Chapter IV

A PERSONAL PROBLEM

How is it possible that the Modern Business Course and Service should be helpful alike to the grizzled executive and to the young man who has not yet made his mark in business? Why is it that in a great many organizations our list of subscribers begins with the president, includes practically all the officers and department heads, and ends with a selected group of men who as yet are in subordinate positions?

The answer is simple. The main problem of every business man is the problem of developing himself. It makes no difference how great or how small a man's position may be, the only way to enlarge his influence and his income is first to enlarge himself. The greatest business men in the country are quickest to accept and apply this truth.

It may sometimes appear as though a man becomes a bigger business man by being promoted

into a bigger job. The truth is just the reverse. The big job naturally gravitates to the well-trained, capable man. If the job proves too large for the man, it doesn't take long for it to shrivel until it becomes a perfect fit.

On the other hand, a man who really becomes bigger than his job simply grows out of it and into another; or he enlarges the job and its rewards to fit his measure.