God's World Whole Life Stewardship - Reflections

THE 4-WAY TEST
By Herbert J. Taylor

What is the 4-Way Test?
Why, just four short questions:

1. Is it the Truth?

2. Is it Fair to all concerned?

3. Will it build Goodwill and Better Friendships?

4. Will it be Beneficial to all concerned?

Those 24 words have now been translated into more than 100 languages! So what is it really , and why did it have such a global impact?

The 4-Way Test is a widely-used ethics measurement tool. In business, civic life, and at home, The 4-Way test speaks its practicality. It helps individuals to think beyond immediate desires, to consider the consequences of actions and not focus on what is merely expedient. The 4-Way Test acts as a lubricant that smoothes personal relationships by basing them on truth and consideration of others, as it creates an atmosphere and attitude in which people can better relate and share ideas.

The History of The 4-Way Test
The 4-Way Test was conceived by Herbert J. Taylor as a result of his long career in business and his deep Christian faith. It was particularly shaped by his memorization of Jesus’ Sermon the Mount (Matthew 5-7). Mr. Taylor believed that in right there is might. He believed that ethical conduct played an important role in relationships and felt that if a company’s leadership and its employees were encouraged to think right, they would act right. What was needed was some sort of ethical code or yardstick which they could easily memorize and apply to what they thought, said, or did, in relationships with others. He applied The 4-Way Test to the operation of his company with remarkable results and subsequently shared it with others.

The story is told best by Herbert J. Taylor in this description of how the Test came into existence and what affect it had.

"Back in 1932 I was assigned, by the creditors of the Club Aluminum Products Company, the task of saving the company from being closed out as a bankrupt organization.

"The company was a distributor of cookware and other household items. We found that the company owed its creditors more than $400,000 in excess of its total assets. It was bankrupt but still alive.

"At that time we borrowed $6,100 from a Chicago bank to give us a little cash on which to operate.

"While we had a good product, our competitors also had fine cookware with well-advertised brand names. Our company had some fine people working for it, but our competitors also had the same. Our competitors were naturally in much stronger financial condition than we were.

"With tremendous obstacles and handicaps facing us, we felt that we must develop something in our organization which our competitors would not have in equal amount. We decided that it should be the character, dependability, and service mindedness of our personnel.

"We determined, first, to be very careful in the selection of our personnel and, second, to help them become better men and women as they progressed with our company.

"We believed that 'In right there is might,' and we determined to do our best to always be right.

"Our industry, as was true of scores of other industries, had a code of ethics— but the code was long, almost impossible to memorize and therefore impractical. We felt that we needed a simple measuring stick of ethics which everyone in the company could quickly memorize. We also believed that the proposed test should not tell our people what they must do, but ask them questions which would make it possible for them to find out whether their proposed plans, policies, statements, or actions were right or wrong.

"We had looked in available literature for such a short measuring stick of ethics but could not find a satisfactory one. One day in July 1932, I decided to pray about the matter. That morning I leaned over my desk and asked God to give us a simple guide to help us think, speak and do that which was right. I immediately picked up a white card and wrote out:

The 4-Way Test of the things we think, say, or do as follows:

1. Is it the Truth?

2. Is it Fair to all concerned?

3. Will it build Goodwill and Better Friendships?

4. Will it be Beneficial to all concerned?

"I placed the little test under the glass of my desk and determined to try it out for a few days before talking to anyone else in the company about it. I had a very discouraging experience. I almost threw it into the wastepaper basket the first day when I checked everything that passed over my desk with the first question, 'Is it the truth?' I never realized before how far I often was from the truth and how many untruths appeared in our company's literature, letters, and advertising.

"After about 60 days of faithful, constant effort on my part to live up to The 4-Way Test I was thoroughly sold on its great worth and at the same time greatly humiliated, and at times, discouraged with my own performance as president of the company. I had, however, made sufficient progress in living up to The 4-Way Test to feel qualified to talk to some of my associates about it.

"I discussed it with my four department heads. You may be interested in knowing the religious faiths of these four men. One was a Roman Catholic, the second a Christian Scientist, the third an Orthodox Jew, and the fourth a Presbyterian.

"I asked each man whether or not there was anything in The 4-Way Test which was contrary to the doctrines and ideals of his particular faith. They all four agreed that truth, justice, friendliness, and helpfulness not only coincided with their religious ideals, but that if constantly applied in business they should result in greater success and progress.

"These four men agreed to use The 4-Way Test in checking proposed plans, policies, statements, and advertising of the company. Later, all employees were asked to memorize and use The 4-Way Test in their relations with others.

"The checking of advertising copy against The 4-Way Test resulted in the elimination of statements, the truth of which could not be proved. All superlatives such as the words better, best, greatest, and finest disappeared from our advertisements. As a result, the public gradually placed more confidence in what we stated in our advertisements and bought more of our products.

"The constant use of The 4-Way Test caused us to change our policies covering relations with competitors. We eliminated all adverse or detrimental comments on our competitors' products from our advertisements and literature.

"When we found an opportunity to speak well of our competitors, we did so. Thus we gained the confidence and friendship of our competitors.

"The application of The 4-Way Test to our relations with our own personnel and that of our suppliers and customers helped us to win their friendship and goodwill. We have learned that the friendship and confidence of those with whom we associate is essential to permanent success in business.

"Through over twenty years of sincere effort on the part of our personnel, we have been making progress toward reaching the ideals expressed in The 4-Way Test. We have been rewarded with a steady increase in sales, profits, and earnings of our personnel. From a bankrupt condition in 1932 our company within a period of some twenty years had paid its debts in full, had paid its stockholders over one million dollars in dividends, and had a value of over two million dollars. All these rewards have come from a cash investment of only $6,100, The 4-Way Test, and some good hard-working people who have faith in God and high ideals.

"Intangible dividends from the use of The 4-Way Test have been even greater than the financial ones. We have enjoyed a constant increase in the goodwill, friendship and confidence of our customers, our competitors, and the public-and what is even more valuable, a great improvement in the moral character of our own personnel.

"We have found that you cannot apply The 4-Way Test continuously to all your relations with others eight hours each day in business without getting into the habit of doing it in your home, social, and community life. You thus become a better father, a better friend, and a better citizen."

Who Uses the 4-Way Test?
Over the years, The 4-Way Test has been the cornerstone of labor contracts, adopted by state governments such as the Florida legislature in 1980; promoted in community-wide campaigns:  Daytona Beach, FL; Dallas, TX; Pittsburgh, PA; Long Beach, CA; Grosse Point, MI; Oshkosh, WI; Memphis, TN; and introduced into middle school to college level classrooms throughout the USA and abroad. By 1990, the 4-Way Test was used by and on the desks of approximately 800,000 business and community leaders in 51 countries around the world. It has been placed on monuments and bill-boards. It is on the walls of schools, libraries, factories and business offices. Today, the 4-Way Test is used by more than one million people worldwide.

Mr. Taylor died in 1978, but his legacy of The 4-Way Test continues to spread its influence— to facilitate people building effective channels of communication with each other.

The 4-Way Test Association
In 1959, Mr. Taylor founded The 4-Way Test Association to aid its spread into community use worldwide. The association works to provide resource materials, instruction, speakers and consultants to individuals and groups— introducing and encouraging its use in schools, government, business and homes as a yardstick for building better communications and stronger, more effective relationships between people. For up-to-date information on ongoing projects visit The 4-Way Test Association at www.4waytest.org and click on resources and their bulletin board. To contact the 4-Way Test Association Inc. call 1-800-377-FOURWAY (368-7929) or email them at Four@4waytest.org.

To learn more about Herbert J. Taylor, we suggest God’s Man in the Marketplace: The Story of Herbert J. Taylor, by Paul H. Heidebrecht, IVP 1990.  This book is available at: www.intervarsity.org/store, click on Marketplace.

It is also available, in addition to The Herbert J. Taylor Story, by Herbert J. Taylor, IVP 1968 from the store at www.4waytest.org.

 

 
 

"Exalt the LORD our God and worship at his holy mountain, for the LORD our God is holy."

Psalms 99:9 (NIV)

 
 

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