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[Sarkari-Naukri] Harish Sati, Tact Wins Many Friends

Tact wins many friends

Tact is a delicate quality. It is difficult to define and hard to cultivate, but it is indispensable to one who wishes to get on in the world soon and smoothly. Talent is no match for tact. We see its failure everywhere. In the race of life, commonsense has the right of way.

The day has gone when a man could boast of his superiority. These are days of cooperation and interdependence. We have fellow-workers. We are all in groups. We are held up or pulled down by public opinion. We stand by what other people think of us.

When we use the word "tact" we do not mean strategy.  Do not mean trickiness or deceit. We know that it is bad policy to fool people. As Abraham Lincoln once said, "you can fool all the people some of the time, and some of people all of the time."

Every man is found out sooner or later for what he is. There are sharp eyes watching every man. Hardly ever does a tricky unreliable man make permanent success.

By tact we mean commonsense and courtesy as applied to pleasing or influencing of other people. In the upper layer of business life we do not fool people nor lay traps for them. We win them by our manner and by methods which they approve. When sympathy is added to tact, tact is not a mere matter of manner. It is appreciated as mark of sincerity.

We have learned much in the pool of hard knocks. Strikes and lockouts and bank and lawsuits and loss of trade have taught us much. Why are we now interested in the art of handling people? For centuries we mishandled them. That is the reason.

We are now trying to prevent clashes and conflicts. We are trying to secure goodwill from employees as well as all sections of society. We are trying to reduce friction. We have to appreciate tact as a business-building force, as also as a lubricant of social, personal relationships.
We have learned that it is foolish and costly to thrust our dislikes down other people's throats. We are sure now that our plans are more likely to be carried out if we make people to believe in them. We are learning that a man can win more friends if he does not wear armour and carry a club in his hand.

This is to take a kindly interest in the man whom we are going to deal with. This has a magical effect. Just to consider his point of view makes all the difference between failure and success. A tactful man, when he is talking to an employee or a friend, notices the effect of his words. He tries to secure attention. He observes the effect of his words to the man. He realises that his purpose is to influence the man in his favour, not to antagonise him.

It is not easy for a busy man, overwhelmed with the burden of his own affairs, to give a cordial greeting to visitors who come to his office. In his heart, he regards them as intruders, trespassing upon his time. But he must take himself in hand and be polite. At least, he must be friendly.

It was said of one politician: "The trouble with him is that he does not know how to shake hands."
This is a serious handicap to any one as well as to a politician. Many men spoil an interview by appearing bored or by giving a clumsy, non-cordial greeting to a visitor.

To offer a limp hand indifferently to a man is like throwing a splash of cold water on him. The first five seconds of greeting make or mar any meeting.

Tact is necessary for every man is interested in himself. There are few exceptions to this rule. Naturally, a man is more interested in himself than in anyone else. To interest him, you must talk first about his affairs, not about your own. No one is ever bored or hostile if you talk to him about himself.

Talk to a competent man about what he is trying to do. An inventor is interested in what he is trying to invent, and very likely he has lost interest in his earlier inventions. It is wise to talk to a man about his problem, whatever it is. That is what he is thinking about.

Questions are always effective. Almost any man will come out of his shell if you ask him his opinion on a subject that concerns him. Make him a listener and he thinks you are a bore. Ask him questions until he begins to ask you questions. Then you may be sure he is interested.
T.E. Lawrence became the "uncrowned King of Arabia" by learning the Arabic language, by dressing and living like an Arab, by listening to the Arab chiefs, by being intensely interested in their affairs and by helping them to overcome their enemies, the Turks. He became for a time an Arab and won the loyalty of the Arab chiefs to himself.

A tactful managing director gives a complainant a chance to get it off his chest. He lets the man tell him about the grievance. He listens.

A grievance is like poison and hearing is like a cure. Then, if the man has been wronged, he can be given justice. And if he has been mistaken, he will be willing to be shown his error.

A memory for names and faces is great help to any man. It prevents us from treating as a stranger a man whom we have been before. It is tactless to ask a busy man "Do you remember me?" It is very likely that he does not and he is put in an uncomfortable position.

The more tactful way would be to say: "I had the pleasure of seeing you four years ago and I remember quite distinctly what you said to me."

We know that in handling people, there is a magical effect in remembering what they like. If a shop assistant says, "I know you prefer grey," the lady is pleased.

If a waiter says, "We have your favourite dish today", the customer is pleased. It is an effective touch of courtesy to remember the wishes and opinions of others.

Tact is a subtle discrimination of not saying what you are itching to say, as it is on your tongue-tip. Say what the situation demands, not what your bile suggests.


--
with warm regards

Harish Sati
Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU)
Maidan Garhi, New Delhi-110068

(M) + 91 - 9990646343 | (E-mail) Harish.sati@gmail.com



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Sonia Choudhary

Author & Editor

Has laoreet percipitur ad. Vide interesset in mei, no his legimus verterem. Et nostrum imperdiet appellantur usu, mnesarchum referrentur id vim.

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