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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SHOP MANAGEMENT 175
between the best speed of a first-class man and the
actual speed of the average man is very great. One
of the most difficult pieces of work which must be
faced by the man who is to set the daily tasks is to
decide just how hard it is wise for him to make the
task. Shall it be fixed for a first-class man, and if
not, then at what point between the first-class and
the average? One fact is clear, it should always be
well above the performance of the average man, since
men will invariably do better if a bonus is offered
them than they have done without this incentive.
The writer has, in almost all cases, solved this part
of the problem by fixing a task which required a
first-class man to do his best, and then offering a
good round premium. When this high standard
is set it takes longer to raise the men up to it. But
it is surprising after all how rapidly they develop.
The precise point between the average and the
first-class, which is selected for the task, should
depend largely upon the labor market in which the
works is situated. If the works were in a fine labor
market, such, for instance, as that of Philadelphia,
there is no question that the highest standard should
be aimed at. If, on the other hand, the shop re-
quired a good deal of skilled labor, and was situated
in a small country town, it might be wise to aim
rather lower. There is a great difference in the labor
markets of even some of the adjoining states in this
country, and in one instance, in which the writer
was aiming at a high standard in organizing a works,
he found it necessary to import almost all of his men
from a neighboring state before meeting with success.