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 41
ance with these principles without the aid of a man
better educated than he is. And the further illustra-
tions to be given will make it clear that in almost
all of the mechanic arts the science which underlies
each workman’s act is so great and amounts to so
much that the workman who is best suited actually
to do the work is incapable (either through lack of
education or through insufficient mental capacity)
of understanding this science. This is announced
as a general principle, the truth of which will become
apparent as one illustration after another is given.
After showing these four elements in the handling
of pig iron, several illustrations will be given of their
application to different kinds of work in the field
of the mechanic arts, at intervals in a rising scale,
beginning with the simplest and ending with the
more intricate forms of labor.
One of the first pieces of work undertaken by
us, when the writer started to introduce scientific
management into the Bethlehem Steel Company,
was to handle pig iron on task work. The opening
of the Spanish War found some 80,000 tons of pig
iron placed in small piles in an open field adjoining
the works. Prices for pig iron had been so low that
it could not be sold at a profit, and it therefore had
been stored. With the opening of the Spanish War
the price of pig iron rose, and this large accumulation
of iron was sold. This gave us a good opportunity
to show the workmen, as well as the owners and
managers of the works, on a fairly large scale the
advantages of task work over the old-fashioned day