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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40 THE PRINCIPLES OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
which differentiate the new management from the
old will at first appear to be merely high-sounding
phrases; and he would again repeat that he has no
idea of convincing the reader of their value merely
through announcing their existence. His hope of
carrying conviction rests upon demonstrating the
tremendous force and effect of these four elements
through a series of practical illustrations. It will
be shown, first, that they can be applied absolutely
to all classes of work, from the most elementary to
the most intricate; and second, that when they are
applied, the results must of necessity be overwhelm-
ingly greater than those which it is possible to attain
under the management of initiative and incentive.
The first illustration is that of handling pig iron,
and this work is chosen because it is typical of
perhaps the crudest and most elementary form of
labor which is performed by man. This work is
done by men with no other implements than their
hands. The pig-iron handler stoops down, picks
up a pig weighing about 92 pounds, walks for a few
feet or yards and then drops it on to the ground or
upon a pile. This work is so crude and elementary
in itä nature that the writer firmly believes that it
would be possible to train an intelligent gorilla so as
to become a more efficient pig-iron handler than any
man can be. Yet it will be shown that the science
of handling pig iron is so great and amounts to
so much that it is impossible for the man who is
best suited to this type of work to understand the
principles of this science, or even to work in accord-