Many years ago a senior executive of the then Standard Oil Company made a wrong
decision that cost the company more than $ 2 million. John D Rockefeller was then
running the firm.
On the day the news leaked out most of the executives of the company were finding
various ingenious ways of avoiding Mr Rockefeller; lest his wrath descend on their
heads.
There was one exception, however; he was Edward T Bedford, a partner in the company.
Bedford was scheduled to see Rockefeller that day and he kept the appointment, even
though he was prepared to listen to a long harangue against the man who made the
error in judgment.
When he entered the office the powerful head of the gigantic Standard Oil empire was
bent over his desk busily writing with a pencil on a pad of paper. Bedford stood
silently, not wishing to interrupt. After a few minutes Rockefeller looked up.
"Oh, it's you, Bedford," he said calmly. "I suppose you've heard about our loss?"
Bedford said that he had.
"I've been thinking it over," Rockefeller said, "and before I ask the man in to
discuss the matter, I've been making some notes."
Bedford later told the story this way: "Across the top of the
page was written, 'Points in favour of Mr _______.' There followed a long list of
the man's virtues, including a brief description of how he had helped the company
make the right decision on three separate occasions that had earned many times the
cost of his recent error.”
"I never forgot that lesson. In later years, whenever I was tempted to rip into
anyone, I forced myself first to sit down and thoughtfully compile as long a list of
good points as I possibly could. Invariably, by the time I finished my inventory, I
would see the matter in its true perspective and keep my temper under control.”
“There is no telling how many times this habit has prevented me from committing one
of the costliest mistakes any executive can make -- losing his temper.”
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