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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46 THE PRINCIPLES OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
ing till night. When he tells you to pick up a pig
and walk, you pick it up and you walk, and when
he tells you to sit down and rest, you sit down.
You do that right straight through the day. And
what’s more, no back talk. Now a high-priced
man does just what he’s told to do, and no back
talk. Do you understand that? When this man
tells you to walk, you walk; when he tells you to
sit down, you sit down, and you don’t talk back at
him. Now you come on to work here to-morrow
morning and I’ll know before night whether you are
really a high-priced man or not.”
This seems to be rather rough talk. And indeed
it would be if applied to an educated mechanic, or
even an intelligent laborer. With a man of the
mentally sluggish type of Schmidt it is appropriate
and not unkind, since it is effective in fixing his
attention on the high wages which he wants and
away from what, if it were called to his attention,
he probably would consider impossibly hard work.
What would Schmidt’s answer be if he were talked
to in a manner which is usual under the manage-
ment of “initiative and incentive”? say, as follows:
"Now, Schmidt, you are a first-class pig-iron
handler and know your business well. You have
been handling at the rate of 12J tons per day. I
have given considerable study to handling pig iron,
and feel sure that you could do a much larger day’s
work than you have been doing. Now don’t you
think that if you really tried you could handle 47
tons of pig iron per day, instead of 12J tons?”