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Mike Durke

BA Public Services Management & Strategy Pollard (1978) Developments in Management Thought. London: Heinemann. Mike Durke. FW Taylor. Frederick Winslow Taylor (1856-1915) The father of scientific management Eyesight prevented study so he worked as machinist and pattern maker

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Mike Durke

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  1. BA Public ServicesManagement & StrategyPollard (1978) Developments in Management Thought. London: Heinemann Mike Durke

  2. FW Taylor • Frederick Winslow Taylor (1856-1915) • The father of scientific management • Eyesight prevented study so he worked as machinist and pattern maker • FWT said scientific management was born in 1882 – worked on it for 30 yrs • ‘Soldiering’ – natural instinct to take it easy – workers self interest

  3. FW Taylor • Workers saw managers as enemies = power struggle • How to get more output from the workers? • Scientific Management = ‘the management of initiative and incentive’ • Piece-rates and bonuses • FWT sought to replace ‘opinions’ with ‘facts in the workplace

  4. FW Taylor • Always secure full support of top managers • Mental revolution of managers and workers • Friendly co-operation not hostility • Correct feeds and speeds for cutting metal • One best way for each single job • Incentive – extra work = extra pay • First-class staff • 8 functional foremen not one foreman • Correct method for new systems and the right installers

  5. FW Taylor • The mental revolution was the real basis of scientific management. Workers were to: • Stop fighting over wages and the profits • Accept a scientifically established increase (by facts) of 30-100% of wages through effort • Forget soldiering and help management establish the facts about production • Accept management’s role in determining the what, when, where, how and time constraints • Agree to be trained and follow management’s new methods

  6. FW Taylor • Management was to: • Develop a science for each operation • Determine time and method for each job • Match workers to suitable jobs – train to be as good as he could be • Organise efficiently to remove all responsibility from the worker apart from performance of the job • Agree to be governed by the science and surrender arbitrary power over the workers.

  7. Frank B and Lilian M Gilbreth • FB started as an apprentice bricklayer then foreman, manager, owner then consultant • Accepted and developed FW Taylor’s ideas • LM was a psychologist who helped FB and developed her own ideas

  8. Frank B and Lilian M Gilbreth • Science of motion study • ‘Systems Management’ – prescribed way of doing things down to the last detail: FB referred to the, “one best way.” • FB set down his ‘Field System’ for his managers – rules and procedures applicable to all sites • Main problem was to ensure performance and control at a distance

  9. Frank B and Lilian M Gilbreth • Motion study articles in American journal Industrial Engineering in 1911 • Reduce present practice to writing • Enumerate motions used • Enumerate variables which affect each motion • Reduce best practice to writing • Enumerate motions used • Enumerate variables which affect each motion

  10. HL Gantt • HL worked with FWT at the Bethlehem Steel Works – a helper in the development of scientific management • FWT’s work had been used by some bad managers to oppress - unrealistic expectations on workers • HL set a day rate for a job plus a bonus of 20-50% if done in the time set

  11. HL Gantt • If worker couldn’t do any part of the job in time supervisor was informed. • Supervisor would demonstrate that it could be done if not the engineer who set the time would be called. • If he couldn’t do it then a new more realistic time would be set. • Biggest achievement – Gantt Chart

  12. JD Mooney • ‘Principles of Organisation’ with AC Reilly 1939 – mainly related to changes in US system of government • 2 main objectives: principles which relate to all organisations; and illustrations relating to Catholic church, army, government and business • Very difficult to read

  13. JD Mooney • What does ‘organisation’ mean? • Precise and definitive approach which claims ‘org’ is a necessary and universal • Cavemen and co-operation • Aims and objectives are only the ‘physics’ of an organisation • Organisation means order and orderly procedure

  14. JD Mooney • Definition: “organisation is the form of every human association for the attainment of a common purpose.” (Pollard, p41)

  15. PF Drucker • Very popular influence on management thought • 1950s – new ideas with practical focus as opposed to theoretical • 1955 – major work, ‘The Practice of Management’ written for managers and those aspiring to management.

  16. PF Drucker • Focus on different sections in ‘The Practice of Management’ • The Nature of Management: “The manager is the dynamic, life giving element in every business.” • Managing a Business: serving society – purpose of management is to “Create a customer.”

  17. PF Drucker • Managing a business: need for innovation and change, the creation of new needs and the setting of objectives • Managing Manager: a fundamental element. Need to direct everyone’s efforts towards the business objectives • Structure of Management: links betewwn structure and practice

  18. PF Drucker • The Management of Worker and Work: workers at all levels are human beings with human needs • What it Means to be a Manager: making the whole greater than the sum of its parts • On leadership he says: “Leadership cannot be created or promoted. It cannot be taught or learned.”

  19. PF Drucker • 1964 ‘Managing for Results’ • Focus on top-level overall management of a business • Analysis and understanding of results • Opportunities and decisions • Purposeful Performance

  20. Henri Fayol • Managed a coal mine at 25; 31 general manager of a few mines; 47 Managing Director of mining group for 30 yrs. • 1916 ‘General and Industrial Management’ (translation in 1929 & 1949) • Definition of management: “To forecast and plan, to organise, to command, to co-ordinate and to control.”

  21. Oliver Sheldon • Worked for Rowntrees in York. 1920s. • Asked practical questions in the light of increased public awareness of industry, workers’ need to develop themselves, overgrowth of many kinds of associations (inc unions) and science (sm re: FWT) • Management/worker partnership: “Welfare is essentially a corporate enterprise.”

  22. B Seebohm Rowntree • Most influential on British management in 1920s and 30s. Quaker, b 1871. • Succeeded his dad as Chair of board in 1923 and retired at 70 in 1941. • A humanitarian, he wanted workers to co-operate with management: keep workers on-side and don’t overthrow capitalism! • Minimum wage: enough to raise a family of 3 children in reasonable comfort

  23. Mary Parker Follett • 1920s and 30s work rediscovered and amplified in 50s and 60s. “One cannot separate work from human beings, their hopes, fears and aspirations, nor can one look on work and business as a series of isolated cause and effects but only as a continuous process of interrelationships between people.” Pollard (1978; p161)

  24. Chris Argyris • 1950s ‘Personality and the Organisation’ - theory of behaviour in industry • Managers need self-awareness. • Its not possible to understand others unless we understand ourselves and vice versa.

  25. Renis Likert • 1947 - 1960s, Institute for Social Research, Michigan – study of management in practice “Supervision is, therefore, always a relative process. To be effective and to communicate as intended, a leader must always adapt his behaviour to take into account the expectations, values, and inter-personal skills of those with whom he is interacting.” Jenkins (1947) ‘A review of leadership studies with particular reference to military problems’,

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