Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Letter From George H.W. Bush to Bill Clinton Offers Lessons
Letter From George H.W. Bush to Bill Clinton Offers Lessons As a 1993 letter by former President George H.W. Bush to former President Bill Clinton snakes its way through social media, its gracious, affable message has quickly become a symbol of everything thatâs wrong with the current political climate. The note couldnât have resurfaced at a better time â" hours before it made the rounds on Twitter, a tired electorate watched a major party candidate call his opponent âa nasty woman,â and hint at the possibility of rejecting election results, in one 90-minute debate. In the letter, Bush, who lost to Clinton in the 1992 election, welcomes his successor to the White House with âgreat happiness.â âYou will be our President when you read this note,â it reads. âI wish you well. I wish your family well. Your success is now our countryâs success. I am rooting for you.â There are lessons here for politicians and regular folk alike. We asked career experts to unpack the 23-year-old note, and share some thoughts about its much-needed lesson in grace. If youâre ever replaced, hereâs how to respectfully step away from a position in George H.W. Bush style â" like a class act. Express Your Gratitude If the decision to vacate the position wasnât yours, youâre probably disappointed. Thatâs OK â" but acting like a petulant child isnât. Let your boss know that youâve enjoyed working for him or her â" both vocally and in writing. âEven if you donât necessarily think the decision is fair, you have to thank the folks who gave you an experience that has helped round you out as a professional,â says Roy Cohen, career coach and author of The Wall Street Professionalâs Survival Guide. âThink of it as reputation management â" people take care of the folks who are easy, kind, who demonstrate an understanding of the situation. If youâre relying on them for references, you need to control your image.â Be Cordial and Accommodating to Your Successor Offer to be a resource to the person taking over for you. This helps ease your successor into a new role, and it makes you look like a good sport, says Allen Wass, president of the Hudson, Ohio, branch of executive search firm Sanford Rose. âLet your replacement know that they should feel free to call you for guidance,â he says. âHaving that correspondence with a person who sat in the same seat, who knows exactly what theyâre facing, is going to mean a lot to them. And by making that good-will gesture, youâre demonstrating your commitment to the organization.â Any knowledge you can give them â" like a Rolodex of contacts or a detailed schedule of important dates â" will help your successor transition to the new role, experts say. Itâs easy to be bitter, Wass says, but donât direct your anger at your replacement. âIf youâve been with a company for a long time, you want it to succeed,â he says. âGiving [your successor] inside knowledge will only serve you in the long run ⦠and it will help you move on.â Leave on a Positive Note âNobody likes the feeling of handing over the reigns to their success, but itâs important to handle a turnover with dignity and grace â" just like President Bush did,â says Jennifer Yeko, founder of Ninja Recruiting. âThat letter is going viral because it dealt with a tough situation in a classy manner. Whether youâre leaving on your own accord or not, you have to be professional.â Cohen agrees. Keep your composure even if youâre fuming inside â" for the sake of your severance negotiation and future references and job prospects, if nothing else. âWeâre all documented in perpetuity, thanks to LinkedIn, Glassdoor, and other social media sites,â Cohen says. âThe web has a long memory. If you act like a jerk, people will think about you as a jerk for a long time. Maybe even indefinitely.â
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