
everybody else in the world feels exactly the same way!
Then, along with Lincoln and Roosevelt, you will have
grasped the only solid foundation for interpersonal relationships;
namely, that success in dealing with people
depends on a sympathetic grasp of the other persons’
viewpoint.”
Sam Douglas of Hempstead, New York, used to tell
his wife that she spent too much time working on their
lawn, pulling weeds, fertilizing, cutting the grass twice
a week when the lawn didn’t look any better than it had
when they moved into their home four years earlier. Naturally,
she was distressed by his remarks, and each time
he made such remarks the balance of the evening was
ruined.
After taking our course, Mr. Douglas realized how
foolish he had been all those years. It never occurred to
him that she enjoyed doing that work and she might
really appreciate a compliment on her diligence.
One evening after dinner, his wife said she wanted to
pull some weeds and invited him to keep her company.
He first declined, but then thought better of it and went
out after her and began to help her pull weeds. She was
visibly pleased, and together they spent an hour in hard
work and pleasant conversation.
After that he often helped her with the gardening and
complimented her on how fine the lawn looked, what a
fantastic job she was doing with a yard where the soil
was like concrete. Result: a happier life for both because
he had learned to look at things from her point of view
- even if the subject was only weeds.
In his book
Getting Through to People,
Dr. Gerald S.
Nirenberg commented: "Cooperativeeness in conversation
is achieved when you show that you consider the
other person’s ideas and feelings as important as your
own. Starting your conversation by giving the other person
the purpose or direction of your conversation, governing
what you say by what you would want to hear if
you were the listener, and accepting his or her viewpoint
will encourage the listener to have an open mind
to your ideas.” *
* Dr Gerald S. Nirenberg,
Getting Through to People
(Englewood Cliffs,
N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1963), p. 31.
I have always enjoyed walking and riding in a park
near my home. Like the Druids of ancient Gaul, I all but
worship an oak tree, so I was distressed season after
season to see the young trees and shrubs killed off by
needless fires. These fires weren’t caused by careless
smokers. They were almost all caused by youngsters
who went out to the park to go native and cook a frankfurter
or an egg under the trees. Sometimes, these fires
raged so fiercely that the fire department had to be called
out to fight the conflagration.
There was a sign on the edge of the park saying that
anyone who started a fire was liable to fine and imprisonment,
but the sign stood in an unfrequented part of the
park, and few of the culprits ever saw it. A mounted
policeman was supposed to look after the park; but he
didn’t take his duties too seriously, and the fires continued
to spread season after season. On one occasion, I
rushed up to a policeman and told him about a fire
spreading rapidly through the park and wanted him to
notify the fire department, and he nonchalantly replied
that it was none of his business because it wasn’t in his
precinct! I was desperate, so after that when I went riding,
I acted as a self-appointed committee of one to protect
the public domain. In the beginning, I am afraid I
didn’t even attempt to see the other people’s point of
view. When I saw a fire blazing under the trees, I was so
unhappy about it, so eager to do the right thing, that I
did the wrong thing. I would ride up to the boys, warn
them that they could be jailed for starting a fire, order
with a tone of authority that it be put out; and, if they
refused, I would threaten to have them arrested. I was
merely unloading my feelings without thinking of their
point of view.
The result? They obeyed - obeyed sullenly and with
resentment. After I rode on over the hill, they probably
rebuilt the fire and longed to burn up the whole park.
With the passing of the years, I acquired a trifle more
knowledge of human relations, a little more tact, a somewhat
greater tendency to see things from the other person’s
standpoint. Then, instead of giving orders, I would
ride up to a blazing fire and begin something like this:
“Having a good time, boys? What are you going to
cook for supper? . . . I loved to build fires myself when I
was a boy - and I still love to. But you know they are
very dangerous here in the park. I know you boys don’t
mean to do any harm, but other boys aren’t so careful.
They come along and see that you have built a fire; so
they build one and don’t put it out when they go home
and it spreads among the dry leaves and kills the trees.
We won’t have any trees here at all if we aren’t more
careful, You could be put in jail for building this fire. But
I don’t want to be bossy and interfere with your pleasure.
I like to see you enjoy yourselves; but won’t you
please rake all the leaves away from the fire right now
- and you’ll be careful to cover it with dirt, a lot of dirt,
before you leave, won’t you? And the next time you want
to have some fun, won’t you please build your fire over
the hill there in the sandpit? It can’t do any harm there.
. . . Thanks so much, boys. Have a good time.”
What a difference that kind of talk made! It made the
boys want to cooperate. No sullenness, no resentment.
They hadn’t been forced to obey orders. They had saved
their faces. They felt better and I felt better because I
had handled the situation with consideration for their
point of view.
Seeing things through another person’s eyes may ease
tensions when personal problems become overwhelming.
Elizabeth Novak of New South Wales, Australia,
was six weeks late with her car payment. “On a Friday,”
she reported, "I received a nasty phone call from the
man who was handling my account informing me if I did
not come up with $122 by Monday morning I could anticipate
further action from the company. I had no way
of raising the money over the weekend, so when I received
his phone call first thing on Monday morning I
expected the worst. Instead of becoming upset I looked
at the situation from his point of view. I apologized most
sincerely for causing him so much inconvenience and
remarked that I must be his most troublesome customer
as this was not the first time I was behind in my payments.
His tone of voice changed immediately, and he
reassured me that I was far from being one of his really
troublesome customers. He went on to tell me several
examples of how rude his customers sometimes were,
how they lied to him and often tried to avoid talking to
him at all. I said nothing. I listened and let him pour out
his troubles to me. Then, without any suggestion from
me, he said it did not matter if I couldn’t pay all the
money immediately. It would be all right if I paid him
$20 by the end of the month and made up the balance
whenever it was convenient for me to do so.”
Tomorrow, before asking anyone to put out a fire or
buy your product or contribute to your favorite charity,
why not pause and close your eyes and try to think the
whole thing through from another person’s point of
view? Ask yourself: “Why should he or she want to do
it?” True, this will take time, but it will avoid making
enemies and will get better results - and with less friction
and less shoe leather.
"I would rather walk the sidewalk in front of a person’s
office for two hours before an interview,” said
Dean Donham of the Harvard business school, “than
step into that office without a perfectly clear idea of what
I was going to say and what that person - from my
knowledge of his or her interests and motives - was
likely to answer.”
That is so important that I am going to repeat it in
italics for the sake of emphasis.
I would rather walk the sidewalk in front of a per
son’s
office for
two hours before an interview than step
into that office without a perfectly clear idea
of
what I
was going to say and what that persob - from my
knowledge of his or her interests and motives - was
likely to answer.
If, as a result of reading this book, you get only one
thing - an increased tendency to think always in terms
of the other person’s point of view, and see things from
that person’s angle as well as your own - if you get only
that one thing from this book, it may easily prove to be
one of the stepping - stones of your career.
PRINCIPLE 8
Try honestly to see things from the other
person’s point of view.
WHAT EVERYBODY WANTS
Wouldn't you like to have a magic phrase that would
stop arguments, eliminate ill feeling, create good will,
and make the other person listen attentively?
Yes? All right. Here it is: "I don’t blame you one iota
for feeling as you do. If I were you I would undoubtedly
feel just as you do.”
An answer like that will soften the most cantankerous
old cuss alive. And you can say that and be 100 percent
sincere, because if you were the other person you, of
course, would feel just as he does. Take Al Capone, for
example. Suppose you had inherited the same body and
temperament and mind that Al Capone had. Suppose
you had had his environment and experiences. You
would then be precisely what he was - and where he
was. For it is those things - and only those things - that
made him what he was. The only reason, for example,
that you are not a rattlesnake is that your mother and
father weren’t rattlesnakes.
You
deserve very little credit for being what you are
- and remember, the people who come to you irritated,
bigoted, unreasoning, deserve very little discredit for
being what they are. Feel sorry for the poor devils. Pity
them. Sympathize with them. Say to yourself: “There,
but for the grace of God, go I.”
Three-fourths of the people you will ever meet are
hungering and thirsting for sympathy. Give it to them,
and they will love you.
I once gave a broadcast about the author of
Little
Women,
Louisa May Alcott. Naturally, I knew she had
lived and written her immortal books in Concord, Massachusetts.
But, without thinking what I was saying, I
spoke of visiting her old home in Concord. New Hampshire.
If I had said New Hampshire only once, it might
have been forgiven. But, alas and alack! I said it twice, I
was deluged with letters and telegrams, stinging messages
that swirled around my defenseless head like a
swarm of hornets. Many were indignant. A few insulting.
One Colonial Dame, who had been reared in Concord,
Massachusetts, and who was then living in Philadelphia,
vented her scorching wrath upon me. She couldn’t have
been much more bitter if I had accused Miss Alcott of
being a cannibal from New Guinea. As I read the letter,
I said to myself, “Thank God, I am not married to that
woman.” I felt like writing and telling her that although
I had made a mistake in geography, she had made a far
greater mistake in common courtesy. That was to be just
my opening sentence. Then I was going to roll up my
sleeves and tell her what I really thought. But I didn’t.
I controlled myself. I realized that any hotheaded
fool could do that - and that most fools would do just
that.
I wanted to be above fools. So I resolved to try to turn
her hostility into friendliness. It would be a challenge, a
sort of game I could play. I said to myself, "After all, if
I were she, I would probably feel just as she does.”
So, I determined to sympathize with her viewpoint.
The next time I was in Philadelphia, I called her on the
telephone. The conversation went something like
this:
ME: Mrs. So-and-So, you wrote me a letter a few weeks
ago, and I want to thank you for it.
SHE: (in incisive, cultured, well-bred tones): To whom
have I the honor of speaking?
ME: I am a stranger to you. My name is Dale Carnegie.
You listened to a broadcast I gave about Louisa May
Alcott a few Sundays ago, and I made the unforgivable
blunder of saying that she had lived in Concord,
New Hampshire. It was a stupid blunder, and
I want to apologize for it. It was so nice of you to
take the time to write me.
SHE : I am sorry, Mr. Carnegie, that I wrote as I did. I lost
my temper. I must apologize.
ME: No! No! You are not the one to apologize; I am. Any
school child would have known better than to have
said what I said. I apologized over the air the following
Sunday, and I want to apologize to you personally
now.
SHE : I was born in Concord, Massachusetts. My family
has been prominent in Massachusetts affairs for two
centuries, and I am very proud of my native state. I
was really quite distressed to hear you say that Miss
Alcott had lived in New Hampshire. But I am really
ashamed of that letter.
ME: I assure you that you were not one-tenth as distressed
as I am. My error didn’t hurt Massachusetts,
but it did hurt me. It is so seldom that people of
your standing and culture take the time to write
people who speak on the radio, and I do hope you
will write me again if you detect an error in my
talks.
SHE: You know, I really like very much the way you have
accepted my criticism. You must be a very nice person.
I should like to know you better.
So, because I had apologized and sympathized with
her point of view, she began apologizing and sympathizing
with my point of view, I had the satisfaction of
controlling my temper, the satisfaction of returning
kindness for an insult. I got infinitely more real fun out
of making her like me than I could ever have gotten out
of telling her to go and take a jump in the Schuylkill
River,
Every man who occupies the White House is faced
almost daily with thorny problems in human relations.
President Taft was no exception, and he learned from
experience the enormous chemical value of sympathy in
neutralizing the acid of hard feelings. In his book
Ethics
in Service
, Taft gives rather an amusing illustration of
how he softened the ire of a disappointed and ambitious
mother.
“A lady in Washington,” wrote Taft, “whose husband
had some political influence, came and labored with me
for six weeks or more to appoint her son to a position.
She secured the aid of Senators and Congressmen in
formidable number and came with them to see that they
spoke with emphasis. The place was one requiring technical
qualification, and following the recommendation
of the head of the Bureau, I appointed somebody else. I
then received a letter from the mother, saying that I was
most ungrateful, since I declined to make her a happy
woman as I could have done by a turn of my hand. She
complained further that she had labored with her state
delegation and got all the votes for an administration bill
in which I was especially interested and this was the
way I had rewarded her.
“When you get a letter like that, the first thing you do
is to think how you can be severe with a person who has
committed an impropriety, or even been a little impertinent.
Then you may compose an answer. Then if you
are wise, you will put the letter in a drawer and lock the
drawer. Take it out in the course of two days - such communications
will always bear two days’ delay in answering
- and when you take it out after that interval, you
will not send it. That is just the course I took. After that,
I sat down and wrote her just as polite a letter as I could,
telling her I realized a mother’s disappointment under
such circumstances, but that really the appointment was
not left to my mere personal preference, that I had to
select a man with technical qualifications, and had,
therefore, to follow the recommendations of the head of
the Bureau. I expressed the hope that her son would go
on to accomplish what she had hoped for him in the
position which he then had. That mollified her and she
wrote me a note saying she was sorry she had written as
she had.
“But the appointment I sent in was not confirmed at
once, and after an interval I received a letter which purported
to come from her husband, though it was in the
the same handwriting as all the others. I was therein
advised that, due to the nervous prostration that had followed
her disappointment in this case, she had to take
to her bed and had developed a most serious case of
cancer of the stomach. Would I not restore her to health
by withdrawing the first name and replacing it by her
son’s? I had to write another letter, this one to the husband,
to say that I hoped the diagnosis would prove to
be inaccurate, that I sympathized with him in the sorrow
he must have in the serious illness of his wife, but that it
was impossible to withdraw the name sent in. The man
whom I appointed was confirmed, and within two days
after I received that letter, we gave a musicale at the
White House. The first two people to greet Mrs. Taft and
me were this husband and wife, though the wife had so
recently been in
articulo mortis."
Jay Mangum represented an elevator-escalator main-tenance
company in Tulsa, Oklahoma, which had the
maintenance contract for the escalators in one of Tulsa’s
leading hotels. The hotel manager did not want to shut
down the escalator for more than two hours at a time
because he did not want to inconvenience the hotel’s
guests. The repair that had to be made would take at
least eight hours, and his company did not always have
a specially qualified mechanic available at the convenience
of the hotel.
When Mr. Mangum was able to schedule a top-flight
mechanic for this job, he telephoned the hotel manager
and instead of arguing with him to give him the necessary
time, he said:
“Rick, I know your hotel is quite busy and you would
like to keep the escalator shutdown time to a minimum.
I understand your concern about this, and we want to do
everything possible to accommodate you. However, our
diagnosis of the situation shows that if we do not do a
complete job now, your escalator may suffer more serious
damage and that would cause a much longer shutdown.
I know you would not want to inconvenience
your guests for several days.”
The manager had to agree that an eight-hour shut
down was more desirable than several days'. By sympathizing
with the manager’s desire to keep his patrons
happy, Mr. Mangum was able to win the hotel manager
to his way of thinking easily and without rancor.
Joyce Norris, a piano teacher in St, Louis, Missouri,
told of how she had handled a problem piano teachers
often have with teenage girls. Babette had exceptionally
long fingernails. This is a serious handicap to anyone
who wants to develop proper piano-playing habits.
Mrs. Norris reported: “I knew her long fingernails
would be a barrier for her in her desire to play well.
During our discussions prior to her starting her lessons
with me, I did not mention anything to her about her
nails. I didn’t want to discourage her from taking lessons,
and I also knew she would not want to lose that
which she took so much pride in and such great care to
make attractive.
“After her first lesson, when I felt the time was right,
I said: ‘Babette, you have attractive hands and beautiful
fingernails. If you want to play the piano as well as you
are capable of and as well as you would like to, you
would be surprised how much quicker and easier it
would be for you, if you would trim your nails shorter.
Just think about it, Okay?’ She made a face which was
definitely negative. I also talked to her mother about this
situation, again mentioning how lovely her nails were.
Another negative reaction. It was obvious that Babette’s
beautifully manicured nails were important to her.
“The following week Babette returned for her second
lesson. Much to my surprise, the fingernails had been
trimmed. I complimented her and praised her for making
such a sacrifice. I also thanked her mother for influencing
Babette to cut her nails. Her reply was ‘Oh, I had
nothing to do with it. Babette decided to do it on her
own, and this is the first time she has ever trimmed her
nails for anyone.’ "
Did Mrs. Norris threaten Babette? Did she say she
would refuse to teach a student with long fingernails?
No, she did not. She let Babette know that her finger-
nails were a thing of beauty and it would be a sacrifice
to cut them. She implied, “I sympathize with you - I
know it won’t be easy, but it will pay off in your better
musical development.”
Sol Hurok was probably America’s number one impresario.
For almost half a century he handled artists - such
world-famous artists as Chaliapin, Isadora Duncan, and
Pavlova. Mr. Hurok told me that one of the first lessons
he had learned in dealing with his temperamental stars
was the’ necessity for sympathy, sympathy and more