On this blog I wrote on January 26 2010: "Good I didn't take Frederick Taylor seriously".
I said there:
"I still have "Motion and Time Study: Improving Productivity" by Marvin E. Mundel, fifth edition, first published in May 1973. It was part of my Industrial Management curriculum from 1981-83.
As I thumb through it, I don't find many signs of it being read by me!
Did I miss much?
Frederick Winslow Taylor is considered the father of time and motion studies..."
I read in year 2017 Franz Kafka's views on Taylorism:
...Taylor’s utopian vision of a new managerial order,
triumphant over both capital and labor, follows a long-established pattern in
rationalist thought. Plato, like Taylor, maintained that the advance of
knowledge would eliminate social conflict. He, too, envisioned a utopia in which
those who possess knowledge would guide society to its irenic end. He also
believed that natural-born rulers were made of different stuff than the common
sort. To ease the transition to his utopia, Plato supplied a myth, to be
related to the people, according to which the philosopher-rulers were said to
have evolved from a superior kind of mineral deposit. Taylor, on the other
hand, grounded the legitimacy of his managerial ruling class on a purported
physiological distinction between people with brains and those with muscle. The
main difference between the ancient philosopher and the father of scientific
management, it seems, is that while Plato acknowledged that his utopia was
founded on a “noble lie,” Taylor insisted to the end that his was based on scientific
fact.
I said there:
"I still have "Motion and Time Study: Improving Productivity" by Marvin E. Mundel, fifth edition, first published in May 1973. It was part of my Industrial Management curriculum from 1981-83.
As I thumb through it, I don't find many signs of it being read by me!
Did I miss much?
Frederick Winslow Taylor is considered the father of time and motion studies..."
I read in year 2017 Franz Kafka's views on Taylorism:
“...I was saying goodbye to my friend Leo Lederer on the
Square of the Republic when Franz Kafka unexpectedly approached me.
‘I followed you all the way from Teschnov,’ he said after
the usual words of greeting. ‘You were quite lost in your conversation.’
‘Leo was explaining Taylorism to me, and the division of
labour in industry.’
‘It is a terrible subject.’
‘You are thinking of the enslavement of mankind?’
‘It is much worse than that. Such a violent outrage can only
end in enslavement to evil. It is inevitable. Time, the noblest and most
essential element in all creative work, is conscripted into the net of corrupt
business interests. Thereby not only creative work, but man himself, who is its
essential part, is polluted and humiliated. A Taylorized life is a terrible
curse which will give rise only to hunger and misery instead of the intended
wealth and profit. It is an advance . . .’
‘Towards the end of the world,’ I completed his sentence.
Franz Kafka shook his head.
‘If one could only say that with certainty. But it is by no
means certain. So one can say nothing. One can only scream, stammer, choke. The
conveyor belt of life carries one somewhere — but one doesn’t know where. One
is a thing, an object – rather than a living organism.’...”
('Conversations with Kafka' by Gustav Janouch)
Kafka would have been glad and relieved to know that F W Taylor was fudging both his research and its results and stands today thoroughly discredited!
Matthew Stewart takes apart Mr. Taylor's methods in 'The Management Myth: Debunking Modern Business Philosophy', 2009:
"...Frederick Winslow Taylor told the pig-iron story so often
and so well that for more than half a century after his death, critics and
sympathizers alike simply assumed it was true. But it was not...
...It was not just Taylor’s method of calculation but his very
approach to the problem that was deeply unscientific. A crucial feature of any
activity that aspires to the name of science is verifiability: independent
observers must be able to reproduce experiments and thereby confirm results.
This is why journals are such an integral feature of scientific disciplines. In
his pig-iron escapades, however, Taylor never supplied the data or the methods
that would have allowed others to reproduce and verify his results. Instead of
science, Taylor offered a kind of parody of science. He confused the
paraphernalia of research—stopwatches and long division—with actual research...
...The stunning lack of accountability evident in the finale of
the pig-iron tale, too, seems to have characterized Taylor’s work as a whole.
Although a number of factories adopted or claimed to have adopted the “Taylor
system,” the advocates of the program failed to provide convincing or
comprehensive evidence that it did any real good. Indeed, it was difficult even
to get agreement on exactly what the system was in the first place. In a 1914
study of 35 plants said to have adopted the Taylor system, Robert Hoxie
concluded that “no single shop was found which could be said to represent fully
and faithfully the Taylor system as presented in the treatise on ‘Shop
Management’…and no two shops were found in which identically or even
approximately the same policies and methods were established and adhered to
throughout.”38 Just as the science wasn’t a science, it seems, the system
wasn’t really a system....
Taylor’s ultimate aim was to advance the interests not just
of the managerial elite, but of an elite within the elite—the special cadre of
management experts, or consultants. Self-interest was never very far from the
center of his work, and therein lay the most obdurate source of its errors.
Scientific management isn’t a science; it’s a business..."
Artist: Richard Decker, The New Yorker, April 3 1943