Shop Management
Forfatter: Frederick Winslow Taylor
År: 1911
Forlag: Harper & Brothers Publishers
Sted: New York and London
Sider: 207
UDK: 658.01 Tay
With an introduction by Henry R. Towne
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102
SHOP MANAGEMENT
ards established for the care and maintenance of
the machines and their accessories are rigidly main-
tained, such as care of belts and shifters, cleanliness
of floor around machines, and orderly piling and
disposition of work.
The following is an outline of the duties of the
four functional bosses who are located in the planning
room, and who in their various functions represent
the department in its connection with the men. The
first three of these send their directions to and receive
their returns from the men, mainly in writing. These
four representatives of the planning department are,
the (1) order of work and route clerk, (2) instruction
card clerk, (3) time and cost clerk, and (4) shop dis-
ciplinarian.
Order of Work and Route Clerk. After the route
clerk in the planning department has laid out the
exact route which each piece of work is to travel
through the shop from machine to machine in order
that it may be finished at the time it is needed for
assembling, and the work done in the most economical
way, the order of work clerk daily writes lists in-
structing the workmen and also all of the executive
shop bosses as to the exact order in which the work
is to be done by each class of machines or men, and
these lists constitute the chief means for directing
the workmen in this particular function.
Instruction Card Clerks. The “instruction card,”
as its name indicates, is the chief means employed
by the planning department for instructing both the
executive bosses and the men in all of the details
of their work. It tells them briefly the general and