DEVELOPMENT BY WILL-POWER

his second lesson in finance is to learn how to
keep his money and make it earn more. He
must study how to increase his net profits.
This is more a matter of efficiency than will-
power.
(3) SxkiLL. We have now learned that there
is practically no such thing as an ‘‘ unskilled ”’
job. No matter how simple a job is, there is
one best way to do it. There is one right way
to shovel coal, to lay bricks, to wrap a parcel,
to greet a customer, and so on.
Now that so many specialists are springing
up, business is evolving into hundreds of pro-
fessions. The day of the amateur is done. The
old-fashioned guess-work is being driven out
by experts.
To-day, a man of large affairs must not only
have the skill that his job requires, he must
surround himself with specialists—with a great
variety of skills.
Managing a factory has become a profession.
A Works Manager to-day must be more than
a glorified Foreman. He requires fully as much
skill as an architect or a civil engineer.
Salesmanship, too, has become a profession.
It has its principles and its methods. A
thousand books have been written on it. In

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