Celebrating our new Rotary website! Our old site is still available here:
Thank you for visiting the Rotary Club of Walnut Creek website. We invite you to attend one of our upcoming Rotary meetings to meet us and find out more about our chapter. Click the button below to let us know of your interest and to schedule your visitation date...lunch is on us! .
We invite you to attend an upcoming meeting, listen to one of our guest speakers, donate your time or money and join us on of our many community project outings. Fellowship, Community Service and working elbow-to-elbow with other community business leaders is all part of the experience. We look forward to meeting you.
Our global network of 1.4 million neighbors, friends, and leaders volunteer their skills and resources to solve issues and address community needs.
From the earliest days of the organization, Rotarians were concerned with promoting high ethical standards in their professional lives. One of the world's most widely printed and quoted statements of business ethics is The Four-Way Test, which was created in 1932 by Rotarian Herbert J. Taylor (who later served as RI president) when he was asked to take charge of a company that was facing bankruptcy.
This 24-word test for employees to follow in their business and professional lives became the guide for sales, production, advertising, and all relations with dealers and customers, and the survival of the company is credited to this simple philosophy. Adopted by Rotary in 1943, The Four-Way Test has been translated into more than a hundred languages and published in thousands of ways. It asks the following four questions:
"Of the things we think, say or do:
Friendship
Business Development
Personal Growth and Development
Leadership Development
Citizenship in the Community
Continuing Education
Fun
Public Speaking Skills
Citizenship in the World
Assistance when Traveling
Entertainment
The Development of Social Skills
Family Programs
Vocational Skills
The Development of Ethics
Cultural Awareness
Prestige
Nice People
The Absence of an” Official Creed"
The Opportunity to Serve