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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42 THE PRINCIPLES OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
work and piece work, in doing a very elementary
class of work.
The Bethlehem Steel Company had five blast
furnaces, the product of which had been handled
by a pig-iron gang for many years. This gang, at
this time, consisted of about 75 men. They were
good, average pig-iron handlers, were under an
excellent foreman who himself had been a pig-iron
handler, and the work was done, on the whole,
about as fast and as cheaply as it was anywhere
else at that time.
A railroad switch was run out into the field, right
along the edge of the piles of pig iron. An inclined
plank was placed against the side of a car, and each
man picked up from his pile a pig of iron weighing
about 92 pounds, walked up the inclined plank and
dropped it on the end of the car.
We found that this gang were loading on the
average about 12^ long tons per man per day.
We were surprised to find, after studying the matter,
that a first-class pig-iron handler ought to handle
between 471 and 48 long tons per day, instead of
124 tons. This task seemed to us so very large
that we were obliged to go over our work several
times before we were absolutely sure that we were
right. Once we were sure, however, that 47 tons
was a proper day’s work for a first-class pig-iron
handler, the task which faced us as managers under
the modern scientific plan was clearly before us.
It was our duty to see that the 80,000 tons of pig
1 See foot-note at foot of page 60.