Frederick Winslow Taylor
(1856 - 1915)

Taylor
was born in Germantown (now part of Philadelphia), Pennsylvania.
In 1878, he began working at the Midvale Steel Company. As he
rose to become foreman of the steel plant, he started to apply
himself to thoughts about efficiency and productivity.
These
thoughts led to the development of what became known as "scientific
management".
In
the introduction to his book "The Principles of Scientific
Management", Taylor suggests that :
In
the past man has been first; in the future
the system must be first.
(The
text of his book is available on the web at http://melbecon.unimelb.edu.au/het/taylor/sciman.htm)
His 'scientific
principles' were those of systematic study, analysis and the assumption
of causal relationships that could be derived and subsequently managed.
e.g. the relationship between incentives and effort. He assumed
that working systems were generally inefficient - largely because
no-one had bothered to make them efficient - and that workers were
naturally inclined to be lazy and inefficient - since this was in
their own best interest. Therefore managers had to overcome this
natural reluctance to put in maximum effort and offer incentives
so that worker effort was in the interests of both the company and
the worker.
He
felt that most managers were ill-equipped to fulfil their role,
since they were not trained to analyse and improve work, and seemed
incapable of motivating workers. Taylor thought that managers should
be able to analyse work (method study) to discover the most efficient
way of carrying it out, and then should select and train workers
to develop their skills in supporting this method. He felt that
financial incentives would motivate workers - but that higher productivity
would still result in lower wage costs. In fact, he was a strong
advocate of co-operation between workers and managers to mutual
advantage. However, even in this there was a tendency to consider
workers as industrial resources - as 'machines' rather than as sentient
beings.
Taylor
believed strongly in the concept of measurement. By measuring work,
and constantly refining and re-measuring working methods, one could
work towards an optimal method.
Taylor
promoted the concept of 'support departments' that would take some
specialisms away from face-to-face managers, though later in life
he accepted that the conflict and tension between the generalists
and the specialists could be counter-productive.
When
judging Taylor with hindsight we must take the time to consider
when his work was carried out - the industrial revolution was in
full swing, and many 'factory-based processes' were relatively new.
Taylor was one of the first to realise that systematic scrutiny
of such processes could yield productivity increases. As "the
father of scientific management" he made a major contribution
to the development of productivity science.
see also :
The
One Best Way: Frederick Winslow Taylor and the Enigma of Efficiency
Robert Kanigel
Viking Press
ISBN: 0670864021 (May 1997)
Productivity
Pioneers

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