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The Story
Behind
The Four-Way
Test
By Darrell Thompson
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More
than 60 years ago, in the midst of the Great Depression,
a U.S. Rotarian devised a simple, four-part ethical
guideline that helped him rescue a beleaguered business.
The statement and the principles it embodied also helped
many others find their own ethical compass. Soon
embraced and popularized by Rotary International, The
Four-Way Test today stands as one of the organization's
hallmarks. It may very well be one of the most famous
statements of our century.
Herbert J.
Taylor, author of the Test, was a mover, a doer, a
consummate salesman and a leader of men. He was a man of
action, faith and high moral principle. Born in
Michigan, USA, in 1893, he worked his way through
Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois.
After
graduation, Herb went to France on a mission for the
YMCA and the British Army welfare service and served in
the U.S. Navy Supply Corps in World War I. In 1919, he
married Gloria Forbrich, and the couple set up
housekeeping in Oklahoma, USA, where he worked for the
Sinclair Oil Company. After a year, he resigned and went
into insurance, real estate and oil lease brokerage.
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With some
prosperous years behind him, Herb returned to Chicago,
Illinois, in 1925 and began a swift rise within the
Jewel Tea Company. He soon joined the Rotary Club of
Chicago. In line for the presidency of Jewel in 1932,
Herb was asked to help revive the near-bankrupt Club
Aluminum Company of Chicago. The cookware manufacturing
company owed $400,000 more than its total assets and was
barely staying afloat. Herb responded to the challenge
and decided to cast his lot with this troubled firm. He
resigned from Jewel Tea, taking an 80 percent pay cut to
become president of Club Aluminum. He even invested
$6,100 of his own money in the company to give it some
operating capital.
Looking for a way to resuscitate the company and caught
in the Depression's doldrums, Herb, deeply religious,
prayed for inspiration to craft a short measuring stick
of ethics for the staff to use.
As he thought about an ethical guideline for the
company, he first wrote a statement of about 100 words
but decided that it was too long. He continued to work,
reducing it to seven points. In fact, The Four-Way Test
was once a Seven-Way Test. It was still too long, and he
finally reduced it to the four searching questions that
comprise the Test today.
Next, he checked the statement with his four department
heads: a Roman Catholic, a Christian Scientist, an
Orthodox Jew and a Presbyterian. They all agreed that
the Test's principles not only coincided with their
religious beliefs, but also provided an exemplary guide
for personal and business life.
And so, "The Four-Way Test of the things we think, say
or do" was born:
Is
it the TRUTH?
Is it FAIR to all Concerned?
Will it build GOODWILL and BETTER FRIENDSHIPS?
Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned?
Profound in
its simplicity, the Test became the basis for decisions
large and small at Club Aluminum.
But any test must be put to the test. Would it work in
the real world? Could people in business really live by
its precepts? One lawyer told Herb: "If I followed the
Test explicitly, I would starve to death. Where business
is concerned, I think The Four-Way Test is absolutely
impractical."
The attorney's concerns were understandable. Any ethical
system that calls for living the truth and measuring
actions on the basis of benefits to others is demanding.
Such a test can stir bitter conflict for those who try
to balance integrity and ambition. Sizzling debates have
been held in various parts of the world on its
practicality as a way of living. There are always some
serious-minded Rotarians, not to mention skeptics and
negative thinkers, who view The Four-Way Test as a
simplistic philosophy of dubious worth, contradictory
meaning and unrealistic aims. The Test calls for
thoughtful examination of one's motives and goals. This
emphasis on truth, fairness and consideration provide a
moral diet so rich that it gives some people "ethical
indigestion."
But at Club Aluminum in the 1930s, everything was
measured against The Four-Way Test. First, the staff
applied it to advertising. Words like "better," "best,"
"greatest" or "finest" were dropped from ads and
replaced by factual descriptions of the product.
Negative comments about competitors were removed from
advertising and company literature.
The Test gradually became a guide for every aspect of
the business, creating a climate of trust and goodwill
among dealers, customers and employees. It became part
of the corporate culture, and eventually helped improve
Club Aluminum's reputation and finances.
One day, the sales manager announced a possible order
for 50,000 utensils. Sales were low and the company was
still struggling at the bankruptcy level. The senior
managers certainly needed and wanted that sale, but
there was a hitch. The sales manager learned that the
potential customer intended to sell the products at
cut-rate prices. "That wouldn't be fair to our regular
dealers who have been advertising and promoting our
product consistently," he said. In one of the toughest
decisions the company made that year, the order was
turned down. There was no question this transaction
would have made a mockery out of The Four-Way Test the
company professed to live by.
By 1937, Club Aluminum's indebtedness was paid off and
during the next 15 years, the firm distributed more than
$1 million in dividends to its stockholders. Its net
worth climbed to more than $2 million.
Too idealistic for the real world? The Four-Way Test was
born in the rough and tumble world of business, and put
to the acid test of experience in one of the toughest
times that the business community has ever known. It
survived in the arena of practical commerce.
In 1942, Richard Vernor of Chicago, then a director of
Rotary International, suggested that Rotary adopt the
Test. The R.I. Board approved his proposal in January
1943 and made The Four-Way Test a component of the
Vocational Service program, although today it is
considered a vital element in all four Avenues of
Service.
Herb Taylor transferred the copyright to Rotary
International when he served as R.I. president in
1954-55, during the organization's golden anniversary.
Today, more than six decades since its creation, has the
Test lost its usefulness in modern society, as some
critics maintain? Is it sophisticated enough to guide
business and professional men and women in these
fast-paced times?
Is it the TRUTH? There is a timelessness in truth
that is unchangeable. Truth cannot exist without
justice.
Is it FAIR to all concerned? The substitution of
fairness for the harsh principles of doing business at
arm's length has improved rather than hurt business
relationships.
Will it build GOODWILL and BETTER FRIENDSHIPS? Man is
by nature a cooperative creature and it is his natural
instinct to express love.
Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned? This question
eliminates the dog-eat-dog principle of ruthless
competition and substitutes the idea of constructive and
creative competition.
The Four-Way Test is international, transcending
national boundaries and language barriers. It knows no
politics, dogma or creed. More than a code of ethics, it
has all the ingredients for a successful life in every
way. It can and will work in today's society.
The final test is in the doing. William James, the noted
psychologist, once said, "The ultimate test of what a
truth means is the conduct it dictates or inspires." At
the heart of Rotary today is The Four-Way Test — a call
to moral excellence. Human beings can grow together.
Modern business can be honest and trustworthy. People
can learn to believe in one another. At the 1977 R.I.
Convention, James S. Fish of the U.S. Better Business
Bureaus said, "To endure, the competitive enterprise
system must be practiced within the framework of a
strict moral code. Indeed, the whole fabric of the
capitalistic system rests to a large degree on trust . .
. on the confidence that businessmen and women will deal
fairly and honestly, not only with each other, but also
with the general public, with the consumer, the
stockholder and the employee."
Few things are needed more in our society than moral
integrity. The Four-Way Test will guide those who dare
to use it for worthy objectives: choosing, winning, and
keeping friends; getting along well with others;
ensuring a happy home life; developing high ethical and
moral standards; becoming successful in a chosen
business or profession; and becoming a better citizen
and better example for the next generation.
Eloquently simple, stunning in its power, undeniable in
its results, The Four-Way Test offers a fresh and
positive vision in the midst of a world full of tension,
confusion and uncertainty.
Darrell Thompson is a member
of the Rotary Club of Morro Bay, California. This
article is adapted from a speech given by Darrell, with
contributions from Rotarians Douglas W. Vincent of
Woodstock-Oxford, Ontario, Canada, and Myron Taylor.

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