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This Is A New Release Of The Original 1920 Edition.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1920 Edition.
1920. Contents: thinking beyond your job; how men are appraised;
seizing your opportunities; college man in business; what your
employer expects; my twenty thousand partners; men I have worked
with; and woman's part in man's success.
1920. Contents: thinking beyond your job; how men are appraised;
seizing your opportunities; college man in business; what your
employer expects; my twenty thousand partners; men I have worked
with; and woman's part in man's success.
1920. Contents: thinking beyond your job; how men are appraised;
seizing your opportunities; college man in business; what your
employer expects; my twenty thousand partners; men I have worked
with; and woman's part in man's success.
This candid essay by one of the nation's leading businessmen
originally appeared in American Magazine in November 1916. In it,
Charles Schwab, one-time president of Carnegie Steel, U.S. Steel,
and Bethlehem Steel, offered his secrets for success. Surprisingly,
he didn't believe that genius was required -- he believed in hard
work. "For thirty-six years I have been moving among workingmen in
what is now the biggest branch of American industry, the steel
business," Schwab wrote. "In that time it has been my good fortune
to watch most of the present leaders rise from the ranks, ascend
step by step to places of power. These men, I am convinced, are not
natural prodigies. They won out by using normal brains to think
beyond their manifest daily duty." Thanks to his appreciation of
devoted workers, Schwab placed the ability to succeed in any
employee's hands. More of Schwab's surprising insights are
contained in this fascinating look at the path to success, written
by one who traveled it. CHARLES M. SCHWAB (1862-1939) joined
Carnegie Steel in 1879 and became president when he was 35, working
closely with Andrew Carnegie. He sold the company to J.P. Morgan,
and became president of Morgan's new corporation, U.S. Steel.
Schwab later ran Bethlehem Steel, a company known for its
efficiency and competitiveness. During World War I, Schwab became
Director-General of the Emergency Fleet Corporation for the U.S.
government.
Contents: thinking beyond your job; how men are appraised; seizing
your opportunities; college man in business; what your employer
expects; my twenty thousand partners; men I have worked with; and
woman's part in man's success.
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