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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FUNDAMENTALS OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT 13
These principles appear to be so self-evident
that many men may think it almost childish to
state them. Let us, however, turn to the facts, as
they actually exist in this country and in England.
The English and American peoples are the greatest
sportsmen in the world. Whenever an American
workman plays baseball, or an English workman
plays cricket, it is safe to say that he strains every
nerve to secure victory for his side. He does his
very best to make the largest possible number of
runs. The universal sentiment is so strong that
any man who fails to give out all there is in him in
sport is branded as a “quitter,” and treated with
contempt by those who are around him.
When the same workman returns to work on the
following day, instead of using every effort to turn
out the largest possible amount of work, in a majority
of the cases this man deliberately plans to do as
little as he safely can — to turn out far less work
than he is well able to do — in many instances to
do not more than one-third to one-half of a proper
day’s work. And in fact if he were to do his best
to turn out his largest possible day’s work, he would
be abused by his fellow-workers for so doing, even
more than if he had proved himself a “quitter”
in sport. Underworking, that is, deliberately work-
ing slowly so as to avoid doing a full day’s work,
“soldiering,” as it is called in this country, “hang-
ing it out,” as it is called in England, “ca canae,”
as it is called in Scotland, is almost universal in
industrial establishments, and prevails also to a