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Scientific Management (Taylorism)

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Summary

What is Scientific Management?

The Scientific Management approach was devised by Frederick Winslow Taylor at the end of the 19th century to improve labor productivity by analyzing and establishing workflow processes. Taylor thought that by analyzing work in a scientific manner, the "One Best Way" to perform a task could be found.


Taylor had pragmatic and even good motives to free up the good worker (Schmidt) of one half of his work, who was carrying pig iron at Bethlehem Steel. And at the same time he wanted to alleviate poverty and eliminate waste of time, energy and human ability. But his methods were very hard and sometimes had the opposite effect when they fell into the hands of ruthless exploiters of workers. This is why Scientific Management is often referred to disparagingly as Taylorism.


Frederick Winslow Taylor - Father of Scientific Management. Biography

Frederick Winslow Taylor - Father of Scientific Management

Frederick Winslow Taylor is born in 1856 to a wealthy Quaker family in Philadelphia. In 1874 he becomes an apprentice patternmaker and machinist at Enterprise Hydraulics Works, gaining shop-floor expertise. In 1878 he takes up an unskilled job at Midvale Steel Works where he does his first experiments. In 1881 he gains a master degree in mechanical engineering. In 1890 he is appointed to general manager of Manufacturing Investment Company (MIC). It is important to understand that the circumstances during the life of Taylor were quite different from those today: there had been a series of depressions and production methods at the time were very inefficient. Also there was a need to employ many immigrants into the US, to raise the living standards and to meet rising demands for goods of every sort. All of this influences Taylor when he publishes The Principles of Scientific Management in 1911. Taylor dies in 1915.


Usage of Scientific Management. Applications

Steps in Scientific Management. Process

Scientific Management (Taylorism) - Worker at the Midvale Steel Company, circa 1910

Taylor's scientific management consisted of four principles:

  1. Replace rule of thumb work methods with methods based on a scientific study of the tasks.
  2. Select, train, teach and develop the most suitable person for each job, again scientifically, rather than passively leaving them to train themselves.
  3. Managers must provide detailed instructions and supervision to each worker to ensure the job is done in a scientific way.
  4. Divide work between managers and workers. The managers apply scientific management principles to planning and supervising the work, and the workers carry out the tasks.

Strengths of Scientific Management. Benefits

  • One of the first formal divisions between workers and managers.
  • Contribution to efficient production methods, leading to a major global increase of living standards.
  • Focus on the individual task and worker level. Compare: Business Process Reengineering (process level)
  • Direct reward mechanisms for workers rather than pointless end-of-year profit sharing schemes.
  • Systematic. Early proponent of quality standards.
  • Suggestion schemes for workers, who should be rewarded by cash premiums.
  • Emphasis on measuring. Measurement enables improvement.
  • Pragmatic and useful in times and circumstances as described above (See: Biography).

Limitations of Scientific Management. Disadvantages

  • Taylorism can easily be abused to exploit human beings. Conflicts with labor unions.
  • Not useful to deal with groups or teams.
  • Leaves no room for individual preferences or initiative.
  • Overemphasis on measuring. No attention for soft factors.
  • Mechanistic. Treating people as machines.
  • Separation of planning function and doing.
  • Loss of skill level and autonomy at worker level. Not very useful in current knowledge worker environments (except as an antithesis).

Book: Taylor, Frederick Winslow - The Principles of Scientific Management, 1911

Book: Spender, J.C. and Kijne, H. (Eds) - Scientific Management: Fredrick Winslow Taylor's Gift to the World? 1996


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topic Relevance of Taylor's Scientific Management Today?
How relevant are Taylorism and the scientific management approach in today's business world?...
Rating19
 
Comments9 comments
topic The Eight Bosses System (Taylor)
Taylor also described the '8 Bosses System'. He suggested dividing the labor of the production department into eight main compartments, led by eight different supervisors: 1. Time and costs 2. Work...
Rating9
 
Comments1 comments
topic Scientific Management is Interesting
In Taylor's theory he compared human to machines. For him, human real motivation is salary so employers must abuse them. I'm not really sharing his opinion but in a certain way it is interesting to us...
Rating9
 
Comments1 comments
topic McJobs. Definition, History, Pros and Cons
What does the word "McJobs" mean? How did it start, what are the arguments for and against it and why is it a management debate?...
Rating8
 
Comments1 comments
🔥 First Definition of Management?
F.W. Taylor wrote: "Management is the art of knowing what you want to do and then seeing that they do it in the best and the cheapest manner." Was this the first definition of "management" ever?...
Rating4
 
topic The contribution of Taylor to the theory of Management
Everything (including many management models / theories) is the outcome of the conditions and overall circumstances at the time and place were it was written. Also to interpret the theory of Taylor we...
Rating4
 
topic Comparison of Man to Machine
Taylor`s theory works better with machines because human beings do not follow a set pattern of behaviour. They can change at any time without reference to rules and instructions....
Rating4
 
Comments1 comments
topic Can Scientific Management Be (Best) Practised in Developed Countries?
Do you think the Scientific Management system can really be applied in a developing country like South Sudan? If yes, how long will it take for people to get used to the system?...
Rating3
 
Comments2 comments
topic Workflow Processes of Taylor
What is meant with the 'workflow processes of Taylorism'? What were the main criticisms on it?...
Rating1
 
Comments1 comments
topic Before Implementing Scientific Management
Can you say night & day? Scientific management is what business managers try to use (flavor of the month) on an ongoing basis to improve those scientifically set up / controlled tasks that make the or...
Rating1
 

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10 Decision Areas of Operation Management (Heizer)

Operations Management
According to Heizer and Render, there are 10 decision areas of Operation Management (each having typical issues): 1. Go...
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Scientific Management: Definitions, Theorists and Main Contributions

Scientific Management, Taylor, Gannt, Gilbreth, Gulick, Weber, Fayol
Presentation about Scientific Management that includes a description of the main theorists their contributions to the th...
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Historic Perspective on Taylor's Scientific Management

Developing a broader perspective towards Scientific Management, Grasping the spirit of the time
Extensive presentation on Taylor's ideas, including: 1. Personal background of Frederick Winslow Taylor 2. Book publis...

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Compare with Scientific Management: Management by Objectives  |  Operations Research  |  Balanced Scorecard  |  CSFs and KPIs  |  Just-in-time  |  Lean Manufacturing  |  Six Sigma  |  Total Quality Management  |  Business Process Reengineering  |  14 Principles of Management


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