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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34
SHOP MANAGEMENT
quickest time, unless he has an actual record, proving
conclusively how fast the work can be done.
It evidently becomes for each man’s interest, then,
to see that no job is done faster than it has been in
the past. The younger and less experienced men are
taught this by their elders, and all possible persuasion
and social pressure is brought to bear upon the greedy
and selfish men to keep them from making new
records which result in temporarily increasing their
wages, while all those who come after them are made
to work harder for the same old pay.
Under the best day work of the ordinary type,
when accurate records are kept of the amount of work
done by each man and of his efficiency, and when
each man’s wages are raised as he improves, and those
who fail to rise to a certain standard are discharged
and a fresh supply of carefully selected men are given
work in their places, both the natural loafing and
systematic soldiering can be largely broken up. This
can be done, however, only when the men are thor-
oughly convinced that there is no intention of es-
tablishing piece work even in the remote future, and
it is next to impossible to make men believe this when
the work is of such a nature that they believe piece
work to be practicable. In most cases their fear of
making a record which will be used as a basis for
piece work will cause them to soldier as much as they
dare.
It is, however, under piece work that the art of sys-
tematic soldiering is thoroughly developed. After
a workman has had the price per piece of the work he
is doing lowered two or three times as a result of his