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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+<title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Young Man In Business, by Edward Bok.
+</title>
+<style type="text/css">
+ p {margin-top:.75em;text-align:justify;margin-bottom:.75em;text-indent:2%;}
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Young Man in Business, by Edward W. Bok
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Young Man in Business
+
+Author: Edward W. Bok
+
+Release Date: March 3, 2010 [EBook #31494]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YOUNG MAN IN BUSINESS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chuck Greif (from files available at www.archive.org)
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+<div class="image"><a href="images/ill_cover.jpg"><img src="images/ill_cover.jpg"
+alt="image of book cover not available"
+width="348"
+height="550"
+/></a></div>
+
+<h1>THE YOUNG MAN IN BUSINESS</h1>
+
+<div class="box2">
+<p class="eng">The Day's Work Series</p>
+
+<div class="box">
+
+<h1>THE YOUNG MAN<br />
+IN BUSINESS</h1>
+</div>
+
+<div class="box">
+<p class="c">BY</p>
+
+<h3>EDWARD BOK</h3>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="box">
+
+<div class="image"><img src="images/ill_logo.jpg"
+alt=""
+width="125"
+height="156"
+/></div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="box">
+
+<p class="c">BOSTON<br />
+L. C. PAGE &amp; COMPANY<br />
+MDCCCC</p>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="c">Copyright, 1900<br />
+<span class="smcap">By Edward Bok.</span><br />
+All rights reserved</p>
+
+<p class="c">Colonial press<br />
+Electrotyped and Printed by C. H. Simonds &amp; Co.<br />
+Boston, U. S. A.</p>
+
+
+
+<h1>THE YOUNG MAN IN BUSINESS.</h1>
+
+<div class="imagetb"><img src="images/ill_line.jpg"
+alt="image of book cover not available"
+width="75"
+height="9"
+/></div>
+
+<p>A <span class="smcap">well-known</span> New York millionaire gave it as his
+opinion not long ago that any young man possessing
+a good constitution and a fair degree of intelligence
+might acquire riches. The statement was criticised&mdash;literally
+picked to pieces&mdash;and finally adjudged as being
+extravagant. The figures then came out, gathered by a
+careful statistician, that of the young men in business in
+New York City, sixty per cent, were earning less than
+$1,000 per year, only twenty per cent, had an income
+of $2,000, and barely five per cent, commanded salaries
+in excess of the latter figure. The great majority of
+young men in New York City&mdash;that is, between the
+ages of twenty-three and thirty&mdash;were earning less
+than twenty dollars per week. On the basis, therefore,
+that a young man must be established in his life-profession
+by his thirtieth year, it can hardly be said that the
+average New York young man in business is successful.
+Of course, this is measured entirely from the standpoint
+of income. It is true that a young man may not, in
+every case, receive the salary his services merit, but, as
+a general rule, his income is a pretty accurate indication
+of his capacity.</p>
+
+<p><a name="page_6" id="page_6"></a>Now, as every young man naturally desires to make
+a business success, it is plain from the above statement
+that something is lacking; either the opportunities, or
+the capabilities in the young men themselves. No one
+conversant with the business life of any of our large
+cities can, it seems to me, even for a single moment,
+doubt the existence of good chances for young men.
+Take any large city as a fair example: New York, Boston,
+Philadelphia, or Chicago, and in each instance
+there exist more opportunities than there are young
+men capable of embracing them. The demand is far in
+excess of the supply. Positions of trust are constantly
+going begging for the right kind of young men to fill
+them. But such men are not common; or, if they
+be, they have a most unfortunate way of hiding their
+light under a bushel, so much so that business men
+cannot see even a glimmer of its rays. Let a position of
+any real importance be open, and it is the most difficult
+kind of a problem to find any one to fill it satisfactorily.
+Business men are constantly passing through this experience.
+Young men are desired in the great majority
+of positions because of their progressive 'ideas and capacity
+to endure work; in fact, "young blood," as it is
+called, is preferred in nine positions out of every ten,
+nowadays.</p>
+
+<p>The chances for business success for any young
+man are not wanting. The opportunities exist, plenty
+of them. The trouble is that the average young man of
+to-day is incapable of filling them, or, if he be not
+exactly incapable (I gladly give him the benefit of the
+<a name="page_7" id="page_7"></a>doubt), he is unwilling to fill them, which is even worse.
+That exceptions can be brought up to controvert I
+know, but I am dealing with the many, not with the
+few.</p>
+
+<p>The average young man in business to-day is nothing
+more nor less than a plodder,&mdash;a mere automaton.
+He is at his office at eight or nine o'clock in the
+morning; is faithful in the duties he performs; goes to
+luncheon at twelve, gets back at one; takes up whatever
+he is told to do until five, and then goes home. His
+work for the day is done. One day is the same to him
+as another; he has a certain routine of duties to do,
+and he does them day in and day out, month in and
+month out. His duties are regulated by the clock. As
+that points, so he points. Verily, it is true of him that
+he is the same yesterday, to-day, and forever. No
+special fault can be found with his work. Given a
+particular piece of work to do, he does it just as a
+machine would. Such a young man, too, generally
+considers himself hard-worked&mdash;often overworked and
+underpaid; wondering all the time why his employer
+doesn't recognize his value and advance his salary.
+"I do everything I am told to do," he argues, "and
+I do it well. What more can I do?"</p>
+
+<p>This is simply a type of a young man to be found in
+thousands of offices and stores. He goes to his work
+each day with no definite point nor plan in view; he
+leaves it with nothing accomplished. He is a mere
+automaton. Let him die, and his position can be filled
+in twenty-four hours. If he detracts nothing from his
+<a name="page_8" id="page_8"></a>employer's business, he certainly adds nothing to it.
+He never advances an idea; is absolutely devoid of
+creative powers; his position remains the same after
+he has been in it for five years as when he came to it.</p>
+
+<div class="image"><img src="images/ill_tb.jpg" alt="image not available" width="25" height="23" /></div>
+
+<p>Now, I would not for a moment be understood as
+belittling the value of faithfulness in an employee.
+But, after all, faithfulness is nothing more nor less
+than a negative quality. By faithfulness a man may
+hold a position a lifetime. He will keep it just where
+he found it. But by the exercise of this single quality
+he does not add to the importance of the position any
+more than he adds to his own value. It is not enough
+that it may be said of a young man that he is faithful;
+he must be something more. The willingness and
+capacity to be faithful to the smallest detail must be
+there, serving only, however, as a foundation upon
+which other qualities are built.</p>
+
+<p>Altogether too many young men are content to
+remain in the positions in which they find themselves.
+The thought of studying the needs of the next position
+just above them never seems to enter their minds.
+It is possible for every young man to rise above his
+position, and it makes no difference how humble that
+position may be, nor under what disadvantages he
+may be placed. But he must be alert. He must not
+be afraid of work, and of the hardest kind of work.
+He must study not only to please, but he must go a
+step beyond. It is essential, of course, that he should
+<a name="page_9" id="page_9"></a>first of all fill the position for which he is engaged.
+No man can solve the problem of business before he
+understands the rudiments of the problem itself.
+Once the requirements of a position are understood
+and mastered, then its possibilities should be undertaken.
+It is foolish, as some young men argue, that
+to go beyond their special position is impossible with
+their employers. The employer never existed who will
+prevent the cream of his establishment from rising to
+the surface. The advance of an employee always
+means the advance of the employer's interests. An
+employer would rather pay a young man five thousand
+dollars a year than five hundred. What is to the young
+man's interest is much more to the interest of his
+employer. A five-hundred-dollar clerkship is worth
+just that amount and nothing more to an employer.
+But a five-thousand-dollar man is generally worth five
+times that sum to a business. A young man makes of
+a position exactly what he chooses: a millstone around
+his neck, or a stepping-stone to larger success. The
+possibilities lie in every position; seeing and embracing
+them rest with its occupant. The lowest position can
+be so filled as to lead up to the next and become a
+part of it. One position should be only the chrysalis
+for the development of new strength to master the
+requirements of another position above it.</p>
+
+<div class="imagetb"><img src="images/ill_tb.jpg" alt="image not available" width="25" height="23" /></div>
+
+<p>The average young man is extremely anxious to get
+into a business position in which there are what he
+<a name="page_10" id="page_10"></a>calls "prospects" for advancement. It is usually one
+of his first questions, "What are my prospects here?"
+He seems to have the notion that the question of his
+"prospects" or advancement is one entirely in the
+hands of his employer, whereas it rarely occurs to him
+that it is a matter resting entirely with himself. An
+employer has, of course, the power of promotion, but
+that is all. He cannot advance a young man unless
+the young man first demonstrates that he is worthy of
+advancement. Every position offers prospects; every
+business house has in it the possibility of a young
+man's bettering himself. But it depends upon him, first.
+If he is of the average come-day go-day sort, and does his
+work in a mechanical or careless fashion, lacking that
+painstaking thoroughness which is the basis of successful
+work, his prospects are naught. And they will be
+no greater with one concern than with another, although
+he may identify himself with a score during a year. If,
+on the contrary, he buckles down to work, and makes
+himself felt from the moment he enters his position, no
+matter how humble that may be, his advancement will
+take care of itself. An employer is very quick to discover
+merit in an employee, and if a young man is
+fitted to occupy a higher position in the house than he
+is filling, it will not be long before he is promoted.
+There are, of course, instances where the best work
+that a young man can do goes for nothing and fails of
+rightful appreciation, and where such a condition is
+discovered, of course the young man must change the
+condition and go where his services will receive proper
+<a name="page_11" id="page_11"></a>recognition and value. But this happens only in a very
+small minority of cases. In the vast majority of cases
+where the cry of inappreciation is heard, it is generally
+the fact that the crier is unworthy of more than he
+receives.</p>
+
+<p>No employer can tell a young man just what his
+prospects are. That is for the young man himself to
+demonstrate. He must show first what is in him, and
+then he will discover for himself what his prospects
+are. Because so many young men stand, still does not
+prove that employers are unwilling to advance them,
+but simply shows that the great run of young men
+do not possess those qualities which entitle them to
+advancement. There are exceptional cases, of course;
+but as a rule a man gets in this world about what he is
+worth, or not very far from it. There is not by any
+means as much injustice done by the employer to the
+employee as appears on the surface. Leaving aside all
+question of principle, it would be extremely poor policy
+for a business man to keep in a minor position a
+young man who, if promoted, would expand and make
+more money for the house.</p>
+
+<div class="imagetb"><img src="images/ill_tb.jpg" alt="image not available" width="25" height="23" /></div>
+
+<p>And right here a word or two may perhaps be fitly
+said about the element of "luck" entering into business
+advancement. It is undeniable that there are thousands
+of young men who believe that success in business is
+nothing else than what they call "luck." The young
+men who forge ahead are, in their estimation, simply the
+<a name="page_12" id="page_12"></a>lucky ones, who have had influence of some sort or
+other to push them along.</p>
+
+<p>When a young man gets into that frame of mind
+which makes him believe that "luck" is the one and
+only thing which can help him along, or that it is even
+an element in business, it may be safely said that he is
+doomed to failure. The only semblance to "influence"
+there is in business is found where, through a friendly
+word, a chance is opened to a young man. But the
+only thing that "influence" can do begins and ends
+with an opportunity. The strongest influence that
+can be exerted in a young man's behalf counts for
+very little if he is found to be incapable of embracing
+that chance. And so far as "luck" is concerned, there
+is no such thing in a young man's life or his business
+success. The only lucky young man is he who has a
+sound constitution, with good sense to preserve it; who
+knows some trade or profession thoroughly or is willing
+to learn it and sacrifice everything to its learning; who
+loves his work and has industry enough to persevere in
+it; who appreciates the necessity of self-restraint in all
+things, and who tempers his social life to those habits
+which refresh and not impair his constitution. That is
+luck,&mdash;the luck of having common sense. That is the
+only luck there is,&mdash;the only luck worth having; and
+it is something which every right-minded young man
+may have if he goes about it the right way.</p>
+
+<p>Things in this world never just happen. There is
+always a reason for everything. So with success. It
+is not the result of luck; it is not a thing of chance.
+<a name="page_13" id="page_13"></a>It comes to men only because they work hard and intelligently
+for it, and along legitimate lines.</p>
+
+<div class="imagetb"><img src="images/ill_tb.jpg" alt="image not available" width="25" height="23" /></div>
+
+<p>Now a word about a young man's salary. It is
+human nature to wish to make all the money we
+honestly can: to get just as large a return for our
+services as possible. There is no qualifying that statement,
+and as most of the comforts of this life are
+had through the possession of sufficient money, it is
+perfectly natural that the subject of what we earn
+should be prominent in our minds. But too many
+young men put the cart before the horse in this
+question of salary. It is their first consideration.
+They are constantly asking what salaries are paid in
+different business callings, and whether this profession
+or that trade is more financially productive. The
+question seems to enter into their deliberations as a
+qualifying factor as to whether they shall enter a
+certain trade or profession. I never could quite see
+the point of this nor the reason for it. Of what significance
+to you or to me are the salaries which are paid to
+others? They signify nothing. If the highest salary
+paid to the foremost men in a certain profession is
+$10,000 per year, what does that fact prove? There
+is no obstacle to some one's else going into that
+same profession and earning $25,000. The first consideration,
+when a young man thinks of going into business,
+is not which special trade or profession is most
+profitable, but which particular line he is most interested
+<a name="page_14" id="page_14"></a>in and best fitted for. What matters it to a man
+that fortunes are made in the law if he has absolutely
+no taste or ability for that profession? Of what value
+is it to a young man who loves mechanical engineering
+to know that there are doctors who earn large incomes?
+What difference do the productive possibilities of any
+line of work make to us if we are not by nature fitted
+for that work?</p>
+
+<p>When a young man is always thinking of the salary
+he is receiving, or the salary he "ought to get," he
+gives pretty good proof that he is not of a very superior
+make. The right sort of a young fellow doesn't ever-lastingly
+concern himself about salary. Ability commands
+income. But a young man must start with
+ability, not with salary. That takes care of itself.</p>
+
+<div class="imagetb"><img src="images/ill_tb.jpg" alt="image not available" width="25" height="23" /></div>
+
+<p>Now, a substantial business success means several
+things. It calls, in the first place, for concentration.
+There is no truth more potent than that which tells us
+we cannot serve God and Mammon. Nor can any young
+man successfully serve two business interests, no matter
+how closely allied; in fact, the more closely the interests
+the more dangerous are they. The human mind is
+capable of just so much clear thought, and generally it
+does not extend beyond the requirements of one position
+in these days of keen competition. If there exists
+a secret of success, it lies, perhaps, in concentration
+more than in any other single element. During business
+hours a man should be in business. His thoughts
+<a name="page_15" id="page_15"></a>should be on nothing else. Diversions of thought are
+killing to the best endeavors. The successful mastery
+of business questions calls for a personal interest, a forgetfulness
+of self, that can only come from the closest
+application and the most absolute concentration. I go
+so far in my belief of concentration to business interests
+in business hours as to argue that a young man's
+personal letters should not be sent to his office address,
+nor should he receive his social friends at his
+desk. Business hours are none too long in the great
+majority of our offices, and, with a rest of one hour
+for luncheon, no one has a right to lop off fifteen minutes
+here to read an irrelevant personal letter, or fifteen
+minutes there to talk with a friend whose conversation
+distracts the mind from the problems before it. A
+young man cannot draw the line between his business
+life and his social life too closely. It is all too true of
+thousands of young men that they are better conversant
+during the base-ball season with the batting average
+of some star player, or the number of men "put out
+at second" by some other player, than they are with the
+details of their business.</p>
+
+<p>Digression is just as dangerous as stagnation in the
+career of a young man in business. There is absolutely
+no position worth the having in business life to-day to
+which a care of other interests can be added. Let a man
+attempt to serve the interests of one master, and if he
+serves him well he has his hands and his head full.
+There is a class of ambitious young men who have what
+they choose to call "an anchor to the windward" in their
+<a name="page_16" id="page_16"></a>business. That is, they maintain something outside of
+their regular position. They do this from necessity,
+they claim. One position does not offer sufficient scope
+for their powers or talents; does not bring them sufficient
+income, and they are "forced," they explain, to
+take on something in addition. I have known such
+young men. But, so far as I have been able to discern,
+the trouble does not lie so much with the position
+they occupy as with themselves. When a man turns
+away from the position he holds to outside affairs, he
+turns just so far away from the surest path of success.
+To do one thing perfectly is better than to do two
+things only fairly well. It was told me once, of one
+of our best known actors, that outside of his stage
+knowledge he knew absolutely nothing. But he acted
+well,&mdash;so well that he stands at the head of his profession,
+and has an income of five figures several times
+over. All around geniuses are rare&mdash;so rare that we
+can hardly find them. To know one thing absolutely
+means material success and commercial and mental
+superiority. I dare say that if some of our young
+men understood more fully than they do the needs
+of the positions they occupy, the necessity for outside
+work would not exist.</p>
+
+<p>Stagnation in a young man's career is but a synonym
+for starvation, since there is no such thing as standing
+still in the business world. We go either backward or
+forward; we never stand still. When a young man
+fails to keep abreast of the possibilities of his position
+he recedes constantly, though perhaps unconsciously.
+<a name="page_17" id="page_17"></a>The young man who progresses is he who enters into
+the spirit of the business of his employer, and who
+points out new methods to him, advances new ideas,
+suggests new channels and outputs. There is no more
+direct road to the confidence of an employer than for
+him to see that any one of his clerks has an eye eager
+for the possibilities of business. That young man commands
+the attention of his chief at once, and when a
+vacancy occurs he is apt to step into it, if, indeed, he
+does not forge over the shoulders of others. Young
+men who think clearly, can conceive good ideas and
+carry them out, are not so plentiful that even a single
+one will be lost sight of. It is no special art, and it
+reflects but little credit upon any man simply to fill a
+position. That is expected of him; he is engaged to
+do that, and it is only a fair return for a certain payment
+made. The art lies in doing more than was
+bargained for; in proving greater than was expected;
+in making more of a position than has ever been made
+before. A quick conception is needed here, the ability
+to view a broad horizon; for it is the liberal-minded
+man, not the man of narrow limitations, who makes the
+success of to-day. A young man showing such qualities
+to an employer does not remain in one position long.</p>
+
+<div class="imagetb"><img src="images/ill_tb.jpg" alt="image not available" width="25" height="23" /></div>
+
+<p>Two traps in which young men in business often fall
+are a disregard for small things, and an absolute fear of
+making mistakes. One of the surest keys to success
+lies in thoroughness. No matter how great may be the
+<a name="page_18" id="page_18"></a>enterprise undertaken a regard for the small things is
+necessary. Just as the little courtesies of every-day
+life make life the worth living, so the little details form
+the bone and sinew of a great success. A thing half or
+three-quarters done is worse than not done at all. Let
+a man be careful of the small things in business, and he
+can generally be relied upon for the greater ones. The
+man who can overcome small worries is greater than
+the man who can override great obstacles. When a
+young man becomes so ambitious for large success that
+he overlooks the small things, he is pretty apt to encounter
+failure. There is nothing in business so infinitesimal
+that we can afford to do it in a slipshod fashion.
+It is no art to answer twenty letters in a morning when
+they are, in reality, only half answered. When we
+commend brevity in business letters, we do not mean
+brusqueness. Nothing stamps the character of a house
+so clearly as the letters it sends out.</p>
+
+<p>The fear of making mistakes keeps many a young
+man down. Of course, errors in business are costly,
+and it is better not to make them. But, at the same
+time, I would not give a snap of the fingers for a young
+man who has never made mistakes. But there are
+mistakes and mistakes; some easy to be excused; others
+not to be overlooked in the case of any employee. A
+mistake of judgment is possible with us all; the best of
+us are not above a wrong decision. And a young man
+who holds back for fear of making mistakes loses the
+first point of success.</p>
+
+<p>A young man in business nowadays, with an ambition
+<a name="page_19" id="page_19"></a>to be successful, must also be careful of his social life.
+It is not enough that he should take care of himself during
+the day. To social dissipations at night can be
+traced the downfall of hundreds upon hundreds of
+young men. The idea that an employer has no control
+over a young man's time away from the office is a dangerous
+fallacy. An employer has every right to ask
+that those into whose hands he entrusts responsibilities
+shall follow social habits which will not endanger his
+interests upon the morrow. So far as social life is concerned,
+young men generally run to both extremes.
+Either they do not go out at all, which is stagnating,
+or they go out too much, which is deadly. Only here
+and there is found one who knows the happy medium.
+A certain amount of social diversion is essential to
+everybody, boy, man, girl, or woman. And particularly
+so to a young man with a career to make. To come into
+contact with the social side of people is broadening; it
+is educative. "To know people," says a writer, "you
+must see them at play." Social life can be made a
+study at the same time that it is made a pleasure. To
+know the wants of people, to learn their softer side, you
+must come into contact with their social natures. No
+young man can afford to deny himself certain pleasures,
+or a reasonable amount of contact with people in the
+outer world. It is to his advantage that people should
+know he exists,&mdash;what his aims and aspirations are.
+His evening occupations should be as widely different
+as possible from those which occupy his thoughts in the
+daytime. The mind needs a change of thought as well
+<a name="page_20" id="page_20"></a>as the body needs a change of raiment. The familiar
+maxim, "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy,"
+contains a vast amount of truth.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time, nothing is more injurious to the
+chances of a young man in business than an overindulgence
+in the pleasures of what, for the want of a better
+word, we call "society." It is a rough but a true saying
+that "a man cannot drink whisky and be in business."
+Perhaps a softer interpretation of the idea would be this:
+that a man cannot be in society and be in business.
+This is impossible, and nothing that a young man can
+bear in mind will stand him to such good account as
+this fact. No mind can be fresh in the morning that
+has been kept at a tension the night before by late hours,
+or befogged by indulgence in late suppers. We need
+more sleep at twenty-five than we do at fifty, and the
+young man who grants himself less than eight hours'
+sleep every night just robs himself of so much vitality.
+The loss may not be felt or noticed at present, but the
+process of sleeping is only Nature's banking system of
+principal and interest. A mind capable of the fulfilment
+of its highest duties should be not only receptive
+to ideas, but quick to comprehend a point. With a
+fresh mind and a clear brain, a young man has two
+of the greatest levers of success. These cannot be
+retained under social indulgences. The dissipation of a
+night has its invariable influence upon the work of
+the morrow. I do not preach total abstinence from
+any habits to which human nature is prone. Every
+man ought to know what is good for him and what is
+<a name="page_21" id="page_21"></a>injurious to his best interests. An excess of anything
+is injurious, and a young man on the threshold of a
+business career cannot afford to go to the extreme in
+any direction. He should husband his resources, for he
+will need them all.</p>
+
+<p>For no success is easily made nowadays. Appearances
+are tremendously deceptive in this respect. We
+see men making what we choose to regard and call
+quick success, because at a comparatively early age
+they acquire position or means. But one needs only
+to study the conditions of the business life of to-day to
+see how impossible it is to achieve any success except
+by the very hardest work. No young man need approach
+a business career with the idea that success is
+easy. The histories of successful men tell us all too
+clearly the lessons of patience and the efforts of years.
+Some men compass a successful career in less time
+than others. And if the methods employed are necessarily
+different, the requirements are precisely the same.
+It is a story of hard work in every case, of close application
+and of a patient mastery of the problem in hand.
+Advantages of education will come in at times and push
+one man ahead of another. But a practical business
+knowledge is apt to be a greater possession.</p>
+
+<div class="imagetb"><img src="images/ill_tb.jpg" alt="image not available" width="25" height="23" /></div>
+
+<p>I know there are thousands of young men who feel
+themselves incompetent for a business career because
+of a lack of early education. And here might come in&mdash;if
+I chose to discuss the subject, which I do not&mdash;the
+<a name="page_22" id="page_22"></a>oft-mooted question of the exact value of a college
+education to the young man in business. But I will
+say this: a young man need not feel that the lack of a
+college education will stand in any respect whatever in
+the way of his success in the business world. No
+college on earth ever made a business man. The
+knowledge acquired in college has fitted thousands of
+men for professional success, but it has also unfitted
+other thousands for a practical business career. A
+college training is never wasted, although I have seen
+again and again five-thousand-dollar educations spent
+on five-hundred-dollar men. Where a young man can
+bring a college education to the requirements of a practical
+business knowledge, it is an advantage. But before
+our American colleges become an absolute factor in the
+business capacities of men their methods of study and
+learning will have to be radically changed. I have had
+associated with me both kinds of young men, collegiate
+and non-collegiate, and I must say that those who
+had a better knowledge of the practical part of life
+have been those who never saw the inside of a college
+and whose feet never stepped upon a campus. College-bred
+men, and men who never had college advantages,
+have succeeded in about equal ratios. The men occupying
+the most important commercial positions in New
+York to-day are self-made, whose only education has
+come to them from contact with that greatest college
+of all, the business world. Far be it from me to depreciate
+the value of a college education. I believe in its
+advantages too firmly. But no young man need feel
+<a name="page_23" id="page_23"></a>hampered because of the lack of it. If business qualities
+are in him they will come to the surface. It is not
+the college education; it is the young man. Without
+its possession as great and honorable successes have
+been made as with it. Men are not accepted in the
+business world upon their collegiate diplomas, nor on
+the knowledge these imply.</p>
+
+<div class="imagetb"><img src="images/ill_tb.jpg" alt="image not available" width="25" height="23" /></div>
+
+<p>There are a great many young men in business to-day
+who grow impatient. They are in a position for a certain
+time; they are satisfactory to their employers, and
+then, because they are not promoted, they grow restless.
+These young men generally overlook a point or two. In
+the first place, they overlook the very important point
+that between the years of twenty and twenty-five a
+young man acquires rather than achieves. It is the
+learning period of life, the experience-gaining time.
+Knowledge that is worth anything does not come to us
+until we are past twenty-five. The mind, before that
+age, is incapable of forming wise judgment. The great
+art of accurate decision in business matters is not
+acquired in a few weeks of commercial life. It is the
+result of years. It is not only the power within him,
+but also the experience behind him, that makes a successful
+business man. The commercial world is only a
+greater school than the one of slates and slate-pencils.
+No boy, after attending school for five years, would
+consider himself competent to teach. And surely five
+years of commercial apprenticeship will not fit a young
+<a name="page_24" id="page_24"></a>man to assume a position of trust, nor give him the
+capacity to decide upon important business matters. In
+the first five years, yes, the first ten years, of a young
+man's business life, he is only in the primary department
+of the great commercial world. It is for him,
+then, to study methods, to observe other men&mdash;in
+short, to learn and not to hope to achieve. That will
+come later. Business, simple as it may look to the
+young man, is, nevertheless, a very intricate affair, and
+it is only by years of closest study that we master an
+understanding of it.</p>
+
+<p>The electric atmosphere of the American business
+world is all too apt to make our young men impatient.
+They want to fly before they can even walk well. Ambition
+is a splendid thing in any young man. But he
+must not forget that, like fire and water, it makes a
+good servant but a poor master. Getting along too
+fast is just as injurious as getting along too slow. A
+young man between twenty and twenty-five must be
+patient. I know patience is a difficult thing to cultivate,
+but it is among the first lessons we must learn in
+business. A good stock of patience, acquired in early
+life, will stand a man in good stead in later years. It
+is a handy thing to have and draw upon, and makes a
+splendid safety-valve. Because a young man, as he
+approaches twenty-five, begins to see things more
+plainly than he did five years before, he must not get
+the idea that he is a business man yet, and entitled to
+a man's salary. If business questions, which he did not
+understand five years before, now begin to look clearer
+<a name="page_25" id="page_25"></a>to him, it is because he is passing through the transitory
+state that separates the immature judgment of the
+young man from the ripening penetration of the man.
+He is simply beginning. Afterward he will grow, and
+his salary will grow as he grows. But Rome wasn't
+built in a day, and a business man isn't made in a
+night. As experience comes, the judgment will become
+mature, and by the time the young man reaches thirty
+he will begin to realize that he didn't know as much
+at twenty-five as he thought he did. When he is
+ready to learn from others he will begin to grow wise.
+And when he reaches that state where he is willing to
+concede that he hasn't a "corner" on knowledge in this
+world, he will be stepping out of the chrysalis of youth.</p>
+
+<div class="imagetb"><img src="images/ill_tb.jpg" alt="image not available" width="25" height="23" /></div>
+
+<p>There is another point upon which young men are
+often in doubt, and that is, just how far it pays to be
+honest in business. "Does it really pay to be honest
+in business?" they ask, and they are sincere and in
+earnest in the question.</p>
+
+<p>Now, the simple fact of the matter is that a business
+success is absolutely impossible upon any other basis
+than one of the strictest honesty.</p>
+
+<p>The great trouble with young men, nowadays, is that
+their ideas are altogether too much influenced by a few
+unfortunate examples of apparent success which are
+prominent&mdash;too prominent, alas!&mdash;in American life
+to-day. These "successful men"&mdash;for the most part
+identified in some way with politics&mdash;are talked about
+<a name="page_26" id="page_26"></a>incessantly; interviewed by reporters; buy lavish diamonds
+for their wives, and build costly houses,&mdash;all of
+which is duly reported in the newspapers. Young men
+read these things and ask themselves, "If he can do
+it, why not I?" Then they begin to look around for
+some "short cut to success," as one young fellow expressed
+it to me not long ago. It is owing to this
+practice of "cutting across lots" in business that scores
+of young men find themselves, after awhile in tight
+places. And the man who has once had about him
+an unsavory taint in his business methods rarely, very
+rarely, rids himself of that atmosphere in the eyes of
+his acquaintances. How often we see some young man
+in business, representative of the very qualities that
+should win success. Every one agrees that he is
+brilliant. "He is clever," is the general verdict. His
+manner impresses one pleasantly, he is thoroughly businesslike,
+is energetic, and yet, somehow, he never seems
+to stick to one place. People wonder at it, and excuse
+it on the ground that he hasn't found the right place.
+But some day the secret is explained. "Yes, he is
+clever," says some old business man, "but do you know
+he isn't&mdash;well, he isn't quite safe!" "Quite safe!"
+How much that expresses; how clearly that defines
+hundreds and hundreds of the smartest young men in
+business to-day. He is everything else&mdash;but he isn't
+"quite safe!" He is not dishonest in any way, but he
+is, what is equally as bad, not quite reliable. To attain
+success he has, in other words, tried to "cut across
+lots." And rainbow-chasing is really a very commendable
+<a name="page_27" id="page_27"></a>business in comparison to a young man's search for
+the "royal road to success." No success worth attaining
+is easy; the greater the obstacles to overcome,
+the surer is the success when attained. "Royal
+roads" are poor highways to travel in any pursuit, and
+especially in a business calling.</p>
+
+<p>It is strange how reluctant young men are to accept,
+as the most vital truth in life, that the most absolute
+honesty is the only kind of honesty that succeeds in
+business. It isn't a question of religion or religious
+beliefs. Honesty does not depend upon any religious
+creed or dogma that was ever conceived. It is a question
+of a young man's own conscience. He knows
+what is right and what is wrong. And yet, simple as
+the matter is, it is astonishing how difficult it is of
+understanding. An honest course in business seems
+too slow to the average young man. "I can't afford
+to plod along. I must strike and strike quickly," is the
+sentiment. Ah, yes, my friend, but not dishonestly.
+No young man can afford even to think of dishonesty.
+Success on honorable lines may sometimes seem
+slower in coming, but when it does come it outrivals
+in permanency all the so-called successes gained by
+other methods. To look at the methods of others is
+always a mistake. The successes of to-day are not
+given to the imitator, but to the originator. It makes
+no difference how other men may succeed&mdash;their
+success is theirs and not yours. You cannot partake
+of it. Every man is a law unto himself. The most
+absolute integrity is the one and the only sure foundation
+<a name="page_28" id="page_28"></a>of success. Such a success is lasting. Other
+kinds of success may seem so, but it is all in the
+seeming, and not in the reality. Let a young man
+swerve from the path of honesty, and it will surprise
+him how quickly every avenue of permanent success is
+closed against him. It is the young man of unquestioned
+integrity who is selected for the important position.
+No business man ever places his affairs in the
+hands of a young man whom he feels he cannot unhesitatingly
+trust. And to be trusted means to be
+honest. Honesty, and that alone, commands confidence.
+An honest life, well directed, is the only life
+for a young man to lead. It is the one life that is
+compatible with the largest and surest business success.</p>
+
+<div class="imagetb"><img src="images/ill_tb.jpg" alt="image not available" width="25" height="23" /></div>
+
+<p>And so it is easy enough for any young man to
+succeed, provided he is willing to bear in mind a few
+very essential truths. And they are:</p>
+
+<p>Above all things he should convince himself that he
+is in a congenial business. Whether it be a trade or
+a profession,&mdash;both are honorable and profitable,&mdash;let
+him satisfy himself, above everything else, that it enlists
+his personal interest. If a man shows that he has his
+work at heart his success can be relied on. Personal
+interest in any work will bring other things; but all
+the other essentials combined cannot create personal
+interest. That must exist first; then two-thirds of the
+battle is won. Fully satisfied that he is in the particular
+line of business in which he feels a stronger,
+<a name="page_29" id="page_29"></a>warmer interest than in any other, then he should
+remember:</p>
+
+<p>First&mdash;That, whatever else he may strive to be, he
+must be absolutely honest. From honorable principles
+he never should swerve. There can be no half-way
+compromise.</p>
+
+<p>Second&mdash;He must be alert, alive to every opportunity.
+He cannot afford to lose a single point, for
+that single point may prove to be the very link that
+would make complete the whole chain of a business
+success.</p>
+
+<p>Third&mdash;He must ever be willing to learn, never
+overlooking the fact that others have long ago forgotten
+what he has still to learn. Firmness of decision is an
+admirable trait in business. The young man whose
+opinions can be tossed from one side to the other is
+poor material. But youth is full of errors, and caution
+is a strong trait.</p>
+
+<p>Fourth&mdash;If he be wise he will entirely avoid the use
+of liquors. If the question of harm done by intoxicating
+liquor is an open one, the question of the actual
+good derived from it is not.</p>
+
+<p>Fifth&mdash;Let him remember that a young man's
+strongest recommendation is his respectability. Some
+young men, apparently successful, may be flashy in
+dress, loud in manner, disrespectful to women and
+irreverent toward sacred things. But the young man
+who is respectable always wears best. The way a
+young man carries himself in his private life ofttimes
+means much to him in his business career. No matter
+<a name="page_30" id="page_30"></a>where he is, or in whose company, respectability, and
+all that it implies, will always command respect.</p>
+
+<div class="imagetb"><img src="images/ill_tb.jpg" alt="image not available" width="25" height="23" /></div>
+
+<p>If any young man wishes a set of rules even more
+concise, here it is:</p>
+
+<p>Get into a business you like.</p>
+
+<p>Devote yourself to it.</p>
+
+<p>Be honest in everything.</p>
+
+<p>Be cautious. Think carefully about a thing before
+you act.</p>
+
+<p>Sleep eight hours every night.</p>
+
+<p>Do everything that means keeping in good health.</p>
+
+<p>Don't worry. Worry kills more men than work does.</p>
+
+<p>Avoid liquors of all kinds.</p>
+
+<p>If you must smoke, smoke moderately.</p>
+
+<p>Shun discussion on two points,&mdash;religion and politics.</p>
+
+<p>Marry a good woman, and have your own home.</p>
+
+<p class="c">THE END.</p>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Young Man in Business, by Edward W. Bok
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Young Man in Business, by Edward W. Bok
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Young Man in Business
+
+Author: Edward W. Bok
+
+Release Date: March 3, 2010 [EBook #31494]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YOUNG MAN IN BUSINESS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chuck Greif (from files available at www.archive.org)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: book-cover
+
+THE YOUNG MAN IN BUSINESS
+
+THE DAY'S WORK SERIES]
+
+
+The Day's Work Series
+
+THE YOUNG MAN
+
+IN BUSINESS
+
+BY
+
+EDWARD BOK
+
+BOSTON
+
+L. C. PAGE & COMPANY
+
+MDCCCC
+
+Copyright, 1900
+
+BY EDWARD BOK.
+
+All rights reserved
+
+Colonial press
+
+Electrotyped and Printed by C. H. Simonds & Co.
+
+Boston, U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+THE YOUNG MAN IN BUSINESS.
+
+
+A WELL-KNOWN New York millionaire gave it as his opinion not long ago
+that any young man possessing a good constitution and a fair degree of
+intelligence might acquire riches. The statement was
+criticised--literally picked to pieces--and finally adjudged as being
+extravagant. The figures then came out, gathered by a careful
+statistician, that of the young men in business in New York City, sixty
+per cent, were earning less than $1,000 per year, only twenty per cent,
+had an income of $2,000, and barely five per cent, commanded salaries
+in excess of the latter figure. The great majority of young men in New
+York City--that is, between the ages of twenty-three and thirty--were
+earning less than twenty dollars per week. On the basis, therefore,
+that a young man must be established in his life-profession by his
+thirtieth year, it can hardly be said that the average New York young
+man in business is successful. Of course, this is measured entirely
+from the standpoint of income. It is true that a young man may not, in
+every case, receive the salary his services merit, but, as a general
+rule, his income is a pretty accurate indication of his capacity.
+
+Now, as every young man naturally desires to make a business success,
+it is plain from the above statement that something is lacking; either
+the opportunities, or the capabilities in the young men themselves. No
+one conversant with the business life of any of our large cities can,
+it seems to me, even for a single moment, doubt the existence of good
+chances for young men. Take any large city as a fair example: New York,
+Boston, Philadelphia, or Chicago, and in each instance there exist more
+opportunities than there are young men capable of embracing them. The
+demand is far in excess of the supply. Positions of trust are
+constantly going begging for the right kind of young men to fill them.
+But such men are not common; or, if they be, they have a most
+unfortunate way of hiding their light under a bushel, so much so that
+business men cannot see even a glimmer of its rays. Let a position of
+any real importance be open, and it is the most difficult kind of a
+problem to find any one to fill it satisfactorily. Business men are
+constantly passing through this experience. Young men are desired in
+the great majority of positions because of their progressive 'ideas and
+capacity to endure work; in fact, "young blood," as it is called, is
+preferred in nine positions out of every ten, nowadays.
+
+The chances for business success for any young man are not wanting. The
+opportunities exist, plenty of them. The trouble is that the average
+young man of to-day is incapable of filling them, or, if he be not
+exactly incapable (I gladly give him the benefit of the doubt), he is
+unwilling to fill them, which is even worse. That exceptions can be
+brought up to controvert I know, but I am dealing with the many, not
+with the few.
+
+The average young man in business to-day is nothing more nor less than
+a plodder,--a mere automaton. He is at his office at eight or nine
+o'clock in the morning; is faithful in the duties he performs; goes to
+luncheon at twelve, gets back at one; takes up whatever he is told to
+do until five, and then goes home. His work for the day is done. One
+day is the same to him as another; he has a certain routine of duties
+to do, and he does them day in and day out, month in and month out. His
+duties are regulated by the clock. As that points, so he points.
+Verily, it is true of him that he is the same yesterday, to-day, and
+forever. No special fault can be found with his work. Given a
+particular piece of work to do, he does it just as a machine would.
+Such a young man, too, generally considers himself hard-worked--often
+overworked and underpaid; wondering all the time why his employer
+doesn't recognize his value and advance his salary. "I do everything I
+am told to do," he argues, "and I do it well. What more can I do?"
+
+This is simply a type of a young man to be found in thousands of
+offices and stores. He goes to his work each day with no definite point
+nor plan in view; he leaves it with nothing accomplished. He is a mere
+automaton. Let him die, and his position can be filled in twenty-four
+hours. If he detracts nothing from his employer's business, he
+certainly adds nothing to it. He never advances an idea; is absolutely
+devoid of creative powers; his position remains the same after he has
+been in it for five years as when he came to it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now, I would not for a moment be understood as belittling the value of
+faithfulness in an employee. But, after all, faithfulness is nothing
+more nor less than a negative quality. By faithfulness a man may hold a
+position a lifetime. He will keep it just where he found it. But by the
+exercise of this single quality he does not add to the importance of
+the position any more than he adds to his own value. It is not enough
+that it may be said of a young man that he is faithful; he must be
+something more. The willingness and capacity to be faithful to the
+smallest detail must be there, serving only, however, as a foundation
+upon which other qualities are built.
+
+Altogether too many young men are content to remain in the positions in
+which they find themselves. The thought of studying the needs of the
+next position just above them never seems to enter their minds. It is
+possible for every young man to rise above his position, and it makes
+no difference how humble that position may be, nor under what
+disadvantages he may be placed. But he must be alert. He must not be
+afraid of work, and of the hardest kind of work. He must study not only
+to please, but he must go a step beyond. It is essential, of course,
+that he should first of all fill the position for which he is engaged.
+No man can solve the problem of business before he understands the
+rudiments of the problem itself. Once the requirements of a position
+are understood and mastered, then its possibilities should be
+undertaken. It is foolish, as some young men argue, that to go beyond
+their special position is impossible with their employers. The employer
+never existed who will prevent the cream of his establishment from
+rising to the surface. The advance of an employee always means the
+advance of the employer's interests. An employer would rather pay a
+young man five thousand dollars a year than five hundred. What is to
+the young man's interest is much more to the interest of his employer.
+A five-hundred-dollar clerkship is worth just that amount and nothing
+more to an employer. But a five-thousand-dollar man is generally worth
+five times that sum to a business. A young man makes of a position
+exactly what he chooses: a millstone around his neck, or a
+stepping-stone to larger success. The possibilities lie in every
+position; seeing and embracing them rest with its occupant. The lowest
+position can be so filled as to lead up to the next and become a part
+of it. One position should be only the chrysalis for the development of
+new strength to master the requirements of another position above it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The average young man is extremely anxious to get into a business
+position in which there are what he calls "prospects" for advancement.
+It is usually one of his first questions, "What are my prospects here?"
+He seems to have the notion that the question of his "prospects" or
+advancement is one entirely in the hands of his employer, whereas it
+rarely occurs to him that it is a matter resting entirely with himself.
+An employer has, of course, the power of promotion, but that is all. He
+cannot advance a young man unless the young man first demonstrates that
+he is worthy of advancement. Every position offers prospects; every
+business house has in it the possibility of a young man's bettering
+himself. But it depends upon him, first. If he is of the average
+come-day go-day sort, and does his work in a mechanical or careless
+fashion, lacking that painstaking thoroughness which is the basis of
+successful work, his prospects are naught. And they will be no greater
+with one concern than with another, although he may identify himself
+with a score during a year. If, on the contrary, he buckles down to
+work, and makes himself felt from the moment he enters his position, no
+matter how humble that may be, his advancement will take care of
+itself. An employer is very quick to discover merit in an employee, and
+if a young man is fitted to occupy a higher position in the house than
+he is filling, it will not be long before he is promoted. There are, of
+course, instances where the best work that a young man can do goes for
+nothing and fails of rightful appreciation, and where such a condition
+is discovered, of course the young man must change the condition and go
+where his services will receive proper recognition and value. But this
+happens only in a very small minority of cases. In the vast majority of
+cases where the cry of inappreciation is heard, it is generally the
+fact that the crier is unworthy of more than he receives.
+
+No employer can tell a young man just what his prospects are. That is
+for the young man himself to demonstrate. He must show first what is in
+him, and then he will discover for himself what his prospects are.
+Because so many young men stand, still does not prove that employers
+are unwilling to advance them, but simply shows that the great run of
+young men do not possess those qualities which entitle them to
+advancement. There are exceptional cases, of course; but as a rule a
+man gets in this world about what he is worth, or not very far from it.
+There is not by any means as much injustice done by the employer to the
+employee as appears on the surface. Leaving aside all question of
+principle, it would be extremely poor policy for a business man to keep
+in a minor position a young man who, if promoted, would expand and make
+more money for the house.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And right here a word or two may perhaps be fitly said about the
+element of "luck" entering into business advancement. It is undeniable
+that there are thousands of young men who believe that success in
+business is nothing else than what they call "luck." The young men who
+forge ahead are, in their estimation, simply the lucky ones, who have
+had influence of some sort or other to push them along.
+
+When a young man gets into that frame of mind which makes him believe
+that "luck" is the one and only thing which can help him along, or that
+it is even an element in business, it may be safely said that he is
+doomed to failure. The only semblance to "influence" there is in
+business is found where, through a friendly word, a chance is opened to
+a young man. But the only thing that "influence" can do begins and ends
+with an opportunity. The strongest influence that can be exerted in a
+young man's behalf counts for very little if he is found to be
+incapable of embracing that chance. And so far as "luck" is concerned,
+there is no such thing in a young man's life or his business success.
+The only lucky young man is he who has a sound constitution, with good
+sense to preserve it; who knows some trade or profession thoroughly or
+is willing to learn it and sacrifice everything to its learning; who
+loves his work and has industry enough to persevere in it; who
+appreciates the necessity of self-restraint in all things, and who
+tempers his social life to those habits which refresh and not impair
+his constitution. That is luck,--the luck of having common sense. That
+is the only luck there is,--the only luck worth having; and it is
+something which every right-minded young man may have if he goes about
+it the right way.
+
+Things in this world never just happen. There is always a reason for
+everything. So with success. It is not the result of luck; it is not a
+thing of chance. It comes to men only because they work hard and
+intelligently for it, and along legitimate lines.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now a word about a young man's salary. It is human nature to wish to
+make all the money we honestly can: to get just as large a return for
+our services as possible. There is no qualifying that statement, and as
+most of the comforts of this life are had through the possession of
+sufficient money, it is perfectly natural that the subject of what we
+earn should be prominent in our minds. But too many young men put the
+cart before the horse in this question of salary. It is their first
+consideration. They are constantly asking what salaries are paid in
+different business callings, and whether this profession or that trade
+is more financially productive. The question seems to enter into their
+deliberations as a qualifying factor as to whether they shall enter a
+certain trade or profession. I never could quite see the point of this
+nor the reason for it. Of what significance to you or to me are the
+salaries which are paid to others? They signify nothing. If the highest
+salary paid to the foremost men in a certain profession is $10,000 per
+year, what does that fact prove? There is no obstacle to some one's
+else going into that same profession and earning $25,000. The first
+consideration, when a young man thinks of going into business, is not
+which special trade or profession is most profitable, but which
+particular line he is most interested in and best fitted for. What
+matters it to a man that fortunes are made in the law if he has
+absolutely no taste or ability for that profession? Of what value is it
+to a young man who loves mechanical engineering to know that there are
+doctors who earn large incomes? What difference do the productive
+possibilities of any line of work make to us if we are not by nature
+fitted for that work?
+
+When a young man is always thinking of the salary he is receiving, or
+the salary he "ought to get," he gives pretty good proof that he is not
+of a very superior make. The right sort of a young fellow doesn't
+ever-lastingly concern himself about salary. Ability commands income.
+But a young man must start with ability, not with salary. That takes
+care of itself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now, a substantial business success means several things. It calls, in
+the first place, for concentration. There is no truth more potent than
+that which tells us we cannot serve God and Mammon. Nor can any young
+man successfully serve two business interests, no matter how closely
+allied; in fact, the more closely the interests the more dangerous are
+they. The human mind is capable of just so much clear thought, and
+generally it does not extend beyond the requirements of one position in
+these days of keen competition. If there exists a secret of success, it
+lies, perhaps, in concentration more than in any other single element.
+During business hours a man should be in business. His thoughts should
+be on nothing else. Diversions of thought are killing to the best
+endeavors. The successful mastery of business questions calls for a
+personal interest, a forgetfulness of self, that can only come from the
+closest application and the most absolute concentration. I go so far in
+my belief of concentration to business interests in business hours as
+to argue that a young man's personal letters should not be sent to his
+office address, nor should he receive his social friends at his desk.
+Business hours are none too long in the great majority of our offices,
+and, with a rest of one hour for luncheon, no one has a right to lop
+off fifteen minutes here to read an irrelevant personal letter, or
+fifteen minutes there to talk with a friend whose conversation
+distracts the mind from the problems before it. A young man cannot draw
+the line between his business life and his social life too closely. It
+is all too true of thousands of young men that they are better
+conversant during the base-ball season with the batting average of some
+star player, or the number of men "put out at second" by some other
+player, than they are with the details of their business.
+
+Digression is just as dangerous as stagnation in the career of a young
+man in business. There is absolutely no position worth the having in
+business life to-day to which a care of other interests can be added.
+Let a man attempt to serve the interests of one master, and if he
+serves him well he has his hands and his head full. There is a class of
+ambitious young men who have what they choose to call "an anchor to the
+windward" in their business. That is, they maintain something outside
+of their regular position. They do this from necessity, they claim. One
+position does not offer sufficient scope for their powers or talents;
+does not bring them sufficient income, and they are "forced," they
+explain, to take on something in addition. I have known such young men.
+But, so far as I have been able to discern, the trouble does not lie so
+much with the position they occupy as with themselves. When a man turns
+away from the position he holds to outside affairs, he turns just so
+far away from the surest path of success. To do one thing perfectly is
+better than to do two things only fairly well. It was told me once, of
+one of our best known actors, that outside of his stage knowledge he
+knew absolutely nothing. But he acted well,--so well that he stands at
+the head of his profession, and has an income of five figures several
+times over. All around geniuses are rare--so rare that we can hardly
+find them. To know one thing absolutely means material success and
+commercial and mental superiority. I dare say that if some of our young
+men understood more fully than they do the needs of the positions they
+occupy, the necessity for outside work would not exist.
+
+Stagnation in a young man's career is but a synonym for starvation,
+since there is no such thing as standing still in the business world.
+We go either backward or forward; we never stand still. When a young
+man fails to keep abreast of the possibilities of his position he
+recedes constantly, though perhaps unconsciously. The young man who
+progresses is he who enters into the spirit of the business of his
+employer, and who points out new methods to him, advances new ideas,
+suggests new channels and outputs. There is no more direct road to the
+confidence of an employer than for him to see that any one of his
+clerks has an eye eager for the possibilities of business. That young
+man commands the attention of his chief at once, and when a vacancy
+occurs he is apt to step into it, if, indeed, he does not forge over
+the shoulders of others. Young men who think clearly, can conceive good
+ideas and carry them out, are not so plentiful that even a single one
+will be lost sight of. It is no special art, and it reflects but little
+credit upon any man simply to fill a position. That is expected of him;
+he is engaged to do that, and it is only a fair return for a certain
+payment made. The art lies in doing more than was bargained for; in
+proving greater than was expected; in making more of a position than
+has ever been made before. A quick conception is needed here, the
+ability to view a broad horizon; for it is the liberal-minded man, not
+the man of narrow limitations, who makes the success of to-day. A young
+man showing such qualities to an employer does not remain in one
+position long.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Two traps in which young men in business often fall are a disregard for
+small things, and an absolute fear of making mistakes. One of the
+surest keys to success lies in thoroughness. No matter how great may be
+the enterprise undertaken a regard for the small things is necessary.
+Just as the little courtesies of every-day life make life the worth
+living, so the little details form the bone and sinew of a great
+success. A thing half or three-quarters done is worse than not done at
+all. Let a man be careful of the small things in business, and he can
+generally be relied upon for the greater ones. The man who can overcome
+small worries is greater than the man who can override great obstacles.
+When a young man becomes so ambitious for large success that he
+overlooks the small things, he is pretty apt to encounter failure.
+There is nothing in business so infinitesimal that we can afford to do
+it in a slipshod fashion. It is no art to answer twenty letters in a
+morning when they are, in reality, only half answered. When we commend
+brevity in business letters, we do not mean brusqueness. Nothing stamps
+the character of a house so clearly as the letters it sends out.
+
+The fear of making mistakes keeps many a young man down. Of course,
+errors in business are costly, and it is better not to make them. But,
+at the same time, I would not give a snap of the fingers for a young
+man who has never made mistakes. But there are mistakes and mistakes;
+some easy to be excused; others not to be overlooked in the case of any
+employee. A mistake of judgment is possible with us all; the best of us
+are not above a wrong decision. And a young man who holds back for fear
+of making mistakes loses the first point of success.
+
+A young man in business nowadays, with an ambition to be successful,
+must also be careful of his social life. It is not enough that he
+should take care of himself during the day. To social dissipations at
+night can be traced the downfall of hundreds upon hundreds of young
+men. The idea that an employer has no control over a young man's time
+away from the office is a dangerous fallacy. An employer has every
+right to ask that those into whose hands he entrusts responsibilities
+shall follow social habits which will not endanger his interests upon
+the morrow. So far as social life is concerned, young men generally run
+to both extremes. Either they do not go out at all, which is
+stagnating, or they go out too much, which is deadly. Only here and
+there is found one who knows the happy medium. A certain amount of
+social diversion is essential to everybody, boy, man, girl, or woman.
+And particularly so to a young man with a career to make. To come into
+contact with the social side of people is broadening; it is educative.
+"To know people," says a writer, "you must see them at play." Social
+life can be made a study at the same time that it is made a pleasure.
+To know the wants of people, to learn their softer side, you must come
+into contact with their social natures. No young man can afford to deny
+himself certain pleasures, or a reasonable amount of contact with
+people in the outer world. It is to his advantage that people should
+know he exists,--what his aims and aspirations are. His evening
+occupations should be as widely different as possible from those which
+occupy his thoughts in the daytime. The mind needs a change of thought
+as well as the body needs a change of raiment. The familiar maxim, "All
+work and no play makes Jack a dull boy," contains a vast amount of
+truth.
+
+At the same time, nothing is more injurious to the chances of a young
+man in business than an overindulgence in the pleasures of what, for
+the want of a better word, we call "society." It is a rough but a true
+saying that "a man cannot drink whisky and be in business." Perhaps a
+softer interpretation of the idea would be this: that a man cannot be
+in society and be in business. This is impossible, and nothing that a
+young man can bear in mind will stand him to such good account as this
+fact. No mind can be fresh in the morning that has been kept at a
+tension the night before by late hours, or befogged by indulgence in
+late suppers. We need more sleep at twenty-five than we do at fifty,
+and the young man who grants himself less than eight hours' sleep every
+night just robs himself of so much vitality. The loss may not be felt
+or noticed at present, but the process of sleeping is only Nature's
+banking system of principal and interest. A mind capable of the
+fulfilment of its highest duties should be not only receptive to ideas,
+but quick to comprehend a point. With a fresh mind and a clear brain, a
+young man has two of the greatest levers of success. These cannot be
+retained under social indulgences. The dissipation of a night has its
+invariable influence upon the work of the morrow. I do not preach total
+abstinence from any habits to which human nature is prone. Every man
+ought to know what is good for him and what is injurious to his best
+interests. An excess of anything is injurious, and a young man on the
+threshold of a business career cannot afford to go to the extreme in
+any direction. He should husband his resources, for he will need them
+all.
+
+For no success is easily made nowadays. Appearances are tremendously
+deceptive in this respect. We see men making what we choose to regard
+and call quick success, because at a comparatively early age they
+acquire position or means. But one needs only to study the conditions
+of the business life of to-day to see how impossible it is to achieve
+any success except by the very hardest work. No young man need approach
+a business career with the idea that success is easy. The histories of
+successful men tell us all too clearly the lessons of patience and the
+efforts of years. Some men compass a successful career in less time
+than others. And if the methods employed are necessarily different, the
+requirements are precisely the same. It is a story of hard work in
+every case, of close application and of a patient mastery of the
+problem in hand. Advantages of education will come in at times and push
+one man ahead of another. But a practical business knowledge is apt to
+be a greater possession.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I know there are thousands of young men who feel themselves incompetent
+for a business career because of a lack of early education. And here
+might come in--if I chose to discuss the subject, which I do not--the
+oft-mooted question of the exact value of a college education to the
+young man in business. But I will say this: a young man need not feel
+that the lack of a college education will stand in any respect whatever
+in the way of his success in the business world. No college on earth
+ever made a business man. The knowledge acquired in college has fitted
+thousands of men for professional success, but it has also unfitted
+other thousands for a practical business career. A college training is
+never wasted, although I have seen again and again five-thousand-dollar
+educations spent on five-hundred-dollar men. Where a young man can
+bring a college education to the requirements of a practical business
+knowledge, it is an advantage. But before our American colleges become
+an absolute factor in the business capacities of men their methods of
+study and learning will have to be radically changed. I have had
+associated with me both kinds of young men, collegiate and
+non-collegiate, and I must say that those who had a better knowledge of
+the practical part of life have been those who never saw the inside of
+a college and whose feet never stepped upon a campus. College-bred men,
+and men who never had college advantages, have succeeded in about equal
+ratios. The men occupying the most important commercial positions in
+New York to-day are self-made, whose only education has come to them
+from contact with that greatest college of all, the business world. Far
+be it from me to depreciate the value of a college education. I believe
+in its advantages too firmly. But no young man need feel hampered
+because of the lack of it. If business qualities are in him they will
+come to the surface. It is not the college education; it is the young
+man. Without its possession as great and honorable successes have been
+made as with it. Men are not accepted in the business world upon their
+collegiate diplomas, nor on the knowledge these imply.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There are a great many young men in business to-day who grow impatient.
+They are in a position for a certain time; they are satisfactory to
+their employers, and then, because they are not promoted, they grow
+restless. These young men generally overlook a point or two. In the
+first place, they overlook the very important point that between the
+years of twenty and twenty-five a young man acquires rather than
+achieves. It is the learning period of life, the experience-gaining
+time. Knowledge that is worth anything does not come to us until we are
+past twenty-five. The mind, before that age, is incapable of forming
+wise judgment. The great art of accurate decision in business matters
+is not acquired in a few weeks of commercial life. It is the result of
+years. It is not only the power within him, but also the experience
+behind him, that makes a successful business man. The commercial world
+is only a greater school than the one of slates and slate-pencils. No
+boy, after attending school for five years, would consider himself
+competent to teach. And surely five years of commercial apprenticeship
+will not fit a young man to assume a position of trust, nor give him
+the capacity to decide upon important business matters. In the first
+five years, yes, the first ten years, of a young man's business life,
+he is only in the primary department of the great commercial world. It
+is for him, then, to study methods, to observe other men--in short, to
+learn and not to hope to achieve. That will come later. Business,
+simple as it may look to the young man, is, nevertheless, a very
+intricate affair, and it is only by years of closest study that we
+master an understanding of it.
+
+The electric atmosphere of the American business world is all too apt
+to make our young men impatient. They want to fly before they can even
+walk well. Ambition is a splendid thing in any young man. But he must
+not forget that, like fire and water, it makes a good servant but a
+poor master. Getting along too fast is just as injurious as getting
+along too slow. A young man between twenty and twenty-five must be
+patient. I know patience is a difficult thing to cultivate, but it is
+among the first lessons we must learn in business. A good stock of
+patience, acquired in early life, will stand a man in good stead in
+later years. It is a handy thing to have and draw upon, and makes a
+splendid safety-valve. Because a young man, as he approaches
+twenty-five, begins to see things more plainly than he did five years
+before, he must not get the idea that he is a business man yet, and
+entitled to a man's salary. If business questions, which he did not
+understand five years before, now begin to look clearer to him, it is
+because he is passing through the transitory state that separates the
+immature judgment of the young man from the ripening penetration of the
+man. He is simply beginning. Afterward he will grow, and his salary
+will grow as he grows. But Rome wasn't built in a day, and a business
+man isn't made in a night. As experience comes, the judgment will
+become mature, and by the time the young man reaches thirty he will
+begin to realize that he didn't know as much at twenty-five as he
+thought he did. When he is ready to learn from others he will begin to
+grow wise. And when he reaches that state where he is willing to
+concede that he hasn't a "corner" on knowledge in this world, he will
+be stepping out of the chrysalis of youth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There is another point upon which young men are often in doubt, and
+that is, just how far it pays to be honest in business. "Does it really
+pay to be honest in business?" they ask, and they are sincere and in
+earnest in the question.
+
+Now, the simple fact of the matter is that a business success is
+absolutely impossible upon any other basis than one of the strictest
+honesty.
+
+The great trouble with young men, nowadays, is that their ideas are
+altogether too much influenced by a few unfortunate examples of
+apparent success which are prominent--too prominent, alas!--in American
+life to-day. These "successful men"--for the most part identified in
+some way with politics--are talked about incessantly; interviewed by
+reporters; buy lavish diamonds for their wives, and build costly
+houses,--all of which is duly reported in the newspapers. Young men
+read these things and ask themselves, "If he can do it, why not I?"
+Then they begin to look around for some "short cut to success," as one
+young fellow expressed it to me not long ago. It is owing to this
+practice of "cutting across lots" in business that scores of young men
+find themselves, after awhile in tight places. And the man who has once
+had about him an unsavory taint in his business methods rarely, very
+rarely, rids himself of that atmosphere in the eyes of his
+acquaintances. How often we see some young man in business,
+representative of the very qualities that should win success. Every one
+agrees that he is brilliant. "He is clever," is the general verdict.
+His manner impresses one pleasantly, he is thoroughly businesslike, is
+energetic, and yet, somehow, he never seems to stick to one place.
+People wonder at it, and excuse it on the ground that he hasn't found
+the right place. But some day the secret is explained. "Yes, he is
+clever," says some old business man, "but do you know he isn't--well,
+he isn't quite safe!" "Quite safe!" How much that expresses; how
+clearly that defines hundreds and hundreds of the smartest young men in
+business to-day. He is everything else--but he isn't "quite safe!" He
+is not dishonest in any way, but he is, what is equally as bad, not
+quite reliable. To attain success he has, in other words, tried to "cut
+across lots." And rainbow-chasing is really a very commendable business
+in comparison to a young man's search for the "royal road to success."
+No success worth attaining is easy; the greater the obstacles to
+overcome, the surer is the success when attained. "Royal roads" are
+poor highways to travel in any pursuit, and especially in a business
+calling.
+
+It is strange how reluctant young men are to accept, as the most vital
+truth in life, that the most absolute honesty is the only kind of
+honesty that succeeds in business. It isn't a question of religion or
+religious beliefs. Honesty does not depend upon any religious creed or
+dogma that was ever conceived. It is a question of a young man's own
+conscience. He knows what is right and what is wrong. And yet, simple
+as the matter is, it is astonishing how difficult it is of
+understanding. An honest course in business seems too slow to the
+average young man. "I can't afford to plod along. I must strike and
+strike quickly," is the sentiment. Ah, yes, my friend, but not
+dishonestly. No young man can afford even to think of dishonesty.
+Success on honorable lines may sometimes seem slower in coming, but
+when it does come it outrivals in permanency all the so-called
+successes gained by other methods. To look at the methods of others is
+always a mistake. The successes of to-day are not given to the
+imitator, but to the originator. It makes no difference how other men
+may succeed--their success is theirs and not yours. You cannot partake
+of it. Every man is a law unto himself. The most absolute integrity is
+the one and the only sure foundation of success. Such a success is
+lasting. Other kinds of success may seem so, but it is all in the
+seeming, and not in the reality. Let a young man swerve from the path
+of honesty, and it will surprise him how quickly every avenue of
+permanent success is closed against him. It is the young man of
+unquestioned integrity who is selected for the important position. No
+business man ever places his affairs in the hands of a young man whom
+he feels he cannot unhesitatingly trust. And to be trusted means to be
+honest. Honesty, and that alone, commands confidence. An honest life,
+well directed, is the only life for a young man to lead. It is the one
+life that is compatible with the largest and surest business success.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And so it is easy enough for any young man to succeed, provided he is
+willing to bear in mind a few very essential truths. And they are:
+
+Above all things he should convince himself that he is in a congenial
+business. Whether it be a trade or a profession,--both are honorable
+and profitable,--let him satisfy himself, above everything else, that
+it enlists his personal interest. If a man shows that he has his work
+at heart his success can be relied on. Personal interest in any work
+will bring other things; but all the other essentials combined cannot
+create personal interest. That must exist first; then two-thirds of the
+battle is won. Fully satisfied that he is in the particular line of
+business in which he feels a stronger, warmer interest than in any
+other, then he should remember:
+
+First--That, whatever else he may strive to be, he must be absolutely
+honest. From honorable principles he never should swerve. There can be
+no half-way compromise.
+
+Second--He must be alert, alive to every opportunity. He cannot afford
+to lose a single point, for that single point may prove to be the very
+link that would make complete the whole chain of a business success.
+
+Third--He must ever be willing to learn, never overlooking the fact
+that others have long ago forgotten what he has still to learn.
+Firmness of decision is an admirable trait in business. The young man
+whose opinions can be tossed from one side to the other is poor
+material. But youth is full of errors, and caution is a strong trait.
+
+Fourth--If he be wise he will entirely avoid the use of liquors. If the
+question of harm done by intoxicating liquor is an open one, the
+question of the actual good derived from it is not.
+
+Fifth--Let him remember that a young man's strongest recommendation is
+his respectability. Some young men, apparently successful, may be
+flashy in dress, loud in manner, disrespectful to women and irreverent
+toward sacred things. But the young man who is respectable always wears
+best. The way a young man carries himself in his private life ofttimes
+means much to him in his business career. No matter where he is, or in
+whose company, respectability, and all that it implies, will always
+command respect.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If any young man wishes a set of rules even more concise, here it is:
+
+Get into a business you like.
+
+Devote yourself to it.
+
+Be honest in everything.
+
+Be cautious. Think carefully about a thing before you act.
+
+Sleep eight hours every night.
+
+Do everything that means keeping in good health.
+
+Don't worry. Worry kills more men than work does.
+
+Avoid liquors of all kinds.
+
+If you must smoke, smoke moderately.
+
+Shun discussion on two points,--religion and politics.
+
+Marry a good woman, and have your own home.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Young Man in Business, by Edward W. Bok
+
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