Simon and schuster



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PRINCIPLE 1 
Don’t criticize, condemn or complain. 
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2
 
 
“THE BIG SECRET OF DEALING WITH PEOPLE.” 
 
There is only one way under high heaven to get anybody to do anything. Did you ever stop to think of 
that? Yes, just one way. And that is by making the other person 
want
to do it. 
Remember, there is no other way. 
Of course, you can make someone want to give you his watch by sticking a revolver in his ribs. You 
can make your employees give you cooperation—until your back is turned—by threatening to fire them. You 
can make a child do what you want it to do by a whip or a threat. But these crude methods have sharply 
undesirable repercussions. 
The only way I can get you to do anything is by giving you what you 
want

What do you 
want

Sigmund Freud said that everything you and I do springs from two motives: the sex urge and the desire 
to be great. 
John Dewey, one of America’s most profound philosophers, phrased it a bit differently. Dr. Dewey 
said that the deepest urge in human nature is “the desire to be important". Remember that phrase: “the desire to 
be important." It is significant. You are going to hear a lot about it in this book. 
What do you want? Not many things, but the few that you do wish, you crave with an insistence that 
will not be denied. Some of the things most people want include: 
1. Health and the preservation of life. 
2. Food. 
3. Sleep. 
4. Money and the things money will buy. 
5. Life in the hereafter. 
6. Sexual 
gratification. 
7. The well-being of our children. 
8. A feeling of importance. 
Almost all these wants are usually gratified—all except one. But there is one longing—almost as deep, 
almost as imperious, as the desire for food or sleep—which is seldom gratified. It is what Freud calls “the desire 
to be great.” It is what Dewey calls the “desire to be important”. 
Lincoln once began a letter saying, “Everybody likes a compliment.” William James said, “The 
deepest principle in human nature is the craving to be appreciated.” He didn’t speak, mind you, of the “wish” or 
the “desire” or the “longing” to be appreciated. He said the “craving” to be appreciated. 
Here is a gnawing and unfaltering human hunger, and the rare individual who honestly satisfies this 
heart hunger will hold people in the palm of his or her hand and “even the undertaker will be sorry when he 
dies.” 
The desire for a feeling of importance is one of the chief distinguishing differences between mankind 
and the animals. To illustrate: When I was a farm boy out in Missouri, my father bred fine Duroc-Jersey hogs 
and pedigreed white-faced cattle. We used to exhibit our hogs and white-faced cattle at the country fairs and 
livestock shows throughout the Middle West. We won first prizes by the score. My father pinned his blue 
ribbons on a sheet of white muslin, and when friends or visitors came to the house, he would get out the long 
sheet of muslin. He would hold one end and I would hold the other while he exhibited the blue ribbons. 
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The hogs didn’t care about the ribbons they had won. But Father did. These prizes gave him a feeling 
of importance. 
If our ancestors hadn’t had this flaming urge for a feeling of importance, civilization would have been 
impossible. Without it, we should have been just about like animals. 
It was this desire for a feeling of importance that led an uneducated, poverty-stricken grocery clerk to 
study some law books he found in the bottom of a barrel of household plunder that he had bought for fifty cents. 
You have probably heard of this grocery clerk. His name was Lincoln. 
It was this desire for a feeling of importance that inspired Dickens to write his immortal novels. This 
desire inspired Sir Christopher Wren to design his symphonies in stone. This desire made Rockefeller amass 
millions that he never spent! And this same desire made the richest family in your town build a house far too 
large for its requirements. 
This desire makes you want to wear the latest styles, drive the latest cars, and talk about your brilliant 
children. 
It is this desire that lures many boys and girls into joining gangs and engaging in criminal activities. 
The average young criminal, according to E. P. Mulrooney, one-time police commissioner of New York, is 
filled with ego, and his first request after arrest is for those lurid newspapers that make him out a hero. The 
disagreeable prospect of serving time seems remote so long as he can gloat over his likeness sharing space with 
pictures of sports figures, movie and TV stars and politicians. 
If you tell me how you get your feeling of importance, I’ll tell you what you are. That determines your 
character. That is the most significant thing about you. For example, John D. Rockefeller got his feeling of 
importance by giving money to erect a modern hospital in Peking, China, to care for millions of poor people 
whom he had never seen and never would see. Dillinger, on the other hand, got his feeling of importance by 
being a bandit, a bank robber and killer. When the FBI agents were hunting him, he dashed into a farmhouse up 
in Minnesota and said, “I’m Dillinger!” He was proud of the fact that he was Public Enemy Number One. “I’m 
not going to hurt you, but I’m Dillinger!” he said. 
Yes, the one significant difference between Dillinger and Rockefeller is how they got their feeling of 
importance. 
History sparkles with amusing examples of famous people struggling for a feeling of importance. Even 
George Washington wanted to be called “His Mightiness, the President of the United States”; and Columbus 
pleaded for the title “Admiral of the Ocean and Viceroy of India.” Catherine the Great refused to open letters 
that were not addressed to “Her Imperial Majesty”; and Mrs. Lincoln, in the White House, turned upon Mrs. 
Grant like a tigress and shouted, “How dare you be seated in my presence until I invite you!” 
Our millionaires helped finance Admiral Byrd’s expedition to the Antarctic in 1928 with the 
understanding that ranges of icy mountains would be named after them; and Victor Hugo aspired to have 
nothing less than the city of Paris renamed in his honor. Even Shakespeare, mightiest of the mighty, tried to add 
luster to his name by procuring a coat of arms for his family. 
People sometimes became invalids in order to win sympathy and attention, and get a feeling of 
importance. For example, take Mrs. McKinley. She got a feeling of importance by forcing her husband, the 
President of the United States, to neglect important affairs of state while he reclined on the bed beside her for 
hours at a time, his arm about her, soothing her to sleep. She fed her gnawing desire for attention by insisting 
that he remain with her while she was having her teeth fixed, and once created a stormy scene when he had to 
leave her alone with the dentist while he kept an appointment with John Hay, his secretary of state. 
The writer Mary Roberts Rinehart once told me of a bright, vigorous young woman who became an 
invalid in order to get a feeling of importance. “One day,” said Mrs. Rinehart, “this woman had been obliged to 
face something, her age perhaps. The lonely years were stretching ahead and there was little left for her to 
anticipate. 
“She took to her bed; and for ten years her old mother traveled to the third floor and back, carrying 
trays, nursing her. Then one day the old mother, weary with service, lay down and died. For some weeks, the 
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invalid languished; then she got up, put on her clothing, and resumed living again.” 
Some authorities declare that people may actually go insane in order to find, in the dreamland of 
insanity, the feeling of importance that has been denied them in the harsh world of reality. There are more 
patients suffering from mental diseases in the United States than from all other diseases combined. 
What is the cause of insanity? 
Nobody can answer such a sweeping question, but we know that certain diseases, such as syphilis, 
break down and destroy the brain cells and result in insanity. In fact, about one-half of all mental diseases can 
be attributed to such physical causes as brain lesions, alcohol, toxins and injuries. But the other half—and this is 
the appalling part of the story—the other half of the people who go insane apparently have nothing organically 
wrong with their brain cells. In post-mortem examinations, when their brain tissues are studied under the 
highest-powered microscopes, these tissues are found to be apparently just as healthy as yours and mine. 
Why do these people go insane? 
I put that question to the head physician of one of our most important psychiatric hospitals. This 
doctor, who has received the highest honors and the most coveted awards for his knowledge of this subject, told 
me frankly that he didn’t know why people went insane. Nobody knows for sure But he did say that many 
people who go insane find in insanity a feeling of importance that they were unable to achieve in the world of 
reality. Then he told me this story: 
"I have a patient right now whose marriage proved to be a tragedy. She wanted love, sexual 
gratification, children and social prestige, but life blasted all her hopes. Her husband didn’t love her. He refused 
even to eat with her and forced her to serve his meals in his room upstairs. She had no children, no social 
standing. She went insane; and, in her imagination, she divorced her husband and resumed her maiden name. 
She now believes she has married into English aristocracy, and she insists on being called Lady Smith. 
“And as for children, she imagines now that she has had a new child every night. Each time I call on 
her she says, ‘Doctor, I had a baby last night.’” 
Life once wrecked all her dream ships on the sharp rocks of reality; but in the sunny, fantasy isles of 
insanity, all her barkentines race into port with canvas billowing and winds singing through the masts. 
“Tragic? Oh, I don’t know. Her physician said to me, ‘If I could stretch out my hand and restore her 
sanity, I wouldn’t do it. She’s much happier as she is.’” 
If some people are so hungry for a feeling of importance that they actually go insane to get it, imagine 
what miracle you and I can achieve by giving people honest appreciation this side of insanity. 
One of the first people in American business to be paid a salary of over a million dollars a year (when 
there was no income tax and a person earning fifty dollars a week was considered well-off) was Charles 
Schwab, who had been picked by Andrew Carnegie to become the first president of the newly formed United 
States Steel Company in 1921, when he was only thirty-eight years old (Schwab later left U.S. Steel to take over 
the then-troubled Bethlehem Steel Company, and he rebuilt it into one of the most profitable companies in 
America). 
Why did Andrew Carnegie pay a million dollars a year, or more than three thousand dollars a day, to 
Charles Schwab? Why? Because Schwab was a genius? No. Because he knew more about the manufacture of 
steel than other people? Nonsense. Charles Schwab told me himself that he had many men working for him who 
knew more about the manufacture of steel than he did. 
Schwab says that he was paid this salary largely because of his ability to deal with people. I asked him 
how he did it. Here is his secret set down in his own words—words that ought to be cast in eternal bronze and 
hung in every home and school, every shop and office in the land—words that children ought to memorize 
instead of wasting their time memorizing the conjugation of Latin verbs or the amount of the annual rainfall in 
Brazil—words that will all but transform your life and mine if we will only live them: 
“I consider my ability to arouse enthusiasm among my people,” said Schwab, “the greatest asset I 
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possess, and the way to develop the best that is in a person is by appreciation and encouragement. 
“There is nothing else that so kills the ambitions of a person as criticisms from superiors. I never 
criticize anyone. I believe in giving a person incentive to work. So I am anxious to praise but loath to find fault. 
If I like anything, 

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