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
25
This difference in the output of first-class and
average men is as little realized by the workmen as
by their employers. The first-class men know that
they can do more work than the average, but they
have rarely made any careful study of the matter.
And the writer has over and over again found them
utterly incredulous when he informed them, after
close observation and study, how much they were
able to do. In fact, in most cases when first told
that they are able to do two or three times as much
as they have done they take it as a joke and will not
believe that one is in earnest.
It must be distinctly understood that in referring
to the possibilities of a first-class man the writer does
not mean what he can do when on a spurt or when he
is over-exerting himself, but what a good man can
keep up for a long term of years without injury to
his health. It is a pace under which men become
happier and thrive.
The second and equally interesting fact upon which
the possibility of coupling high wages with low labor
cost rests, is that first-class men are not only willing
but glad to work at their maximum speed, providing
they are paid from 30 to 100 per cent, more than the
average of their trade.
The exact percentage by which the wages must be
increased in order to make them work to their maxi-
mum is not a subject to be theorized over, settled by
boards of directors sitting in solemn conclave, nor
voted upon by trades unions. It is a fact inherent in
human nature and has only been determined through
the slow and difficult process of trial and error.