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 31
ordinary management and scientific management
may be fully appreciated.
In an industrial establishment which employs say
from 500 to 1000 workmen, there will be found in
many cases at least twenty to thirty different trades.
The workmen in each of these trades have had their
knowledge handed down to them by word of mouth,
through the many years in which their trade has
been developed from the primitive condition, in
which our far-distant ancestors each one practised
the rudiments of many different trades, to the
present state of great and growing subdivision of
labor, in which each man specializes upon some com-
paratively small class of work.
The ingenuity of each generation has developed
quicker and better methods for doing every element
of the work in every trade. Thus the methods which
are now in use may in a broad sense be said to be
an evolution representing the survival of the fittest
and best of the ideas which have been developed
since the starting of each trade. However, while this
is true in a broad sense, only those who are inti-
mately acquainted with each of these trades are fully
aware of the fact that in hardly any element of any
trade is there uniformity in the methods which are
used. Instead of having only one way which is
generally accepted as a standard, there are in daily
use, say, fifty or a hundred different ways of doing
each element of the work. And a little thought
will make it clear that this must inevitably be the
case, since our methods have been handed down from