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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30
SHOP MANAGEMENT
uct; while owing to a bad system, lack of exact
knowledge of the time required to do work, and
mutual suspicion and misunderstanding between
employers and men, the output per man is so
small that the men receive little if any more than
average wages, both sides being evidently the losers
thereby.
The chief causes which produce this loss to both
parties are: First (and by far the most important),
the profound ignorance of employers and their fore-
men as to the time in which various kinds of work
should be done, and this ignorance is shared largely
by the workmen.
Second: The indifference of the employers and their
ignorance as to the proper system of management
to adopt and the method of applying it, and further
their indifference as to the individual character,
worth, and welfare of their men.
On the part of the men the greatest obstacle to
the attainment of this standard is the slow pace which
they adopt, or the loafing or “ soldiering,” marking
time, as it is called.
This loafing or soldiering proceeds from two causes.
First, from the natural instinct and tendency of men
to take it easy, which may be called natural soldiering.
Second, from more intricate second thought and
reasoning caused by their relations with other men,
which may be called systematic soldiering.
There is no question that the tendency of the
average man (in all walks of life) is toward working
at a slow, easy gait, and that it is only after a good
deal of thought and observation on his part or as a