There is a foreign trade company in Tokyo, Japan, which has trade relations with a British company. Managers of British companies often need to buy train tickets from Tokyo to Kobe. Soon, the manager found that every time he went to Kobe, the seat was always at the right window, and when he came back, he was always at the left window. The manager asked the conductor of the Japanese company why, and she replied with a smile, Mount Fuji is on your right when the bus goes to Kobe.
When you return to Tokyo, Mount Fuji is on your left. Most foreigners like the beautiful scenery of Mount Fuji, so I specially arranged different seats for you. The British manager was so moved that he immediately increased the trade volume of this Japanese company from 500,000 pounds to 2 million pounds.
In his view, as an ordinary employee of this company, he can be so attentive to such a trivial matter, so what is there to worry about doing business with such a company?
2. Once upon a time, in the American Standard Oil Company, there was a clerk named Akibot. When he stays in a hotel on a long trip, he always writes down the words "four dollars a barrel of standard oil" under his signature, and signs his name on letters and receipts. You must write these words down. So he was called "four dollars a barrel" by his colleagues, but his real name was not called out.
Rockefeller, the chairman of the company, said after learning about the incident, "I want to meet the employees who have worked so hard to promote the company's reputation." So I invited archibald to dinner.
Later, Rockefeller stepped down and Akibot became the second chairman. Promoting the company's reputation and writing "four dollars a barrel" on the back of the signature is something anyone can do, but only Akibot has done it, and he has made up his mind and enjoys it. There must be many people who laughed at him who were more talented and capable than him, but in the end, only he became the chairman.
3. Tao Kan, the general of the Eastern Jin Dynasty, was as small as bamboo scraps and as big as setting up a city to station troops. Considered quite carefully. He once presided over shipbuilding and ordered soldiers to collect all the remaining sawdust and bamboo heads. People don't know why.
After the heavy snow, the weather was fine and the snow melted. The government heard that the snow was muddy before, and the sawdust was only used to cushion the road against skidding. Many years later, when Huan Wen, the secretariat of Jingzhou, was preparing to cut Shu, he built a big ship with not enough nails. The bamboo heads collected by Tao Kan can be used as bamboo nails. It is precisely because of Tao Kan's constant attention to details that he achieved his brilliant feats.
4. Zhuge Liang pays great attention to details, the most typical example-"empty city plan". There is a sentence in "Empty City Plan" describing how Zhuge Liang arranged it: "If you see Kong Ming sitting on the tower, smiling, burning incense and playing the piano. There is a boy on the left, holding a sword; There is a boy on the right, with a tail in his hand. Inside and outside the city gate, more than twenty people bowed their heads and swept the floor, and there was no one. "
What really scared Sima Yi away was not Zhuge Liang, but these carefully arranged details.
Gagarin became the first person to travel in space. On April/KOOC-0/96/KOOC-0/,Gagarin, a former Soviet astronaut, traveled in space for 89 minutes in the 4.75-ton "Oriental/KOOC-0/"spacecraft, becoming the first astronaut in the world. Why can he stand out from more than 20 astronauts?
It turned out that a week before the candidate was decided, Rolev, the chief designer of the spacecraft, found that Gagarin was the only one who took off his shoes and entered the cockpit with only socks. It was this small move that won Rolev's favor at once. He felt that the 27-year-old man knew the rules and cherished the spaceship he worked hard for.
So he decided to let Gagarin carry out the sacred mission of the first human space flight. Gagarin showed his self-cultivation and quality of cherishing the fruits of other people's labor through a casual detail, which also made him the first person to travel in space.