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In a world of rapid change in which business units continue to grow larger and the penalties of faulty judgment are more serious than ever before, skillful management is essential. Every enterprise must have it to survive and prosper. Everyone knows this. But how to get skillful management— whether to develop it from within, or acquire it from without - remains a subtle and difficult question. The very nature of management is an elusive concept. Is it skill? Is it an art? Or a manner of solving problems, or dealing with people? Can it be acquired by training and experience? Or must you be born with the capacity for it? The leaders of enterprises in both the public and the private sectors may not really know just what they want in the way of management in their own situations. Or they may not agree among themselves on it. Even if they did, it is another matter, and a difficult one, for them to get the management they desire. With Haskins & Sells, as with every other vibrant, growing enterprise in modern industrial society, the development of managers is of continuing concern. For a number of years the Firm has held periodic management training seminars in the summer, at which a selected group of partners have spent the better part of a week in study, discussion and exchange of ideas and experiences. The program and content have changed somewhat through the years in response to the felt needs of the Firm and the responses of the partners attending. This year's management training seminar followed a format established by the Professional Education and Development Section in Executive Office (which has recently changed its name to Continuing Education). The seminar was held near New York City June 5-8, immediately after the induction of new partners into the Firm on June 4. Attending were 31 new partners and directors, and 27 colleagues who had become partners within the past five years. It was, therefore, a young group. The site was Harrison House, a conference center on Long Island located on a beautiful, secluded private estate where the participants could tune out the noise and turmoil of the great city just a few miles to the west. As defined by EO through the Continuing Education group, the objectives of the 1973 management seminar were: II Management Training Seminar to improve their Identifying our ego states. Stanley Silverzweig, executive vice-president of Scientific Resources Inc. and the SRI Human Resources Institute, discusses the manner in which we can see ourselves in our relations with others. 12