James Cash Penney quotes:

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  • The art of effective listening is essential to clear communication, and clear communication is necessary to management success.

  • Honor bespeaks worth. Confidence begets trust. Service brings satisfaction. Cooperation proves the quality of leadership.

  • I cannot remember a time when the Golden Rule was not my motto and precept, the torch that guided my footsteps.

  • The keystone of successful business is cooperation. Friction retards progress.

  • Growth is never by mere chance; it is the result of forces working together.

  • The Golden Rule finds no limit of application in business.

  • The five separate fingers are five independent units. Close them and the fist multiplies strength. This is organization.

  • Determine to do some thinking for yourself. Don't live entirely upon the thoughts of others. Don't be an automaton.

  • I do not believe in excuses. I believe in hard work as the prime solvent of life's problems.

  • The best teamwork comes from men who are working independently toward one goal in unison.

  • A store's best advertisement is the service its goods render, for upon such service rest the future, the good-will, of an organization.

  • I believe in trusting men, not only once but twice - in giving a failure another chance.

  • The well-satisfied customer will bring the repeat sale that counts.

  • The problem with the bronco is to get on and stay on. This is the problem with the Golden Rule-to understand and apply

  • A merchant who approaches business with the idea of serving the public well has nothing to fear from the competition.

  • I never trust an executive who tends to pass the buck. Nor would I want to deal with him as a customer or a supplier.

  • No business can succeed in any great degree without being properly organized.

  • Salesmanship, too, is an art; the perfection of its technique requires study and practice.

  • Luck is always the last refuge of laziness and incompetence.

  • Clock watchers never seem to be having a good time.

  • Courteous treatment will make a customer a walking advertisement.

  • Men are not great or small because of their material possessions. They are great or small because of what they are.

  • It is the service we are not obliged to give that people value most.

  • We get real results only in proportion to the real values we give.

  • Exchange ideas frequently.

  • There's no better friend to any merchant than a fair competitor.

  • As a rule, we find what we look for; we achieve what we get ready for.

  • Every man must decide for himself whether he shall master his world or be mastered by it.

  • My definition of an executive's job is brief and to the point. It is simply this: Getting things done through other people.

  • Change is vital, improvement the logical form of change.

  • How can we expect our children to know and experience the joy of giving unless we teach them that the greater pleasure in life lies in the art of giving rather than receiving.

  • No man can climb the ladder of success without first placing his foot on the bottom rung.

  • No matter what his position or experience in life, there is in everyone more latent than developed ability; far more unused than used power.

  • No serious-minded man should have time for the mediocre in any phase of his living.

  • It was always my practice to train salespeople under my direct supervision, and to treat children with the utmost consideration.

  • In setting up a business under the name and meaning of the Golden Rule, I was publicly binding myself, in my business relations, to a principle which had been a real and intimate part of my family upbringing. Our idea was to make money and build business through serving the community with fair dealing and honest value.

  • Too many would-be executives are slaves of routine.

  • Responsibilities are given to him on whom trust rests. Responsibility is always a sign of trust.

  • Success cannot come from standstill men. Methods change and men must change with them.

  • Theory is splendid but until put into practice, it is valueless.

  • I believe a man is better anchored who has a belief in the Supreme Being.

  • Salesmanship is limitless. Our very living is selling. We are all salespeople.

  • Selling is our No. 1 job. Never get away from selling a lot of merchandise personally. The more you sell the more you learn.

  • The best of merchandise will go back to the shelf unless handled by a conscientious, tactful salesman.

  • The thought in my mind was that I must be a good merchant. If I were a good merchant, the rest would probably take care of itself.

  • The men who have furnished me with my greatest inspiration have not been men of wealth, but men of deeds.

  • No company can afford not to move forward. It may be at the top of the heap today but at the bottom of the heap tomorrow, if it doesn't.

  • In every man s life there lies latent energy. There is, however, a spark that, if kindled, will set the whole being afire, and he will become a human dynamo, capable of accomplishing almost anything to which he aspires.

  • It is always the start that requires the greatest effort.

  • The greatest teacher I know is the job itself.

  • In retailing, the formula happens to be a basic liking for human beings, plus integrity, plus industry, plus the ability to see the other fellow's point of view.

  • The disciplined are free.

  • The friendly smile, the word of greeting, are certainly something fleeting and seemingly insubstantial. You can't take them with you. But they work for good beyond your power to measure their influence. It is the service we are not obliged to give that people value most.

  • They serve best who give most of themselves. Self is forgotten by the one who serves, for such a one rejoices to see success coming to others through his or her efforts.

  • The best way to stop a bad habit is never to begin it.

  • Honor bespeaks worth Confidence begets trust.

  • I was long brought up to think that it was nothing short of a crime to miss a sale.

  • The public is not greatly interested in saving a little money on a purchase at the expense of service.

  • Intelligence is the effort to do the best you can at your particular job; the quality that gives dignity to that job, whether it happens to be scrubbing a floor or running a corporation.

  • We can serve our customers well only if our buying jobs are right. You cannot sell if you haven't ordered wanted goods into your store.

  • Every great business is built on friendship.

  • I will have no man work for me who has not the capacity to become a partner.

  • Our very living is selling. We are all salespeople.

  • Business is no longer a matter of profits alone. Profits must come through public confidence, and public confidence is given to any merchant in proportion to the service which he gives to the public.

  • Success in business does not depend upon genius. Any young man of ordinary intelligence who is normally sound and not afraid to work should succeed in spite of obstacles and handicaps if he plays the game fairly and keeps everlastingly at it.

  • No company can afford not to move forward. It may be at the top of the heap today but at the bottom of the heap tomorrow, if it doesn't

  • Selling is our No. 1 job. Never get away from selling a lot of merchandise personally. The more you sell the more you learn

  • There has never been a time when a career in the Penney Company was not a challenge that brought out the best in a man.

  • Responsibility is always a sign of trust.

  • Do not primarily train men to work. Train them to serve willingly and intelligently.

  • I learned that all things come to those who wait-provided they hustle while they wait.

  • Success will always be measured by the extent to which we serve the buying public.

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