Dale Carnegie & Associates Inc.

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Dale Carnegie & Associates Inc.

290 Motor Parkway
Hauppauge, New York 11788
U.S.A.
Telephone: (631) 415-9300
Fax: (631) 415-9390
Web site: http://www.dalecarnegie.com

Private Company
Incorporated:
1945 as Dale Carnegie & Associates Inc.
Employees: 300
Sales: $50 million (1997 est.)
NAIC: 61141 Business & Secretarial Schools

Based on Dale Carnegie's classic self-help book, How to Win Friends and Influence People, family-owned Dale Carnegie & Associates, Inc. offers a path to successful living, with a heavy emphasis on success in business. In the early years of the new millennium there were over 2,700 Dale Carnegie instructors offering training in more than 70 countries and in 25 languages, making it one of the world's largest adult-education operations. Among its seven million graduates were such noted entrepreneurs and business leaders as Tom Monaghan (Domino's Pizza), Mary Kay Ash (Mary Kay Cosmetics), Frank Perdue (Perdue Farms), and Lee Iacocca (Ford Motor Company and Chrysler Corporation).

THE CARNEGIE COURSE: 191244

The son of a hardscrabble Missouri farm couple, Dale Carnegie found, while attending college, that training in public speaking enabled him to overcome shyness and raise his level of self-confidence and self-esteem. After a brief stint as a salesman, Carnegie moved to New York City to become an actor. He soon became discouraged, left show business, and returned to sales but did not find his niche until, in 1912, he offered to teach an evening course in public speaking at a Manhattan YMCA. Refused a $2-per-session salary, he negotiated payment on a commission basis instead and soon was earning $30 to $40 a night, teaching at YMCA locations in Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Wilmington, Delaware, as well as in New York City.

As Carnegie's course evolved, it broadened from public speaking to confidence building and increased personal effectiveness. By 1914 he was making $500 a week and hiring assistants to help him teach what he came to call the Dale Carnegie Course in Public Speaking and Human Relations. At first Carnegie simply posted rules or points for the 16-session course on a series of postcards he distributed to instructors. The postcards evolved into a series of booklets given both to instructors and to students taking the course. But despite Carnegie's hiring of instructors, his course remained essentially a one-man operation for many years, with average enrollment of fewer than 1,000 students a year. In 1935 he named his enterprise The Carnegie Institute for Effective Speaking and Human Relations.

Following the publication of Carnegie's 1936 book, How to Win Friends and Influence People, which more than 60 years later was still in print, the public flocked to his banner. A 1937 New York Times advertisement offering a free demonstration by Carnegie at the Hotel Astor promised 15 benefits in taking the course, among them the ability to think on one's feet, increase income, win more friends, improve one's personality, develop latent powers, and get to know intimately 40 ambitious men and women. It drew 2,500 people. According to a 1937 Saturday Evening Post article, the course consisted of 40 sessions over 16 weeks and cost $75. Classes were given such names as The Magic Formula Session, The Crashing-Through Session, The Heckling Session, and The Making-Your-Body-Talk Session. They were presided over by professional instructors who were paid $25 a night.

Other articles, written at various times, described the course in somewhat different ways. In order to master his techniques, Carnegie first required each student to seek a new approach to achieving his or her goals and then to share the results with the other students. In keeping with his maxim that "a man's name is to him the sweetest sound in any language," much of the first session was given to learning how to remember the names of the other participants. The fourth was a kind of show-and-tell session in which each class member was to bring "an exhibit that represents an achievement." The fifth, or "breakthrough" session was devoted to "coming out of your shell." In the seventh, the participants divided into smaller groups. The eleventh, like the fifth, was given to breaking down inhibitions, through role-playing exercises. Each student was expected to give at least a one two-minute talk per session.

TRAINING FOR CORPORATE MANAGERS: 194590

In 1944 Carnegie began licensing certain territories to sponsors who agreed to pay a percentage of revenues to the home office and follow its instructional guidelines. Privately held Dale Carnegie & Associates, Inc. was established in 1945, with Carnegie as president and his wife Dorothy as vice-president. By 1949 the Dale Carnegie Course (now 14 rather than 16 sessions) was being offered annually to 15,000 students attending 300 classes in 168 cities in the United States, Canada, and Norway.

The annual number of Carnegie students had reached 60,000 by 1957, in 14 countries. License holders generally held classes in office buildings or hotels, but in some cases conducted sessions in conjunction with business or commercial colleges that they also operated. Nearly 900 teachers were trained by a supervisory staff of 20 instructors from national headquarters. The course continued for 14 weeks, with one four-hour session each week, generally from 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. Tuition, including all books and materials, usually cost between $125 and $150. Subjects covered included developing poise, relaxation techniques, overcoming shyness, and displaying enthusiasm.

Although Carnegie's students sought personal growth and happiness, they commonly had more tangible goals, notably increasing their earning power. Business, in turn, was seeking enthusiastic, motivated, self-starting employees and middle managers who could motivate the people working for them. The Carnegie course instilled practical leadership skills based on cooperation rather than confrontation. General Motors Corporation began sending employees to Dale Carnegie & Associates in 1949, paying half the tuition. By 1959, 67 companies were sending staffers to Dale Carnegie, and some, such as The Coca-Cola Company, were paying the entire cost.

Dale Carnegie died in 1955 and was succeeded by his widow as head of Dale Carnegie & Associates. She was credited by Joseph Kahn of the New York Times with transforming the enterprise from "'a Mom-and-Pop store' into a carefully managed commercial operation." She continued the policy of seeking enrollment from the ranks of corporate America and started a workshop for women that did not, however, prove financially successful. Although she remained the major stockholder of the closely held family corporation and had the title of chairwoman, her son-in-law, J. Oliver Crom, became president and chief executive officer of the enterprise in 1978.

Executives of Dale Carnegie & Associates said in 1983 that enrollment was at a record high and that they expected before the end of the year to graduate their three millionth student. The company now had its own "institutes" in 13 cities and 135 licensed sponsors in about 60 countries. There were Carnegie courses covering sales, customer relations, professional development, and executive presentations, as well as the original course on public speaking and human relationstestimony to the growing interest in business training.

COMPANY PERSPECTIVES

Founded in 1912, Dale Carnegie Training has evolved from one man's belief in the power of self-improvement to a performance-based training company with offices worldwide. We focus on giving people in business the opportunity to sharpen their skills and improve their performance in order to build positive, steady, and profitable results.

Dale Carnegie & Associates also continued, however, to stress the founder's commonsense principles on how to win friends and influence people: smile, listen to oth-ers, make them feel important, encourage and praise good work, call attention to mistakes without violating Carnegie's first principle, "don't criticize, condemn or complain." Required reading, in addition to How to Win Friends and Influence People, included two more of Carnegie's books: one on public speaking, first published in 1926, and How to Stop Worrying and Start Living (1948).

The Dale Carnegie enterprise of the 1980s received renewed attention partly due to the efforts of Lee Iacocca, who, after reviving the fortunes of Chrysler Corporation credited, in his 1984 autobiography, the Carnegie course with transforming him from a "shrinking violet." By 1987 more than 400 of the nation's 500 largest companies had sent employees to take a Carnegie course at one time or another, and more than 75 percent of the 157,000 students enrolled annually were under corporate sponsorship. Licensed instructors were required to pay $750 and spend two years in part-time training. The basic course cost $700 to $1,000. Dale Carnegie & Associates celebrated the 75th anniversary of the original Dale Carnegie course in 1987 with a four-day convention in St. Louis.

The public-speaking course, based on Dale Carnegie's original seminar, remained by far the most popular of the eight different courses being given in 1989. This course was offered one night a week for 12 to 14 weeks. (The others focused individually on sales, management, professional development, strategic presentations, customer relations, employee development, and executive image.)

19902000

By 1990 Dale Carnegie & Associates had worldwide annual enrollment of more than 170,000an increase of 60 percent since 1983and 4,500 instructors. In that recession year, however, the enterprise suffered its first drop in enrollment since 1980 (during another recession). Even Chrysler eliminated its policy of paying the tuition (now $895 for the basic 14-session course) for any employee who wanted to take a course. Crom said in 1991 that the company was still profitable. However, it cut its courses from 14 to 12 weeks, updated the basic course, and added new business-related "modules."

There was no change nor need of change in Dale Carnegie's orientation. A Los Angeles Times reporter who attended a class in 1991 wrote, "Most enrolled because they want to do better on the job, though a few say they need help in family and personal relationships." In 1994 there were 4,000 Dale Carnegie instructors and 142 licensed sponsors in over 70 countries on every continent except Antarctica. The eight courses were being offered in 20 languages.

Stuart Levine succeeded Crom as chief executive officer in 1992, although he still reported to Crom, who remained president. Interviewed for Newsday in 1995, Levine told Drew Fetherston, "I have to tell you, this business was going south. When income starts to drop, you take it personally." The problem, he felt, was that the company's offerings were out of date, with just one training course added in 15 years and a host of aggressive competitors nipping at the enterprise's heels. Levin continued, "We took a year and spent a large proportion of our advertising dollars on research." The result, according to Levine, was a greater emphasis on international salesnow responsible for 41 percent of revenuenew courses, and training companies to use workplace teams. The company also adopted the Dale Carnegie Training brand moniker and developed a new logo and mission statement.

KEY DATES

1912:
Dale Carnegie offers to teach an evening course in public speaking at a Manhattan YMCA.
1914:
Carnegie hires assistants to help him teach what he came to call the Dale Carnegie Course in Public Speaking and Human Relations.
1935:
Carnegie names his enterprise The Carnegie Institute for Effective Speaking and Human Relations.
1936:
How to Win Friends and Influence People is published.
1945:
Privately held Dale Carnegie & Associates, Inc. is established in 1945.
1957:
The annual number of Carnegie students reaches 60,000.
1987:
Dale Carnegie & Associates celebrates the 75th anniversary of the original Dale Carnegie course.
1990:
The company has worldwide annual enrollment of more than 170,000.
2003:
Dale Carnegie teams up with Walchand Capital to launch Dale Carnegie Training classes in India.

One result of the research effort was the creation of a short leadership program for middle- and upper-management people, titled "The Leader in You." Another was a book cowritten by Levine: The Leader in You: How to Win Friends, Influence People and Succeed in a Changing World. A quarterly newsletter, "The Leader," was introduced in 1995. Levine, in October 1995, said the company's market share had increased eight to nine percent in the last year, on top of a three percent increase the year before, thereby reversing a three-year decline.

The flagship Dale Carnegie Course also underwent a revision during this period. It now began by asking participants to write a vision of how they would like to see themselves in the future. This vision became the anchor for the individual's course experience and was examined through what the company called "the five drivers of success," namely, self-confidence, human relations, communications, leadership, and controlling stress. These areas provided the framework of the course, leading to a four-phase continuous-improvement cycle, consisting of attitude change, knowledge, practice, and skill development.

The revised 12-session program covered the following dozen subjects: laying the foundation for success, remembering names, building self-confidence, setting breakthrough goals, using the power of enthusiasm, crashing through barriers, strengthening relationships, using the power of recognition, becoming flexible, stating opinions, inspiring others, and identifying breakthrough results. Firms could also request a course tailored to their particular needs or problems.

By mid-1998 Crom was again chief executive officer, and Levine had departed. Crom indicated that the company, in which family members held all the stock, would remain private. "For us, the benefit of being private is more stability in terms of the people we have," he told James T. Madore of Newsday, continuing, "This is a very secure business. We have certain strengths that we believe would be lost as part of a larger corporation." Dale Carnegie Training had offices in 70 countries and five million graduates in 1998. Annual revenues, including that of the licensees, came to $187 million in fiscal 1996 (the year ended August 31, 1996). The company reserved for itself operations in ten or more cities, including New York and Washington.

In addition to the basic Dale Carnegie Course, Dale Carnegie Training was, in early 1999, offering six other courses: sales advantage, leadership training for managers, high-impact presentations, leadership advantage, customer relations/employee development, and professional development.

MODERNIZING IN THE NEW MILLENNIUM

Dale Carnegie entered the new millennium under the leadership of Peter Handal, the second non-family CEO in Dale Carnegie history. Handal immediately set out to modernize the company. "Mr. Carnegie's principles are still good," he told the New York Times, continuing, "What's changed is the world around us." As part of Handal's strategy, he moved company headquarters to the training center in Hauppauge, New York and renegotiated the contract with its franchisee, or sponsor, association. The company created new curriculum, adding courses including Negotiation, High Impact Presentations, Public Speaking Mastery, and Creating an Executive Image to its arsenal. It also began promoting its Youth Training Course, which was designed to foster teamwork and confidence among high school students. Overall, the company nearly tripled its course offerings between 2000 and 2001.

Dale Carnegie also made its first move to embrace the Internet and began developing Web-based classes, which was a marked departure from the company's emphasis on face-to-face communication. In addition, the company began to restructure some of its class formats, offering more two and three-day seminars instead of the 12-week courses. A direct sales program was also launched to increase sales.

A slowing economy in 2001 threatened Dale Carnegie's bottom line. "It's tough out there," Handal told a gathering at the Little Rock Regional Chamber of Commerce. He continued, "But sometimes that means there are things you can seize upon, pieces of business that you can go after that you might not otherwise been able to do." For Dale Carnegie, that meant taking advantage of new opportunities including adding new business from smaller training companies that had been forced to declare bankruptcy, like Fred Pryor Seminars. Dale Carnegie and its sponsors were approved to offer products and services to federal government agencies in 2001. At the same time, the company looked to international markets to fuel growth. In 2003, Dale Carnegie teamed up with Walchand Capital to launch Dale Carnegie Training classes in India.

After more than 90 years, Dale Carnegie stood as a leader in the training industry in 2006. Its impressive and wide-ranging client list included the likes of Harvard University, Time Warner Cable, American Express, Ford, Coca-Cola, and Wal-Mart Stores. With more than seven million graduates annually and operations in over 70 countries, Dale Carnegie was positioned to continue sharpening the skills of business people for years to come.

                                          Robert Halasz

                            Updated, Christina M. Stansell

PRINCIPAL COMPETITORS

Franklin Covey Co.; Nightingale-Conant Corporation; SkillSoft PLC.

FURTHER READING

Abrams, Garry, "All Smiles," Los Angeles Times, June 14, 1991, pp. E1, E16-E17.

Barron, James, "Old Ways Pay Off for Dale Carnegie," New York Times, August 8, 1983, pp. D1, D8.

Berry, Joe, "Dale Carnegie's Blues," Adweek's Marketing Week, February 17, 1992, p. 16.

Conniff, Richard, "The So-So Salesman Who Told Millions How to Make It Big," Smithsonian, October 1987, pp. 82-86, 88, 90, 92-93.

"Dale Carnegie Launches India Operations," Businessline, November 14, 2003.

Fetherston, Drew, "Winning Friends, Influencing People," Newsday, October 9, 1995, pp. C1+.

Furio, Joanne, "His Own Success Story: He Knows How to Win in Business," New York Times, October 15, 1995, Sec. 13, p. 2.

Harriman, Margaret Case, "He Sells Hope," Saturday Evening Post, August 14, 1937, pp. 13-14, 30, 33-34.

Hatch, Addy, "A New Dale," Journal of Business, August 30, 2001, p. A17.

Johnson, Dirk, "At 75, Carnegie's Message Lives On," New York Times, December 13, 1987, p. A28.

Kahn, Joseph, "Dorothy Carnegie Rivkin, 85, Ex-Dale Carnegie Chief, Dies," New York Times, August 8, 1998, p. A13.

Kelley, Bill, "How to Make Friends and Sell to People," Sales & Marketing Management, August 1989, pp. 40-42.

Kemp, Giles, and Claflin, Edward, Dale Carnegie: The Man Who Influenced Millions, New York: St. Martin's Press, 1989.

Lovell, Michael, "Training at Dale Carnegie," Des Moines Business Record, June 23, 2003, p. 3.

Madore, James T., "All in the Family for Most Privates," Newsday, June 8, 1998, p. C21.

Marshall, Jeannie, "Still a Man of Charm and Influence," National Post, February 15, 2002, p. B7.

Nelton, Sharon, "How to Win Friendsfor Half a Century," Nation's Business, December 1986, pp. 40-41.

"Perk Up Your Personality," Changing Times, February 1957, pp. 15-17.

Smith, David, "'Tough out There,' Carnegie CEO Tells LR Chamber," Arkansas Democrat Gazette, January 14, 2003.

Strugatch, Warren, "At Dale Carnegie, Looking to a New Generation," New York Times, November 5, 2000.

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