Scientific Management (F. W. Taylor) 1
Scientific Management (F. W. Taylor) 1
Scientific Management (F. W. Taylor) 1
The evolution of modern management began in the closing decades of the nineteenth century,
after the Industrial Revolution had swept through Europe, Canada, and the United States. Small
workshops run by skilled workers who produced hand manufactured products (a system called
crafts-style production) were replaced by large factories. In these factories, hundreds or even
thousands of unskilled or semi-skilled employees controlled the sophisticated machines that
made products.
APPENDIX A
Many of the managers and supervisors had only technical knowledge and were unprepared for
the social problems that occur when people work together in large groups (as in a factory or shop
system). Managers began to search for new ways to manage their organizations resources, and
soon they began to focus on how to increase the efficiency of the employeetask mix.
By 1910, Taylors system of scientific management had become known and, in many instances,
faithfully and fully practised.5 However, managers in many organizations chose to use the new
principles of scientific management selectively. This decision ultimately resulted in problems.
For example, some managers using scientific management saw increases in performance, but
rather than sharing performance gains with employees through bonuses as Taylor had advocated,
they simply increased the amount of work that each employee was expected to do. Thus,
employees found they were required to do more work for the same pay. Employees also learned
that increases in performance often resulted in layoffs because fewer employees were needed. In
addition, the specialized, simplified jobs were often monotonous and repetitive, and many
employees became dissatisfied with their jobs.
Scientific management brought many employees more hardship than gain and left them with a
distrust of managers who did not seem to care about their well-being. These dissatisfied
employees resisted attempts to use the new scientific management techniques and at times even
withheld their job knowledge from managers to protect their jobs and pay.
Taylors work has had an enduring effect on the management of production systems. Managers
in every organization, whether it produces goods or services, now carefully analyze the basic
tasks that must be performed and try to create work systems that will allow their organizations to
operate most efficiently.