The Principles of Scientific Management
Forfatter: Frederick Winslow Taylor
År: 1919
Forlag: Harper & Brothers Publishers
Sted: New York and London
Sider: 144
UDK: 658.01 Tay
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THE PRINCIPLES OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT 101
change in the mental attitude and in the habits
of the three hundred or more workmen can be
brought about only slowly and through a long
series of object-lessons, which finally demonstrates
to each man the great advantage which he will
gain by heartily cooperating in his every-day work
with the men in the management. Within three
years, however, in this shop, the output had been
more than doubled per man and per machine.
The men had been carefully selected and in almost
all cases promoted from a lower to a higher order
of work, and so instructed by their teachers (the
functional foremen) that they were able to earn
higher wages than ever before. The average increase
in the daily earnings of each man was about 35
per cent., while, at the same time, the sum total of
the wages paid for doing ä given amount of work
was lower than before. This increase in the speed
of doing the work, of course, involved a substitution
of the quickest hand methods for the old independent
rule-of-thumb methods, and an elaborate analysis
of the hand work done by each man. (By hand
work is meant such work as depends upon the
manual dexterity and speed of a workman, and
which is independent of the work done by the
machine.) The time saved by scientific hand work
was in many cases greater even than that saved in
machine-work.
It seems important to fully explain the reason
why, with the aid of a slide-rule, and after having
studied the art of cutting metals, it was possible