A king decided to settle accounts with his servants. One servant owed him a large sum, but could not pay it. The king ordered that the servant and his entire family be sold to pay the debt.
The servant begged for patience and promised to repay the debt in full. At this, the king was moved to compassion and forgave the debt.
The servant left and happened to run into a fellow-servant who owed him a much smaller amount of money. He became violent and demanded immediate payment. The follow-servant begged for patience and promised to repay the debt in full. Unlike the king, however, the servant was not forgiving. He had his fellow-servant thrown into prison.
When the king found out what had happened, he was very angry. He had the unforgiving servant arrested, thrown into prison, and tortured until the original debt was repaid.
So what has all of this to do with modern business?
Quite a bit, actually. The core lesson here is the golden rule: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. Perhaps the best example is to be found around business policies and practices.
Think about this:
Your business makes a customer service cock up. Your customer is angry and frustrated and wants good customer service now. Of course you want to give good customer service. So you bend over backwards to do the right thing. Ideally, your customer will see that you're trying to help and will focus on a mutually-acceptable solution.
At this moment, you are also frustrated, and you need a little understanding from your customer. Do you say what you do and do what you say. Do you expect others to do that and get angry when they don’t?
Do you communicate clearly and often? Do you get angry when others don’t?
Now turn it around. Let's say you have a complaint. When you're angry and frustrated, you want good customer service. Unfortunately, large businesses seem incapable of giving good customer service. Telephone loops, hand-offs, excuses, and no one seems to have the job of caring about your business. You get angrier and more frustrated.
How do you act? Do you act the way you want your customers to act? Or do you yell and scream and generally abuse the customer service rep?
Another example might be in the area of employee-manager relations. Do you treat your staff the way you want to be treated by your manager?
Of course there are many other areas to apply this lesson. In general, think about the areas where you ask a favour or courtesy from others. Do you extend that favour or courtesy when asked?
Some areas of life are just plain frustrating. Perhaps the best we can hope for is balance: If we practice patience and compassion with those we deal with, perhaps we can improve the changes that they'll do the same for us.
And don't beat yourself up over this. There will always be another opportunity to practice the behaviour of treating other people with compassion and respect. So, if you blow your top today, just take note and work on being more mindful next time
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