| “Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters, since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the Lord Christ you are serving.” |
| —Colossians 3:23-24 |
“I want to be known as a professional,” the aspiring businessman told me. What did he mean? What qualities mark a man or woman as a “professional?” So far in this series, I’ve suggested that “compassion,” “justice,” “common sense,” a “commitment to excellence, a “wholehearted determination to always tell the truth,” and an “attention to details” are all marks of a professional. This time I add to the list “going the second mile.”
Matthew 5:38-42 (NIV) reads:
“You have heard that it was said, ‘Eye for eye, and tooth for tooth. ’ But I tell you, do not resist an evil person. If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also. And if someone wants to sue you and take your tunic, let him have your cloak as well. If someone forces you to go one mile, go with him two miles. Give to the one who asks you, and do not turn away from the one who wants to borrow from you.”
Jesus’ words during that most famous discourse known as “The Sermon on the Mount,” found in the Gospel of Matthew, Chapters 5, 6 and 7, have always startled people because they cut so sharply across the grain we call “normal” in our gutsy and materialistic culture. Nevertheless, the deep underlying philosophy that this One—known as Immanuel, God With Us—was teaching characterizes an individual who is determined to do his or her very best to meet and exceed the “customer’s” or “constituent’s” or “client’s” demands.
“Now just one cotton-pickin’ minute,” you interject. “Are you trying to tell me that Jesus Christ was preaching a ‘service excellence’ philosophy?”
Exactly. God’s Son was One who taught excellence as a way of life. He taught, and He demonstrated, excellence permeating every aspect of one’s being. So, in a customer service realm, excellence often means “going the second mile.” Let me illustrate.
Some years ago, my wife, Shirley, was searching through the library at Central Connecticut State University trying to get some material on a project that had taken place in the Pittsburgh (PA) public schools called “Arts Propel.” This project, in turn, is based on work done at Harvard University called “Project Zero.” She needed the information for a research paper she was writing for one of her graduate courses. Everywhere she searched, she kept hitting a dead end. Finally, she approached a librarian in charge of lnter-Library Loan, hoping that she would be able to locate some material from the Harvard University Library.
“Let me look up that number for you,” the librarian suggested. “Here it is. Listen, please let me make the call for you.”
After reaching the research librarian at the Harvard University Library, the Central Connecticut State University librarian proceeded to efficiently and effectively establish a rapport with the Harvard librarian. She learned that there was a packet of information available.
To speed the process of obtaining the information, the CCSU librarian paid the fee out of her petty cash, rather than insisting that Shirley write a check that would have to clear before Harvard would send the information.
Shirley was astonished! For days she sang the praises of this librarian who did her job, plus “went the second mile” to make certain her customer was satisfied.
In whatever endeavor we undertake in the course of our business lives, or personal lives, it pays dividends in the coinage of professionalism when we willingly “go the second mile.” Maybe we’ve come up against a customer, constituent, or client who never seems satisfied. No matter how hard we try to please this one, all we receive in return is complaint and criticism. Do we determine to get even? Or, do we keep on delivering top quality service, consistently bending over backwards to help our customer?
Or, maybe we’re an individual who has supervisory responsibility. When we spot some aspect of job performance that makes us feel that an employee is going to have a problem with one of the other supervisors, do we ignore it, chuckling to ourselves? Or, do we give the employee a call, or take the employee aside, and suggest he or she check it out with the other department before it becomes a major snag?
As a supervisor, do we continually remind ourselves that our fellow staff members constitute our partners in working hard to ensure our department helps the overall business grow? Or, when times get tough, do we repay years of a loyal and mutually beneficial relationship with unrelentingly hard-nosed supervisory policies?
“Going the second mile” is not necessarily an easy path to take. But, “going the second mile” is another of those rare qualities that the true professional manifests in his or her business life and personal life. It is the living out of an inner conviction. It sets the professional apart from his or her peers. This rings especially true for one who follows the Great King Jesus.