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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62 THE PRINCIPLES OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
gang. He merely happened to be a man of the type
of the ox, — no rare specimen of humanity, difficult
to find and therefore very highly prized. On the con-
trary , he was a man so stupid that he was unfitted
to do most kinds of laboring work, even. The
selection of the man, then, does not involve finding
some extraordinary individual, but merely picking
out from among very ordinary men the few who are
especially suited to this type of work. Although
in this particular gang only one man in eight was
suited to doing the work, we had not the slightest
difficulty in getting all the men who were needed—
some of them from inside of the works and others
from the neighboring country—who were exactly
suited to the job.
Under the management of “ initiative and incen-
tive” the attitude of the management is that of
“putting the work up to the workmen.” What
likelihood would there be, then, under the old type
of management, of these men properly selecting
themselves for pig-iron handling? Would they be
likely to get rid of seven men out of eight from their
own gang and retain only the eighth man? No!
And no expedient could be devised which would
make these men properly select themselves. Even
if they fully realized the necessity of doing so in order
to obtain high wages (and they are not sufficiently
intelligent properly to grasp this necessity), the fact
that their friends or their brothers who were working
right alongside of them would temporarily be thrown
out of a job because they were not suited to this