CHAPTER IV
LOYALTY
AS A MEANS OF INCREASING HUMAN EFFICIENCY Increasing Human Efficiency in Business: A Contribution to the Psychology of Business | ||
Personal Relationship with Workers as Basis for creating Loyalty
The effectiveness of human sympathy in creating loyalty is most apparent in one-man businesses where the head of the house is in personal contact with all or many of his employees. This personal touch, however, is not necessarily limited to the small organization. Many men have employed thousands and secured it. Others have succeeded in impressing their personalities, and demonstrating their sympathy upon large forces, though their actual relations were with a few. The impression made upon these and the loyalty created in them were sufficient to permeate and influence the entire body. Potter Palmer, the elder Armour, Marshall Field, and Andrew Carnegie were among the hundreds of captains who made acquaintance with the men in the ranks the cornerstone on which they raised their trade or industrial citadels.
When the size of the organization precludes personal contact, or when conditions remove
Many successful merchants and manufacturers, however, disdain agents and intermediaries in this relation and are always accessible
Even though human sympathy may well be regarded as the most important consideration in increasing loyalty, it is not sufficient in and of itself. The most patriotic citizens are those who have, served the state. They are made loyal by the very act of service. They have assumed the responsibility of promoting the welfare of the state, and their patriotism is thereby stimulated and given concrete outlet. A paternalistic government in which the citizens had every right but no responsibility would develop beggars rather than patriots.
Similarly in a business house ideally organized to create loyalty, each employee not only feels that his rights are protected, but also feels a degree of responsibility for the success and for the good name of the house. He feels that his task or process is an essential
CHAPTER IV
LOYALTY
AS A MEANS OF INCREASING HUMAN EFFICIENCY Increasing Human Efficiency in Business: A Contribution to the Psychology of Business | ||