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 65
set out to find what may be called the foundation
of the science of shoveling, that with perhaps 15
to 20 hours of thought and analysis he would be
almost sure to have arrived at the essence of this
science. On the other hand, so completely are the
rule-of-thumb ideas still dominant that the writer
has never met a single shovel contractor to whom
it had ever even occurred that there was such a thing
as the science of shoveling. This science is so
elementary as to be almost self-evident.
For a first-class shoveler there is a given shovel
load at which he will do his biggest day’s work.
What is this shovel load? Will a first-class man do
more work per day with a shovel load of 5 pounds,
10 pounds, 15 pounds, 20, 25, 30, or 40 pounds?
Now this is a question which can be answered only
through carefully made experiments. By first select-
ing two or three first-class shovelers, and paying
them extra wages for doing trustworthy work, and
then gradually varying the shovel load and having
all the conditions accompanying the work carefully
observed for several weeks by men who were used
to experimenting, it was found that a first-class man
would do his biggest day’s work with a shovel load
of about 21 pounds. For instance, that this man
would shovel a larger tonnage per day with a 21-
pound load than with a 24-pound load or than with
an 18-pound load on his shovel. It is, of course,
evident that no shoveler can always take a load of
exactly 21 pounds on his shovel, but nevertheless,
although his load may vary 3 or 4 pounds one way