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Frederick Winslow Taylor

Frederick Winslow Taylor (March 20, 1856 – March 21, 1915) was an American mechanical engineer. He was widely known for his methods to improve industrial efficiency.[1] He was one of the first management consultants.[2] In 1909, Taylor summed up his efficiency techniques in his book The Principles of Scientific Management which, in 2001, Fellows of the Academy of Management voted the most influential management book of the twentieth century.[3] His pioneering work in applying engineering principles to the work done on the factory floor was instrumental in the creation and development of the branch of engineering that is now known as industrial engineering. Taylor made his name, and was most proud of his work, in scientific management; however, he made his fortune patenting steel-process improvements. As a result, scientific management is sometimes referred to as Taylorism.[4]

Frederick Winslow Taylor
Taylor circa 1907
BornMarch 20, 1856 (1856-03-20)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DiedMarch 21, 1915(1915-03-21) (aged 59)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Resting placeWest Laurel Hill Cemetery
Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania, U.S.
EducationPhillips Exeter Academy
Alma materStevens Institute of
Technology
(BS)
Occupation(s)Efficiency expert
Management consultant
Known forFather of scientific management, efficiency movement and industrial engineering
SpouseLouise M. Spooner
Children3
AwardsElliott Cresson Medal (1902)

Biography

Taylor was born in 1856 to a Quaker family in Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Taylor's father, Franklin Taylor, a Princeton-educated lawyer, built his wealth on mortgages.[5] Taylor's mother, Emily Annette Taylor (née Winslow), was an ardent abolitionist and a coworker with Lucretia Mott. His father's ancestor, Samuel Taylor, settled in Burlington, New Jersey, in 1677. His mother's ancestor, Edward Winslow, was one of the fifteen original Mayflower Pilgrims who brought servants or children, and one of eight who had the honorable distinction of Mister. Winslow served for many years as the Governor of the Plymouth colony.

Educated early by his mother, Taylor studied for two years in France and Germany and traveled Europe for 18 months.[6] In 1872, he entered Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire, with the plan of eventually going to Harvard and becoming a lawyer like his father. In 1874, Taylor passed the Harvard entrance examinations with honors. However, due allegedly to rapidly deteriorating eyesight, Taylor chose quite a different path.

Instead of attending Harvard University, Taylor became an apprentice patternmaker and machinist, gaining shop-floor experience at Enterprise Hydraulic Works in Philadelphia (a pump-manufacturing company whose proprietors were friends of the Taylor family). He left his apprenticeship for six months and represented a group of New England machine-tool manufacturers at Philadelphia's centennial exposition. Taylor finished his four-year apprenticeship and in 1878 became a machine-shop laborer at Midvale Steel Works. At Midvale, he was quickly promoted to time clerk, journeyman machinist, gang boss over the lathe hands, machine shop foreman, research director, and finally chief engineer of the works (while maintaining his position as machine shop foreman). Taylor's fast promotions reflected both his talent and his family's relationship with Edward Clark, part owner of Midvale Steel. (Edward Clark's son Clarence Clark, who was also a manager at Midvale Steel, married Taylor's sister.)

 
Midvale Steel Works Aerial View, 1879.

Early on at Midvale, working as a laborer and machinist, Taylor recognized that workmen were working their machines, or themselves, not nearly as hard as they could (a practice that at the time was called "soldiering") and that this resulted in high labor costs for the company. When he became a foreman he expected more output from the workmen. In order to determine how much work should properly be expected, he began to study and analyze the productivity of both the men and the machines (although the word "productivity" was not used at the time, and the applied science of productivity had not yet been developed). His focus on the human component of production Taylor labeled scientific management.[7]

While Taylor worked at Midvale, he and Clarence Clark won the first tennis doubles tournament in the 1881 US National Championships, the precursor of the US Open.[1] Taylor became a student of Stevens Institute of Technology, studying via correspondence[8] and obtaining a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering in 1883.[9] On May 3, 1884, he married Louise M. Spooner of Philadelphia.

 
The Bethlehem Steel plant, 1896.

From 1890 until 1893 Taylor worked as a general manager and a consulting engineer to management for the Manufacturing Investment Company of Philadelphia, a company that operated large paper mills in Maine and Wisconsin. He was a plant manager in Maine. In 1893, Taylor opened an independent consulting practice in Philadelphia. His business card read "Consulting Engineer - Systematizing Shop Management and Manufacturing Costs a Specialty". Through these consulting experiences, Taylor perfected his management system. His first paper, A Piece Rate System, was presented to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) in June 1895.[10]

In 1898 he joined Bethlehem Steel to solve an expensive machine-shop capacity problem. While at Bethlehem, he discovered the best known and most profitable of his many patents: between 1898 and 1900 Taylor and Maunsel White ( Maunsel White III; 1856–1912; grandson of Maunsel White; 1783–1863) conducted comprehensive empirical tests, and concluded that tungsten alloyed steel doubled or quadrupled cutting speeds. The inventors received US$100,000 (equivalent to about $3,300,000 in 2021) for the English patents alone,[11][12] although the U.S. patent was eventually nullified.[13]

Taylor was forced to leave Bethlehem Steel in 1901 after discord with other managers. Now a wealthy man, Taylor focused the remainder of his career promoting his management and machining methods through lecturing, writing, and consulting. In 1910, owing to the Eastern Rate Case, Frederick Winslow Taylor and his Scientific Management methodologies became famous worldwide. In 1911, Taylor introduced his The Principles of Scientific Management paper to the ASME, eight years after his Shop Management paper.

On October 19, 1906, Taylor was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Science by the University of Pennsylvania.[14] Taylor eventually became a professor at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College.[15] In early spring of 1915 Taylor caught pneumonia and died,[16] one day after his fifty-ninth birthday, on March 21, 1915. He was buried in West Laurel Hill Cemetery, in Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania.

Work

Darwin, Marx, and Freud make up the trinity often cited as the "makers of the modern world." Marx would be taken out and replaced by Taylor if there were any justice... For hundreds of years there had been no increase in the ability of workers to turn out goods or to move goods... When Taylor started propounding his principles, nine out of every 10 working people did manual work, making or moving things, whether in manufacturing, farming, mining, or transportation... By 2010 it will constitute no more than one-tenth... The Productivity Revolution has become a victim of its own success. From now on what matters is the productivity of nonmanual workers. [bolding added] -- Peter Drucker, The Rise of the Knowledge Society Wilson Quarterly (Spring 1993) p.63-65[17]

Taylor's crime, in the eyes of the unions, was his assertion that there is no "skilled work." In manual operations there is only "work." All work can be analyzed the same way... The unions... were craft monopolies, and membership in them was largely restricted to sons or relatives of members. They required an apprenticeship of five to seven years but had no systematic training or work study. The unions allowed nothing to be written down. There were not even blueprints or any other drawings of the work to be done. Union members were sworn to secrecy and forbidden to discuss their work with nonmembers. [bolding added] -- Peter Drucker, The Rise of the Knowledge Society Wilson Quarterly (Spring 1993) p.61-62[18]

Taylor was a mechanical engineer who sought to improve industrial efficiency. He is regarded as the father of scientific management, and was one of the first management consultants and director of a famous firm. In Peter Drucker's description,

Frederick W. Taylor was the first man in recorded history who deemed work deserving of systematic observation and study. On Taylor's 'scientific management' rests, above all, the tremendous surge of affluence in the last seventy-five years which has lifted the working masses in the developed countries well above any level recorded before, even for the well-to-do. Taylor, though the Isaac Newton (or perhaps the Archimedes) of the science of work, laid only first foundations, however. Not much has been added to them since—even though he has been dead all of sixty years.[19]

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. Scientifically select, train, and develop each employee rather than passively leaving them to train themselves.
  3. Provide "Detailed instruction and supervision of each worker in the performance of that worker's discrete task"[20]
  4. Divide work nearly equally between managers and workers, so that the managers apply scientific management principles to planning the work and the workers actually perform the tasks.

Future US Supreme Court justice Louis Brandeis coined the term scientific management in the course of his argument for the Eastern Rate Case before the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1910. Brandeis argued that railroads, when governed according to Taylor's principles, did not need to raise rates to increase wages. Taylor used Brandeis's term in the title of his monograph The Principles of Scientific Management, published in 1911. The Eastern Rate Case propelled Taylor's ideas to the forefront of the management agenda. Taylor wrote to Brandeis, "I have rarely seen a new movement started with such great momentum as you have given this one." Taylor's approach is also often referred to as Taylor's Principles, or, frequently disparagingly, as Taylorism.

Managers and workers

The idea, then, of.. training [a workman] under a competent teacher into new working habits until he continually and habitually works in accordance with scientific laws, which have been developed by some one else, is directly antagonistic to the old idea that each workman can best regulate his own way of doing the work... the philosophy of the old management puts the entire responsibility upon the workmen, while the philosophy of the new places a great part of it upon the management. [bolding added] -- FW Taylor, The Principles of Scientific Management (1911) p.63[21]

Taylor had very precise ideas about how to introduce his system:

It is only through enforced standardization of methods, enforced adoption of the best implements and working conditions, and enforced cooperation that this faster work can be assured. And the duty of enforcing the adoption of standards and enforcing this cooperation rests with the management alone.[21]

Workers were to be selected appropriately for each task.

One of the very first requirements for a man who is fit to handle pig iron as a regular occupation is that he shall be so stupid and so phlegmatic that he more nearly resembles in his mental make-up the ox than any other type. The man who is mentally alert and intelligent is for this very reason entirely unsuited to what would, for him, be the grinding monotony of work of this character. [22]

Taylor believed in transferring control from workers to management. He set out to increase the distinction between mental (planning work) and manual labor (executing work). Detailed plans, specifying the job and how it was to be done, were to be formulated by management and communicated to the workers.[23]

The introduction of his system was often resented by workers and provoked numerous strikes. The strike at Watertown Arsenal led to the congressional investigation in 1912. Taylor believed the laborer was worthy of his hire, and pay was linked to productivity. His workers were able to earn substantially more than those under conventional management,[24] and this earned him enemies among the owners of factories where scientific management was not in use.

Rhetorical techniques

Taylor promised to reconcile labor and capital.

With the triumph of scientific management, unions would have nothing left to do, and they would have been cleansed of their most evil feature: the restriction of output. To underscore this idea, Taylor fashioned the myth that 'there has never been a strike of men working under scientific management', trying to give it credibility by constant repetition. In similar fashion he incessantly linked his proposals to shorter hours of work, without bothering to produce evidence of "Taylorized" firms that reduced working hours, and he revised his famous tale of Schmidt carrying pig iron at Bethlehem Steel at least three times, obscuring some aspects of his study and stressing others, so that each successive version made Schmidt's exertions more impressive, more voluntary and more rewarding to him than the last. Unlike [Harrington] Emerson, Taylor was not a charlatan, but his ideological message required the suppression of all evidence of worker's dissent, of coercion, or of any human motives or aspirations other than those his vision of progress could encompass.[25] For the stories about Schmidt Montgomery refers to Charles D. Wrege and Amadeo G. Perroni, "Taylor's Pig Tale: A Historical Analysis of Frederick W. Taylor's Pig-Iron experiments" in: Academy of Management Journal, 17 (March 1974), 6-27</ref>

Scholarly debate about increased efficiency moving pig iron at Bethlehem's Iron and Steel

Debate about Taylor's Bethlehem study of workers, particularly the stereotypical laborer "Schmidt", continues to this day. One 2009 study supports assertions Taylor made about the quite substantial increase in productivity, for even the most basic task of picking up, carrying and dropping pigs of iron.[26][27]

Management theory

Taylor thought that by analysing work, the "one best way" to do it would be found. He is most remembered for developing the stopwatch time study, which, combined with Frank Gilbreth's motion study methods, later became the field of time and motion study. He broke a job into its component parts and measured each to the hundredth of a minute. One of his most famous studies involved shovels. He noticed that workers used the same shovel for all materials. He determined that the most effective load was 21½ pounds, and found or designed shovels that for each material would scoop up that amount. He was generally unsuccessful in getting his concepts applied, and was dismissed from Bethlehem Iron Company/Bethlehem Steel Company. Nevertheless, Taylor was able to convince workers who used shovels and whose compensation was tied to how much they produced to adopt his advice about the optimum way to shovel by breaking the movements down into their component elements and recommending better ways to perform these movements. It was largely through his disciples' efforts (most notably Henry Gantt's) that industry came to implement his ideas. Moreover, the book he wrote after parting company with the Bethlehem company, Shop Management, sold well.

Relations with ASME

Taylor's written works were designed for presentation to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME). These include Notes on Belting (1894), A Piece-Rate System (1895), Shop Management (1903), Art of Cutting Metals (1906), and The Principles of Scientific Management (1911).

Taylor was president of the ASME from 1906 to 1907. While president, he tried to implement his system into the management of the ASME but met with much resistance. He was able to reorganize only the publications department and that only partially. He also forced out the ASME's longtime secretary, Morris Llewellyn Cooke, and replaced him with Calvin W. Rice. His tenure as president was trouble-ridden and marked the beginning of a period of internal dissension within the ASME during the Progressive Age.[28]

In 1911, Taylor collected a number of his articles into a book-length manuscript, which he submitted to the ASME for publication. The ASME formed an ad hoc committee to review the text. The committee included Taylor allies such as James Mapes Dodge and Henry R. Towne. The committee delegated the report to the editor of the American Machinist, Leon P. Alford. Alford was a critic of the Taylor system and his report was negative. The committee modified the report slightly, but accepted Alford's recommendation not to publish Taylor's book. Taylor angrily withdrew the book and published Principles without ASME approval.[29][30] Taylor published the trade book himself in 1912.

Taylor's influence

United States

 
One of Carl G. Barth's speed-and-feed slide rules.
 
A Gantt chart.

France

In France, Le Chatelier translated Taylor's work and introduced scientific management throughout government owned plants during World War I. This influenced the French theorist Henri Fayol, whose 1916 Administration Industrielle et Générale emphasized organizational structure in management. In the classic General and Industrial Management, Fayol wrote that "Taylor's approach differs from the one we have outlined in that he examines the firm from the 'bottom up.' He starts with the most elemental units of activity – the workers' actions – then studies the effects of their actions on productivity, devises new methods for making them more efficient, and applies what he learns at lower levels to the hierarchy ... "[32] He suggests that Taylor has staff analysts and advisors working with individuals at lower levels of the organization to identify the ways to improve efficiency. According to Fayol, the approach results in a "negation of the principle of unity of command."[33] Fayol criticized Taylor's functional management in this way: In Shop Management, Taylor said[34] « ... the most marked outward characteristics of functional management lies in the fact that each workman, instead of coming in direct contact with the management at one point only, ... receives his daily orders and help from eight different bosses... these eight were (1) route clerks, (2) instruction card men, (3) cost and time clerks, (4) gang bosses, (5) speed bosses, (6) inspectors, (7) repair bosses, and the (8) shop disciplinarian. »[35] Fayol said that this was an unworkable situation and that Taylor must have reconciled the differences in some way not described in Taylor's works.

Around 1922 the journalist Paulette Bernège became interested in Taylor's theories, which were popular in France in the post-war period.[36] Bernège became the faithful disciple of the Domestic Sciences Movement that Christine Frederick had launched earlier in the United States, which Bernège adapted to French homes. Frederick had transferred the concepts of Taylorism from the factory to domestic work. These included suitable tools, rational study of movements and timing of tasks. Scientific standards for housework were derived from scientific standards for workshops, intended to streamline the work of a housewife.[37] The Comité national de l'organisation française (CNOF) was founded in 1925 by a group of journalists and consulting engineers who saw Taylorism as a way to expand their client base. Founders included prominent engineers such as Henry Louis Le Châtelier and Léon Guillet. Bernège's Institute of Housekeeping Organization participated in various congresses on the scientific organization of work that led up to the founding of the CNOF, and in 1929 led to a section in CNOF on domestic economy.[38]

Great Britain

Older historical accounts used to suggest that British industry had less interest in Taylor's teachings than in similarly sized countries.[39] More recent research has revealed that British engineers and managers were as interested as in other countries.[40] This disparity was largely due to what historians have been analysing: recent research has revealed that Taylor's practices diffused to Britain more through consultancies, in particular the Bedaux consultancy, than through institutions, as in Germany and to a lesser extent France, where a mixture was most effective.[41][42]

Particularly enthusiastic were the Cadbury family, Seebohm Rowntree, Oliver Sheldon and Lyndall Urwick. In addition to establishing a consultancy to implement Taylor's system, Urwick, Orr & Partners, Urwick was also a key historian of F.W. Taylor and scientific management, publishing The Making of Scientific Management trilogy in the 1940s and The Golden Book of Management in 1956.

Switzerland

In Switzerland, the American Edward Albert Filene established the International Management Institute to spread information about management techniques. Lyndall Urwick was its director until the IMI closed in 1933.[43]Charles D. Wrege, Ronald G. Greenwood, and Sakae Hata, 'The International Management Institute and Political Opposition to its Efforts in Europe, 1925-1934' Business and Economic History (1987)PDF link</ref>

USSR

In the Soviet Union, Vladimir Lenin was very impressed by Taylorism, which he and other Bolshevik leaders tried to incorporate into Soviet manufacturing. When Joseph Stalin took power in the 1920s, he championed the theory of "Socialism in one country" which denied that the Soviet economy needed foreign help to develop, and open advocates of Western management techniques fell into disfavor. No longer celebrated by Soviet leadership, Taylorism and the mass production methods of Henry Ford remained silent influences during the industrialization of the Soviet Union. Nevertheless, "[...] Frederick Taylor's methods have never really taken root in the Soviet Union."[44] The voluntaristic approach of Stalin's Stakhanovite movement in the 1930s, fixated on setting individual records, was intrinsically opposed to Taylor's systematic approach and proved to be counter-productive.[45] The stop-and-go of the production process – workers having nothing to do at the beginning of a month and 'storming' during illegal extra shifts at the end of the month – which prevailed even in the 1980s had nothing to do with the successfully taylorized plants e.g., of Toyota which are characterized by continuous production processes (heijunka) which are continuously improved (kaizen).[46]

"The easy availability of replacement labor, which allowed Taylor to choose only 'first-class men,' was an important condition for his system's success."[47] The situation in the Soviet Union was very different. "Because work is so unrhythmic, the rational manager will hire more workers than he would need if supplies were even in order to have enough for storming. Because of the continuing labor shortage, managers are happy to pay needed workers more than the norm, either by issuing false job orders, assigning them to higher skill grades than they deserve on merit criteria, giving them 'loose' piece rates, or making what is supposed to be 'incentive' pay, premia for good work, effectively part of the normal wage. As Mary McAuley has suggested under these circumstances piece rates are not an incentive wage, but a way of justifying giving workers whatever they 'should' be getting, no matter what their pay is supposed to be according to the official norms."[48]

Taylor and his theories are also referenced (and put to practice) in the 1921 dystopian novel We by Yevgeny Zamyatin.

Canada

In the early 1920s, the Canadian textile industry was re-organized according to scientific management principles. In 1928, workers at Canada Cotton Ltd. in Hamilton, Ontario went on strike against newly introduced Taylorist work methods. Also, Henry Gantt, who was a close associate of Taylor, re-organized the Canadian Pacific Railway.[49]

With the prevalence of US branch plants in Canada and close economic and cultural ties between the two countries, the sharing of business practices, including Taylorism, has been common.

The Taylor Society and its legacy

The Taylor Society was founded in 1912 by Taylor's allies to promote his values and influence.[50] A decade after Taylor's death in 1915 the Taylor Society had 800 members, including many leading U.S. industrialists and managers.[51] In 1936 the Society merged with the Society of Industrial Engineers, forming the Society for Advancement of Management, which still exists today.[52]

Criticism of Taylor

Many of the critiques of Taylor come from Marxists. The earliest was by Antonio Gramsci, an Italian Communist, in his Prison Notebooks (1937). Gramsci argued that Taylorism subordinates the workers to management. He also argued that the repetitive work produced by Taylorism might actually give rise to revolutionary thoughts in workers' minds.[53][54]

Harry Braverman's work Labor and Monopoly Capital: The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century, published in 1974, was critical of scientific management and of Taylor in particular. This work pioneered the field of Labor Process Theory as well as contributing to the historiography of the workplace.

Management theorist Henry Mintzberg is highly critical of Taylor's methods. Mintzberg states that an obsession with efficiency allows measurable benefits to overshadow less quantifiable social benefits completely, and social values get left behind.[55]

Taylor's methods have also been challenged by socialists. Their arguments relate to progressive defanging of workers in the workplace and the subsequent degradation of work as management, powered by capital, uses Taylor's methods to render work repeatable and precise yet monotonous and skill-reducing.[56] James W. Rinehart argued that Taylor's methods of transferring control over production from workers to management, and the division of labor into simple tasks, intensified the alienation of workers that had begun with the factory system of production around the period 1870 to 1890.[57]

Criticism of Taylor and the Japanese model, according to Kōnosuke Matsushita:

"We are going to win and the industrial west is going to lose out; ... the reasons for failure are within yourselves. Your firms are built on the Taylor model. Even worse, so are your heads. With your bosses doing the thinking while workers wield the screwdrivers, you’re convinced deep down that it is the right way to run a business. For the essence of management is getting ideas out of the heads of the bosses and into the heads of labour. We are beyond your mindset. Business, we know, is now so complex and difficult, the survival of firms so hazardous in an environment increasingly unpredictable, competitive and fraught with danger, that their continued existence depends on the day-to-day mobilisation of every ounce of intelligence."[58]

Tennis and golf accomplishments

Taylor was an accomplished tennis and golf player. He and Clarence Clark won the inaugural United States National tennis doubles championship at Newport Casino in 1881, defeating Alexander Van Rensselaer and Arthur Newbold ( Arthur Emlen Newbold; 1859–1920) in straight sets.[1] In the 1900 Summer Olympics, Taylor finished fourth in golf.

Result Year Championship Surface Partner Opponents Score
Win 1881 U.S. Doubles Championships Grass
  Frederick W. Taylor
  Clarence Clark
  Alexander Van Rensselaer
  Arthur Newbold
6–5, 6–4, 6–5

Publications

Books

  • 1903, 1911. Taylor, Frederick Winslow (1911). Shop Management (With an introduction by Henry R. Towne). New York, London: Harper & Brothers.[59]
  • 1911. Taylor, Frederick Winslow (1919) [1911]. The Principles of Scientific Management. Harper & Brothers – via Internet Archive (Prelinger Library)  . LCCN 11-10339; OCLC 233134 (all editions).
    The Principles of Scientific Management – via Project Gutenberg  .
  • 1911. Taylor, Frederick Winslow; Thompson, Sanford Eleazer (1867–1949) (1907). A Treatise on Concrete, Plain and Reinforced: Materials, Construction, and Design of Concrete and Reinforced Concrete (1st ed.). New York: John Wiley & Sons – via Internet Archive (University of Toronto)  . OCLC 1722781 (all editions).
  • 1912. Taylor, Frederick Winslow; Thompson, Sanford Eleazer (1867–1949) (1912). Concrete Costs (1st ed.; 1st issue). John Wiley & Sons – via Internet Archive (University of Wisconsin–Madison)  . LCCN 12-10295; OCLC 2272138 (all editions).

Selected articles

Bibliography

Notes

  1. ^ a b c New York Times, March 22, 1915, p. 9.
  2. ^ Wall Street Journal, June 13, 1997, p. A17.
  3. ^ Bedeian & Wren, Winter 2001, pp. 221–225.
  4. ^ Epstein, 1996, pp. 579–580.
  5. ^ Papesh, February 14, 1998.
  6. ^ Miami University, 2003.
  7. ^ Hughes, 1989, p. 190.
  8. ^ Kanigel, 1997, pp. 182–183, 199.
  9. ^ New York Times, June 15, 1883, p. 8.
  10. ^ Copley, 1923, pp. 396–397.
  11. ^ Drury, 1918, p. 100.
  12. ^ "F.W. Taylor Collection," 2001.
  13. ^ Roeber & Parmelee, March 1909.
  14. ^ Harrison Letter, October 8, 1906.
  15. ^ D'Aveni, Winter 2003.
  16. ^ Frederick Taylor University.
  17. ^ Drucker, The Rise, Spring 1993, pp. 63–65.
  18. ^ Drucker, The Rise, Spring 1993, pp. 61–62.
  19. ^ Drucker, 1974, p. 181.
  20. ^ Montgomery, 1989, p. 250.
  21. ^ a b Taylor, Principles, 1919, p. 63.
  22. ^ Taylor, Principles, 1919, p. 59.
  23. ^ Rinehart, 1975, p. 44.
  24. ^ Taylor 1911, p. 95.
  25. ^ Montgomery, 1989, p. 254.
  26. ^ Hough & White, September-October 2001.
  27. ^ Baruch, March 1, 2009.
  28. ^ Jaffe, 1957, p. 34.
  29. ^ Jaffe, 1957, pp. 36–40.
  30. ^ Nelson, 1980, p. 174.
  31. ^ Lepore, October 12, 2009, p. 114.
  32. ^ Fayol, 1988, p. 43.
  33. ^ Fayol, 1988, p. 44.
  34. ^ Fayol, 1968.
  35. ^ Fayol, 1949, p. 68.
  36. ^ Dumont, September 2012, pp. 36–40.
  37. ^ Bernège & Ribeill, 1989.
  38. ^ Henry, 2003, p. 5.
  39. ^ Maier, 1970.
  40. ^ Whitston, Summer 1997.
  41. ^ Kipping, October 1997.
  42. ^ Wren, June 8, 2015, pp. 309–327.
  43. ^ Wrege, 1987.
  44. ^ Atta, April 1986, p. 335.
  45. ^ Atta, April 1986, p. 331.
  46. ^ Head, 2003, p. 38–59.
  47. ^ Atta, April 1986, p. 329.
  48. ^ Atta, April 1986, p. 333.
  49. ^ Rinehart, 1975, p. 43.
  50. ^ Mee, Spring 1988.
  51. ^ Brown, May 1925.
  52. ^ Society for Advancement of Management (link).
  53. ^ Gramsci, Selections, 1929–1931.
  54. ^ Gramsci, 1929–1931.
  55. ^ Mintzberg, 1989, p. 333.
  56. ^ Braverman, 1974, pp. 43–52.
  57. ^ Rinehart, 1975, pp. 43–52.
  58. ^ 1990 & Pascale, 1990, p. 27.
  59. ^ Taylor, Shop, 1903, pp. 1337–1480.

References

Secondary sources – books, journals, magazines, and papers
  • Atta, Don Van, PhD (April 1986). "Why Is There No Taylorism in the Soviet Union?". Comparative Politics. 18 (33): 327–337. doi:10.2307/421614. JSTOR 421614. doi:10.2307/421614; JSTOR 421614; ISSN 0010-4159; OCLC 5548842780, 8313710703, 13565305.
  • Baruch, Yehuda, DSc (March 1, 2009). "Once Upon a Time There Was an Organization: Organizational Stories as Antitheses to Fairy Tales". Journal of Management Inquiry. 18 (1): 15–25. doi:10.1177/1056492606294522. S2CID 144074635. ISSN 1056-4926, ISSN 1552-6542; doi:10.1177/1056492606294522; OCLC 439088502, 5234861190; ProQuest 1928625238, 203317764 (ABI/Inform Collection).
  • Bernège, Paulette (1896–1983) (1989). "Le Tuyau: ÉLément Essentiel de Civilisation" [The Pipe: Essential Element of Civilization]. Flux, Numéro Spécial (presented by Georges Ribeill). 5: 59. Retrieved August 29, 2022 – via Persée. doi:10.3406/flux.1989.910; ISSN 1154-2721; OCLC 8333955036, 4648688853, 732458564.
  • Brown, Percy Shiras (1883–1973) (May 1925). "The Works and Aims of the Taylor Society". Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 119: 134–139. doi:10.1177/000271622511900121. JSTOR 1015419. S2CID 143498508. doi:10.1177/000271622511900121; JSTOR 1015419; ISSN 0002-7162; OCLC 5546400949, 5723415222.
  • Copley, Frank Barkley (1875–1941) (1923). Frederick W. Taylor, Father of Scientific Management. Harper & Brothers. (2 Vols.) LCCN 23-17530; OCLC 807494 (all editions).
    1. Vol. 1. Taylor Society. 1923 – via HathiTrust (University of Michigan Library)  .
    2. Vol. 2. Harper and Brothers. 1923 – via HathiTrust (University of California Libraries)  .
pp. 396–397. Taylor Society. 1923. → "The first statement of his management methods in general he reserved for his paper A Piece-Rate System read by him at the Detroit meeting of the A.S.M.E. in June, 1895."
  • Dumont, Marie-Jeanne (September 2012). "Si Les Femmes Faisaient Les Maisons, la Croisade de Paulette Bernège" [If Women Made Houses – The Crusade of Paulette Bernège]. Criticat (re: Paulette Bernège's 1928 book, If Women Made Houses) (in French). 10: 36–40.
    . Archived from the original on May 6, 2016. Retrieved June 5, 2015 – via Wayback Machine.
"Mr. Taylor has taken out about one hundred patents, his greatest invention being the discovery between 1898 and 1900, jointly with Mr. Maunsel White, of the Taylor-White process of treating tungsten steel. This invention, according to the highest authorities, has revolutionized the machine shops of the world, enabling tools to cut metal at least three times as rapidly as before. The inventors received $100,000 [equivalent to $3,016,000 in 2021] for the English patents alone. Fame again came to Mr. Taylor upon his publication, in 1906, of the results of the extended researches of himself and others in the art of cutting metals – a work of genuine scientific character, and of the highest practical importance. Mr. Taylor, however, regarded as of far greater moment than all this other work his share in the discovery of the principles of scientific management."
  • Fayol, Henri (1949). General and Industrial Management. Retrieved August 29, 2022 – via Internet Archive  .
  • Frederick Winslow Taylor – A Memorial Volume, Being Addresses Delivered at the Funeral of Frederick Winslow Taylor, Cedron, Indian Queen Lane, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa., March 24, 1915; At a Memorial Meeting Held Under the Auspices of the Society to Promote the Science of Management (Now Taylor Society) University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa., October 22, 1915; And at Mr. Taylor's Home "Boxly," Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa., October 23, 1915. Taylor Society. 1920. Retrieved August 28, 2022 – via Internet Archive (Library of Congress)  . LCCN 21-1438.
  • . Samuel C. Williams Library, Stevens Institute of Technology. 2001. Archived from the original on November 12, 2007. Retrieved May 4, 2008. (Series III of the Collection – "Patents and Correspondence Relating to Patents") OCLC 123905137.
  • Henry, Odile (2003). "Femmes & Taylorisme: La Rationalisation du Travail Domestique" [Women & Taylorism: The Rationalization of Domestic Work]. Agone (in French) (28): 5. Retrieved June 5, 2015. doi:10.4000/revueagone.402; OCLC 4659970814.
    The article is also included in a compilation book → Vincent, Béatrice, ed. (2003). Lutte des Sexes & Lutte des Classes [Gender Struggle & Class Struggle] (in French). Marseille: Éditions Agone. ISBN 2-7489-0003-0, 978-2-7489-0003-3; OCLC 491458578 (all editions).
  • Hough, Jill Renee; White, Margaret Alice (September–October 2001). "Using Stories to Create Change: The Object Lesson of Frederick Taylor's 'Pig-Tale'". Journal of Management. Sage Publications. 27 (5): 585–601. doi:10.1177/014920630102700505; ProQuest 197150631 (ABI/Inform Collection); ISSN 0149-2063; OCLC 5568698486, 4309090200.
  • Lepore, Jill (October 12, 2009). "Not So Fast – Scientific Management Started as a Way to Work. How Did It Become a Way of Life?". The New Yorker (book review → The Management Myth – Why the 'Experts' Keep Getting It Wrong, by Matthew Stewart). Vol. 85, no. 32. p. 114 (1st page). Retrieved June 28, 2017. ProQuest 233147691; ISSN 0028-792X, ISSN 2163-3827; OCLC 5326941980.
    In 1908, Edwin Gay, a Harvard economics professor, visited Taylor in Philadelphia. Gay had been frustrated in his efforts to start a business school at Harvard: "I am constantly being told by businessmen that we cannot teach business." After meeting Taylor, Gay declared, "I am convinced that there is a scientific method involved in and underlying the art of business."
    1. Vol. 1 (1992 ed.) – via Google Books (limited preview). ISBN 0-2310-6082-3, 978-0-2310-6082-0.
    2. Vol. 2 (not available online) (1992 ed.). ISBN 0-2311-0592-4, 978-0-2311-0592-7.
    3. Vol. 3 (not available online) (1992 ed.). ISBN 978-0-2311-3944-1.
    4. Vol. 3 (2007 ed.). 1992 – via Internet Archive (Trent University). ISBN 978-0-2311-3944-1.
  • Roeber, Eugene Franz (1867–1917); Parmelee, Howard Coon (1874–1928) (March 1909). "The High-Speed Tool-Steel Patent Decision". Electrochemical and Metallurgical Industry. 7 (3): 105–107. Retrieved February 9, 2016 – via Google Books (University of Michigan Library)  .
    "The famous patent suit of the Bethlehem Steel company against the Niles-Bement-Pond Company for infringement of two fundamental patents of F. W. Taylor and M. White [Maunsel White III; 1856–1912] (668,369 and 668,270, both of Feb. 19, 1907,) has been decided in favor of the defendant ... "
    "The decision of the court emphasizes that there is no new composition of steel invented by Taylor and White."
  • SAM – Society for Advancement of Management (link).
  • Whitston, Kevin, PhD (Summer 1997). "The Reception of Scientific Management by British Engineers, 1890–1914". The Business History Review. 71 (2): 207–229. doi:10.2307/3116158. JSTOR 3116158. S2CID 145203181. OCLC 0007-6805; JSTOR 3116158; OCLC 5546532273, 5235438781.
  • Wrege, Charles D.; Greenwood, Ronald G.; Hata, Sakae (1987). "The International Management Institute and Political Opposition to its Efforts in Europe, 1925–1934". Business and Economic History. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.392.2216. JSTOR 23702641; ISSN 0894-6825; OCLC 5792788126.
  • Wren, Daniel Alan, PhD (June 8, 2015). "Implementing the Gantt Chart in Europe and Britain: The Contributions of Wallace Clark". Journal of Management History. 21 (3): 309–327. doi:10.1108/JMH-09-2014-0163. doi:10.1108/JMH-09-2014-0163; ISSN 1751-1348; OCLC 5911249398, 7054577907, 1014430228. Online here.
Secondary sources – news media
  • New York Times (The) (June 15, 1883). "Stevens Institute Graduates – A Special Department of Applied Electricity to Be Established". Vol. 32, no. 9914. p. 8. Retrieved August 30, 2022 – via TimesMachine.
  • New York Times (The) (March 22, 1915). "F.W. Taylor, Expert in Efficiency, Dies". Vol. 64, no. 20876. p. 9 (col. 5). Retrieved March 14, 2008 – via TimesMachine.
    Also accessible via:
    1. TimesMachine permalink.
    2. Online reprint by the New York Times Leaning Network (online education blog) → "On This Day" (Times archive). March 20, 2018.
    3. Newspapers.com.
"Frederick Winslow Taylor, originator of the modern scientific management movement ... "
Primary sources
  • Taylor, Frederick Winslow (1947). Scientific Management – Comprising Shop Management [1903], The Principles of Scientific Management [1911], "Testimony Before the Special House Committee" [1912] (A Harper International Student Reprint). With introduction by Harlow Stafford Person (1875–1955). New York, Evanston, London: Harper & Row. LCCN 47-11978; OCLC 560540 (all editions).

Further reading

See Also

External links

  • Works by Frederick Winslow Taylor at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Frederick Winslow Taylor at Internet Archive
  • Special Collections: Frederick Winslow Taylor. The Samuel C. Williams Library at the Stevens Institute of Technology has an extensive collection. OCLC 123905137.
  • "Frederick W. Taylor, 1856–1915". Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments, Harvard University. OCLC 77066758.
  • Charles D. Wrege Research Papers; Collection Number: 6395 (see Charles D. Wrege; 1924–2014). Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Cornell University Library. OCLC 826068268
    Series III: Frederick W. Taylor
    Series X: Boxly: Frederick Taylor's Residence – Includes the 1921 Hawthorne Film, a video tour of Boxly (Frederick W. Taylor's house), and videos on management history and historical research.

frederick, winslow, taylor, march, 1856, march, 1915, american, mechanical, engineer, widely, known, methods, improve, industrial, efficiency, first, management, consultants, 1909, taylor, summed, efficiency, techniques, book, principles, scientific, managemen. Frederick Winslow Taylor March 20 1856 March 21 1915 was an American mechanical engineer He was widely known for his methods to improve industrial efficiency 1 He was one of the first management consultants 2 In 1909 Taylor summed up his efficiency techniques in his book The Principles of Scientific Management which in 2001 Fellows of the Academy of Management voted the most influential management book of the twentieth century 3 His pioneering work in applying engineering principles to the work done on the factory floor was instrumental in the creation and development of the branch of engineering that is now known as industrial engineering Taylor made his name and was most proud of his work in scientific management however he made his fortune patenting steel process improvements As a result scientific management is sometimes referred to as Taylorism 4 Frederick Winslow TaylorTaylor circa 1907BornMarch 20 1856 1856 03 20 Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S DiedMarch 21 1915 1915 03 21 aged 59 Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S Resting placeWest Laurel Hill CemeteryBala Cynwyd Pennsylvania U S EducationPhillips Exeter AcademyAlma materStevens Institute ofTechnology BS Occupation s Efficiency expertManagement consultantKnown forFather of scientific management efficiency movement and industrial engineeringSpouseLouise M SpoonerChildren3AwardsElliott Cresson Medal 1902 Contents 1 Biography 2 Work 2 1 Managers and workers 2 2 Rhetorical techniques 2 3 Scholarly debate about increased efficiency moving pig iron at Bethlehem s Iron and Steel 2 4 Management theory 2 5 Relations with ASME 3 Taylor s influence 3 1 United States 3 2 France 3 3 Great Britain 3 4 Switzerland 3 5 USSR 3 6 Canada 3 7 The Taylor Society and its legacy 3 8 Criticism of Taylor 4 Tennis and golf accomplishments 5 Publications 6 Bibliography 6 1 Notes 6 2 References 7 Further reading 8 See Also 9 External linksBiography EditTaylor was born in 1856 to a Quaker family in Germantown Philadelphia Pennsylvania Taylor s father Franklin Taylor a Princeton educated lawyer built his wealth on mortgages 5 Taylor s mother Emily Annette Taylor nee Winslow was an ardent abolitionist and a coworker with Lucretia Mott His father s ancestor Samuel Taylor settled in Burlington New Jersey in 1677 His mother s ancestor Edward Winslow was one of the fifteen original Mayflower Pilgrims who brought servants or children and one of eight who had the honorable distinction of Mister Winslow served for many years as the Governor of the Plymouth colony Educated early by his mother Taylor studied for two years in France and Germany and traveled Europe for 18 months 6 In 1872 he entered Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter New Hampshire with the plan of eventually going to Harvard and becoming a lawyer like his father In 1874 Taylor passed the Harvard entrance examinations with honors However due allegedly to rapidly deteriorating eyesight Taylor chose quite a different path Instead of attending Harvard University Taylor became an apprentice patternmaker and machinist gaining shop floor experience at Enterprise Hydraulic Works in Philadelphia a pump manufacturing company whose proprietors were friends of the Taylor family He left his apprenticeship for six months and represented a group of New England machine tool manufacturers at Philadelphia s centennial exposition Taylor finished his four year apprenticeship and in 1878 became a machine shop laborer at Midvale Steel Works At Midvale he was quickly promoted to time clerk journeyman machinist gang boss over the lathe hands machine shop foreman research director and finally chief engineer of the works while maintaining his position as machine shop foreman Taylor s fast promotions reflected both his talent and his family s relationship with Edward Clark part owner of Midvale Steel Edward Clark s son Clarence Clark who was also a manager at Midvale Steel married Taylor s sister Midvale Steel Works Aerial View 1879 Early on at Midvale working as a laborer and machinist Taylor recognized that workmen were working their machines or themselves not nearly as hard as they could a practice that at the time was called soldiering and that this resulted in high labor costs for the company When he became a foreman he expected more output from the workmen In order to determine how much work should properly be expected he began to study and analyze the productivity of both the men and the machines although the word productivity was not used at the time and the applied science of productivity had not yet been developed His focus on the human component of production Taylor labeled scientific management 7 While Taylor worked at Midvale he and Clarence Clark won the first tennis doubles tournament in the 1881 US National Championships the precursor of the US Open 1 Taylor became a student of Stevens Institute of Technology studying via correspondence 8 and obtaining a bachelor s degree in mechanical engineering in 1883 9 On May 3 1884 he married Louise M Spooner of Philadelphia The Bethlehem Steel plant 1896 From 1890 until 1893 Taylor worked as a general manager and a consulting engineer to management for the Manufacturing Investment Company of Philadelphia a company that operated large paper mills in Maine and Wisconsin He was a plant manager in Maine In 1893 Taylor opened an independent consulting practice in Philadelphia His business card read Consulting Engineer Systematizing Shop Management and Manufacturing Costs a Specialty Through these consulting experiences Taylor perfected his management system His first paper A Piece Rate System was presented to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers ASME in June 1895 10 In 1898 he joined Bethlehem Steel to solve an expensive machine shop capacity problem While at Bethlehem he discovered the best known and most profitable of his many patents between 1898 and 1900 Taylor and Maunsel White ne Maunsel White III 1856 1912 grandson of Maunsel White 1783 1863 conducted comprehensive empirical tests and concluded that tungsten alloyed steel doubled or quadrupled cutting speeds The inventors received US 100 000 equivalent to about 3 300 000 in 2021 for the English patents alone 11 12 although the U S patent was eventually nullified 13 Taylor was forced to leave Bethlehem Steel in 1901 after discord with other managers Now a wealthy man Taylor focused the remainder of his career promoting his management and machining methods through lecturing writing and consulting In 1910 owing to the Eastern Rate Case Frederick Winslow Taylor and his Scientific Management methodologies became famous worldwide In 1911 Taylor introduced his The Principles of Scientific Management paper to the ASME eight years after his Shop Management paper On October 19 1906 Taylor was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Science by the University of Pennsylvania 14 Taylor eventually became a professor at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College 15 In early spring of 1915 Taylor caught pneumonia and died 16 one day after his fifty ninth birthday on March 21 1915 He was buried in West Laurel Hill Cemetery in Bala Cynwyd Pennsylvania Work EditThis section contains too many or overly lengthy quotations for an encyclopedic entry Please help improve the article by presenting facts as a neutrally worded summary with appropriate citations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or for entire works to Wikisource December 2019 Darwin Marx and Freud make up the trinity often cited as the makers of the modern world Marx would be taken out and replaced by Taylor if there were any justice For hundreds of years there had been no increase in the ability of workers to turn out goods or to move goods When Taylor started propounding his principles nine out of every 10 working people did manual work making or moving things whether in manufacturing farming mining or transportation By 2010 it will constitute no more than one tenth The Productivity Revolution has become a victim of its own success From now on what matters is the productivity of nonmanual workers bolding added Peter Drucker The Rise of the Knowledge Society Wilson Quarterly Spring 1993 p 63 65 17 Taylor s crime in the eyes of the unions was his assertion that there is no skilled work In manual operations there is only work All work can be analyzed the same way The unions were craft monopolies and membership in them was largely restricted to sons or relatives of members They required an apprenticeship of five to seven years but had no systematic training or work study The unions allowed nothing to be written down There were not even blueprints or any other drawings of the work to be done Union members were sworn to secrecy and forbidden to discuss their work with nonmembers bolding added Peter Drucker The Rise of the Knowledge Society Wilson Quarterly Spring 1993 p 61 62 18 Taylor was a mechanical engineer who sought to improve industrial efficiency He is regarded as the father of scientific management and was one of the first management consultants and director of a famous firm In Peter Drucker s description Frederick W Taylor was the first man in recorded history who deemed work deserving of systematic observation and study On Taylor s scientific management rests above all the tremendous surge of affluence in the last seventy five years which has lifted the working masses in the developed countries well above any level recorded before even for the well to do Taylor though the Isaac Newton or perhaps the Archimedes of the science of work laid only first foundations however Not much has been added to them since even though he has been dead all of sixty years 19 Taylor s scientific management consisted of four principles Replace rule of thumb work methods with methods based on a scientific study of the tasks Scientifically select train and develop each employee rather than passively leaving them to train themselves Provide Detailed instruction and supervision of each worker in the performance of that worker s discrete task 20 Divide work nearly equally between managers and workers so that the managers apply scientific management principles to planning the work and the workers actually perform the tasks Future US Supreme Court justice Louis Brandeis coined the term scientific management in the course of his argument for the Eastern Rate Case before the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1910 Brandeis argued that railroads when governed according to Taylor s principles did not need to raise rates to increase wages Taylor used Brandeis s term in the title of his monograph The Principles of Scientific Management published in 1911 The Eastern Rate Case propelled Taylor s ideas to the forefront of the management agenda Taylor wrote to Brandeis I have rarely seen a new movement started with such great momentum as you have given this one Taylor s approach is also often referred to as Taylor s Principles or frequently disparagingly as Taylorism Managers and workers Edit The idea then of training a workman under a competent teacher into new working habits until he continually and habitually works in accordance with scientific laws which have been developed by some one else is directly antagonistic to the old idea that each workman can best regulate his own way of doing the work the philosophy of the old management puts the entire responsibility upon the workmen while the philosophy of the new places a great part of it upon the management bolding added FW Taylor The Principles of Scientific Management 1911 p 63 21 Taylor had very precise ideas about how to introduce his system It is only through enforced standardization of methods enforced adoption of the best implements and working conditions and enforced cooperation that this faster work can be assured And the duty of enforcing the adoption of standards and enforcing this cooperation rests with the management alone 21 Workers were to be selected appropriately for each task One of the very first requirements for a man who is fit to handle pig iron as a regular occupation is that he shall be so stupid and so phlegmatic that he more nearly resembles in his mental make up the ox than any other type The man who is mentally alert and intelligent is for this very reason entirely unsuited to what would for him be the grinding monotony of work of this character 22 Taylor believed in transferring control from workers to management He set out to increase the distinction between mental planning work and manual labor executing work Detailed plans specifying the job and how it was to be done were to be formulated by management and communicated to the workers 23 The introduction of his system was often resented by workers and provoked numerous strikes The strike at Watertown Arsenal led to the congressional investigation in 1912 Taylor believed the laborer was worthy of his hire and pay was linked to productivity His workers were able to earn substantially more than those under conventional management 24 and this earned him enemies among the owners of factories where scientific management was not in use Rhetorical techniques EditTaylor promised to reconcile labor and capital With the triumph of scientific management unions would have nothing left to do and they would have been cleansed of their most evil feature the restriction of output To underscore this idea Taylor fashioned the myth that there has never been a strike of men working under scientific management trying to give it credibility by constant repetition In similar fashion he incessantly linked his proposals to shorter hours of work without bothering to produce evidence of Taylorized firms that reduced working hours and he revised his famous tale of Schmidt carrying pig iron at Bethlehem Steel at least three times obscuring some aspects of his study and stressing others so that each successive version made Schmidt s exertions more impressive more voluntary and more rewarding to him than the last Unlike Harrington Emerson Taylor was not a charlatan but his ideological message required the suppression of all evidence of worker s dissent of coercion or of any human motives or aspirations other than those his vision of progress could encompass 25 For the stories about Schmidt Montgomery refers to Charles D Wrege and Amadeo G Perroni Taylor s Pig Tale A Historical Analysis of Frederick W Taylor s Pig Iron experiments in Academy of Management Journal 17 March 1974 6 27 lt ref gt Scholarly debate about increased efficiency moving pig iron at Bethlehem s Iron and Steel Edit Debate about Taylor s Bethlehem study of workers particularly the stereotypical laborer Schmidt continues to this day One 2009 study supports assertions Taylor made about the quite substantial increase in productivity for even the most basic task of picking up carrying and dropping pigs of iron 26 27 Management theory Edit Taylor thought that by analysing work the one best way to do it would be found He is most remembered for developing the stopwatch time study which combined with Frank Gilbreth s motion study methods later became the field of time and motion study He broke a job into its component parts and measured each to the hundredth of a minute One of his most famous studies involved shovels He noticed that workers used the same shovel for all materials He determined that the most effective load was 21 pounds and found or designed shovels that for each material would scoop up that amount He was generally unsuccessful in getting his concepts applied and was dismissed from Bethlehem Iron Company Bethlehem Steel Company Nevertheless Taylor was able to convince workers who used shovels and whose compensation was tied to how much they produced to adopt his advice about the optimum way to shovel by breaking the movements down into their component elements and recommending better ways to perform these movements It was largely through his disciples efforts most notably Henry Gantt s that industry came to implement his ideas Moreover the book he wrote after parting company with the Bethlehem company Shop Management sold well Relations with ASME Edit Taylor s written works were designed for presentation to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers ASME These include Notes on Belting 1894 A Piece Rate System 1895 Shop Management 1903 Art of Cutting Metals 1906 and The Principles of Scientific Management 1911 Taylor was president of the ASME from 1906 to 1907 While president he tried to implement his system into the management of the ASME but met with much resistance He was able to reorganize only the publications department and that only partially He also forced out the ASME s longtime secretary Morris Llewellyn Cooke and replaced him with Calvin W Rice His tenure as president was trouble ridden and marked the beginning of a period of internal dissension within the ASME during the Progressive Age 28 In 1911 Taylor collected a number of his articles into a book length manuscript which he submitted to the ASME for publication The ASME formed an ad hoc committee to review the text The committee included Taylor allies such as James Mapes Dodge and Henry R Towne The committee delegated the report to the editor of the American Machinist Leon P Alford Alford was a critic of the Taylor system and his report was negative The committee modified the report slightly but accepted Alford s recommendation not to publish Taylor s book Taylor angrily withdrew the book and published Principles without ASME approval 29 30 Taylor published the trade book himself in 1912 Taylor s influence EditUnited States Edit One of Carl G Barth s speed and feed slide rules A Gantt chart Carl G Barth helped Taylor to develop speed and feed calculating slide rules to a previously unknown level of usefulness Similar aids are still used in machine shops today Barth became an early consultant on scientific management and later taught at Harvard H L Gantt developed the Gantt chart a visual aid for scheduling tasks and displaying the flow of work Harrington Emerson introduced scientific management to the railroad industry and proposed the dichotomy of staff versus line employees with the former advising the latter Morris Cooke adapted scientific management to educational and municipal organizations Hugo Munsterberg created industrial psychology Lillian Gilbreth introduced psychology to management studies Frank Gilbreth husband of Lillian discovered scientific management while working in the construction industry eventually developing motion studies independently of Taylor These logically complemented Taylor s time studies as time and motion are two sides of the efficiency improvement coin The two fields eventually became time and motion study Harvard University one of the first American universities to offer a graduate degree in business management in 1908 based its first year curriculum on Taylor s scientific management 31 Harlow S Person as dean of Dartmouth s Amos Tuck School of Administration and Finance promoted the teaching of scientific management James O McKinsey professor of accounting at the University of Chicago and founder of the consulting firm bearing his name advocated budgets as a means of assuring accountability and of measuring performance France Edit In France Le Chatelier translated Taylor s work and introduced scientific management throughout government owned plants during World War I This influenced the French theorist Henri Fayol whose 1916 Administration Industrielle et Generale emphasized organizational structure in management In the classic General and Industrial Management Fayol wrote that Taylor s approach differs from the one we have outlined in that he examines the firm from the bottom up He starts with the most elemental units of activity the workers actions then studies the effects of their actions on productivity devises new methods for making them more efficient and applies what he learns at lower levels to the hierarchy 32 He suggests that Taylor has staff analysts and advisors working with individuals at lower levels of the organization to identify the ways to improve efficiency According to Fayol the approach results in a negation of the principle of unity of command 33 Fayol criticized Taylor s functional management in this way In Shop Management Taylor said 34 the most marked outward characteristics of functional management lies in the fact that each workman instead of coming in direct contact with the management at one point only receives his daily orders and help from eight different bosses these eight were 1 route clerks 2 instruction card men 3 cost and time clerks 4 gang bosses 5 speed bosses 6 inspectors 7 repair bosses and the 8 shop disciplinarian 35 Fayol said that this was an unworkable situation and that Taylor must have reconciled the differences in some way not described in Taylor s works Around 1922 the journalist Paulette Bernege became interested in Taylor s theories which were popular in France in the post war period 36 Bernege became the faithful disciple of the Domestic Sciences Movement that Christine Frederick had launched earlier in the United States which Bernege adapted to French homes Frederick had transferred the concepts of Taylorism from the factory to domestic work These included suitable tools rational study of movements and timing of tasks Scientific standards for housework were derived from scientific standards for workshops intended to streamline the work of a housewife 37 The Comite national de l organisation francaise CNOF was founded in 1925 by a group of journalists and consulting engineers who saw Taylorism as a way to expand their client base Founders included prominent engineers such as Henry Louis Le Chatelier and Leon Guillet Bernege s Institute of Housekeeping Organization participated in various congresses on the scientific organization of work that led up to the founding of the CNOF and in 1929 led to a section in CNOF on domestic economy 38 Great Britain Edit Older historical accounts used to suggest that British industry had less interest in Taylor s teachings than in similarly sized countries 39 More recent research has revealed that British engineers and managers were as interested as in other countries 40 This disparity was largely due to what historians have been analysing recent research has revealed that Taylor s practices diffused to Britain more through consultancies in particular the Bedaux consultancy than through institutions as in Germany and to a lesser extent France where a mixture was most effective 41 42 Particularly enthusiastic were the Cadbury family Seebohm Rowntree Oliver Sheldon and Lyndall Urwick In addition to establishing a consultancy to implement Taylor s system Urwick Orr amp Partners Urwick was also a key historian of F W Taylor and scientific management publishing The Making of Scientific Management trilogy in the 1940s and The Golden Book of Management in 1956 Switzerland Edit In Switzerland the American Edward Albert Filene established the International Management Institute to spread information about management techniques Lyndall Urwick was its director until the IMI closed in 1933 43 Charles D Wrege Ronald G Greenwood and Sakae Hata The International Management Institute and Political Opposition to its Efforts in Europe 1925 1934 Business and Economic History 1987 PDF link lt ref gt USSR Edit In the Soviet Union Vladimir Lenin was very impressed by Taylorism which he and other Bolshevik leaders tried to incorporate into Soviet manufacturing When Joseph Stalin took power in the 1920s he championed the theory of Socialism in one country which denied that the Soviet economy needed foreign help to develop and open advocates of Western management techniques fell into disfavor No longer celebrated by Soviet leadership Taylorism and the mass production methods of Henry Ford remained silent influences during the industrialization of the Soviet Union Nevertheless Frederick Taylor s methods have never really taken root in the Soviet Union 44 The voluntaristic approach of Stalin s Stakhanovite movement in the 1930s fixated on setting individual records was intrinsically opposed to Taylor s systematic approach and proved to be counter productive 45 The stop and go of the production process workers having nothing to do at the beginning of a month and storming during illegal extra shifts at the end of the month which prevailed even in the 1980s had nothing to do with the successfully taylorized plants e g of Toyota which are characterized by continuous production processes heijunka which are continuously improved kaizen 46 The easy availability of replacement labor which allowed Taylor to choose only first class men was an important condition for his system s success 47 The situation in the Soviet Union was very different Because work is so unrhythmic the rational manager will hire more workers than he would need if supplies were even in order to have enough for storming Because of the continuing labor shortage managers are happy to pay needed workers more than the norm either by issuing false job orders assigning them to higher skill grades than they deserve on merit criteria giving them loose piece rates or making what is supposed to be incentive pay premia for good work effectively part of the normal wage As Mary McAuley has suggested under these circumstances piece rates are not an incentive wage but a way of justifying giving workers whatever they should be getting no matter what their pay is supposed to be according to the official norms 48 Taylor and his theories are also referenced and put to practice in the 1921 dystopian novel We by Yevgeny Zamyatin Canada Edit In the early 1920s the Canadian textile industry was re organized according to scientific management principles In 1928 workers at Canada Cotton Ltd in Hamilton Ontario went on strike against newly introduced Taylorist work methods Also Henry Gantt who was a close associate of Taylor re organized the Canadian Pacific Railway 49 With the prevalence of US branch plants in Canada and close economic and cultural ties between the two countries the sharing of business practices including Taylorism has been common The Taylor Society and its legacy Edit The Taylor Society was founded in 1912 by Taylor s allies to promote his values and influence 50 A decade after Taylor s death in 1915 the Taylor Society had 800 members including many leading U S industrialists and managers 51 In 1936 the Society merged with the Society of Industrial Engineers forming the Society for Advancement of Management which still exists today 52 Criticism of Taylor Edit Many of the critiques of Taylor come from Marxists The earliest was by Antonio Gramsci an Italian Communist in his Prison Notebooks 1937 Gramsci argued that Taylorism subordinates the workers to management He also argued that the repetitive work produced by Taylorism might actually give rise to revolutionary thoughts in workers minds 53 54 Harry Braverman s work Labor and Monopoly Capital The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century published in 1974 was critical of scientific management and of Taylor in particular This work pioneered the field of Labor Process Theory as well as contributing to the historiography of the workplace Management theorist Henry Mintzberg is highly critical of Taylor s methods Mintzberg states that an obsession with efficiency allows measurable benefits to overshadow less quantifiable social benefits completely and social values get left behind 55 Taylor s methods have also been challenged by socialists Their arguments relate to progressive defanging of workers in the workplace and the subsequent degradation of work as management powered by capital uses Taylor s methods to render work repeatable and precise yet monotonous and skill reducing 56 James W Rinehart argued that Taylor s methods of transferring control over production from workers to management and the division of labor into simple tasks intensified the alienation of workers that had begun with the factory system of production around the period 1870 to 1890 57 Criticism of Taylor and the Japanese model according to Kōnosuke Matsushita We are going to win and the industrial west is going to lose out the reasons for failure are within yourselves Your firms are built on the Taylor model Even worse so are your heads With your bosses doing the thinking while workers wield the screwdrivers you re convinced deep down that it is the right way to run a business For the essence of management is getting ideas out of the heads of the bosses and into the heads of labour We are beyond your mindset Business we know is now so complex and difficult the survival of firms so hazardous in an environment increasingly unpredictable competitive and fraught with danger that their continued existence depends on the day to day mobilisation of every ounce of intelligence 58 Tennis and golf accomplishments EditTaylor was an accomplished tennis and golf player He and Clarence Clark won the inaugural United States National tennis doubles championship at Newport Casino in 1881 defeating Alexander Van Rensselaer and Arthur Newbold ne Arthur Emlen Newbold 1859 1920 in straight sets 1 In the 1900 Summer Olympics Taylor finished fourth in golf Result Year Championship Surface Partner Opponents ScoreWin 1881 U S Doubles Championships Grass Frederick W Taylor Clarence Clark Alexander Van Rensselaer Arthur Newbold 6 5 6 4 6 5Publications EditBooks 1903 1911 Taylor Frederick Winslow 1911 Shop Management With an introduction by Henry R Towne New York London Harper amp Brothers 59 1911 Taylor Frederick Winslow 1919 1911 The Principles of Scientific Management Harper amp Brothers via Internet Archive Prelinger Library LCCN 11 10339 OCLC 233134 all editions The Principles of Scientific Management via Project Gutenberg 1911 Taylor Frederick Winslow Thompson Sanford Eleazer 1867 1949 1907 A Treatise on Concrete Plain and Reinforced Materials Construction and Design of Concrete and Reinforced Concrete 1st ed New York John Wiley amp Sons via Internet Archive University of Toronto OCLC 1722781 all editions 1912 Taylor Frederick Winslow Thompson Sanford Eleazer 1867 1949 1912 Concrete Costs 1st ed 1st issue John Wiley amp Sons via Internet Archive University of Wisconsin Madison LCCN 12 10295 OCLC 2272138 all editions Selected articles 1894 Notes on Belting Transactions American Society of Mechanical Engineers 15 204 259 1880 via Internet Archive University of Toronto OCLC 1052127574 all editions 1896 A Piece Rate System Economic Studies American Economic Association 1 2 89 129 June 1896 via Internet Archive University of Michigan OCLC 1076000 all editions 1903 Shop Management Transactions No 1003 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 24 1337 1480 1880 via Internet Archive University of Toronto OCLC 6077365 all editions 1906 On the Art of Cutting Metals Transactions No 1119 American Society of Mechanical Engineers 28 31 350 1880 via Internet Archive University of Toronto OCLC 9057615 all editions Bibliography EditNotes Edit a b c New York Times March 22 1915 p 9 Wall Street Journal June 13 1997 p A17 Bedeian amp Wren Winter 2001 pp 221 225 Epstein 1996 pp 579 580 Papesh February 14 1998 Miami University 2003 Hughes 1989 p 190 Kanigel 1997 pp 182 183 199 New York Times June 15 1883 p 8 Copley 1923 pp 396 397 Drury 1918 p 100 F W Taylor Collection 2001 Roeber amp Parmelee March 1909 Harrison Letter October 8 1906 D Aveni Winter 2003 Frederick Taylor University sfn error no target CITEREFFrederick Taylor University help Drucker The Rise Spring 1993 pp 63 65 Drucker The Rise Spring 1993 pp 61 62 Drucker 1974 p 181 Montgomery 1989 p 250 a b Taylor Principles 1919 p 63 Taylor Principles 1919 p 59 Rinehart 1975 p 44 Taylor 1911 p 95 Montgomery 1989 p 254 Hough amp White September October 2001 Baruch March 1 2009 Jaffe 1957 p 34 Jaffe 1957 pp 36 40 Nelson 1980 p 174 Lepore October 12 2009 p 114 Fayol 1988 p 43 Fayol 1988 p 44 Fayol 1968 sfn error no target CITEREFFayol 1968 help Fayol 1949 p 68 Dumont September 2012 pp 36 40 Bernege amp Ribeill 1989 Henry 2003 p 5 Maier 1970 Whitston Summer 1997 Kipping October 1997 Wren June 8 2015 pp 309 327 Wrege 1987 Atta April 1986 p 335 Atta April 1986 p 331 Head 2003 p 38 59 Atta April 1986 p 329 Atta April 1986 p 333 Rinehart 1975 p 43 Mee Spring 1988 Brown May 1925 Society for Advancement of Management link sfn error no target CITEREFSociety for Advancement of Management link help Gramsci Selections 1929 1931 Gramsci 1929 1931 Mintzberg 1989 p 333 Braverman 1974 pp 43 52 Rinehart 1975 pp 43 52 1990 amp Pascale 1990 p 27 Taylor Shop 1903 pp 1337 1480 References Edit Secondary sources books journals magazines and papers Atta Don Van PhD April 1986 Why Is There No Taylorism in the Soviet Union Comparative Politics 18 33 327 337 doi 10 2307 421614 JSTOR 421614 doi 10 2307 421614 JSTOR 421614 ISSN 0010 4159 OCLC 5548842780 8313710703 13565305 Baruch Yehuda DSc March 1 2009 Once Upon a Time There Was an Organization Organizational Stories as Antitheses to Fairy Tales Journal of Management Inquiry 18 1 15 25 doi 10 1177 1056492606294522 S2CID 144074635 ISSN 1056 4926 ISSN 1552 6542 doi 10 1177 1056492606294522 OCLC 439088502 5234861190 ProQuest 1928625238 203317764 ABI Inform Collection Bedeian Arthur G Wren Daniel Alan PhD Winter 2001 Most Influential Management Books of the 20th Century PDF Organizational Dynamics 29 3 221 225 doi 10 1016 S0090 2616 01 00022 5 Retrieved March 12 2017 via Louisiana State University ISSN 0090 2616 doi 10 1016 S0090 2616 01 00022 5 OCLC 5198509376 Bernege Paulette 1896 1983 1989 Le Tuyau ELement Essentiel de Civilisation The Pipe Essential Element of Civilization Flux Numero Special presented by Georges Ribeill 5 59 Retrieved August 29 2022 via Persee doi 10 3406 flux 1989 910 ISSN 1154 2721 OCLC 8333955036 4648688853 732458564 Braverman Harry 1920 1976 1974 Labor and Monopoly Capital The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century see Labor and Monopoly Capital pp 43 52 Retrieved August 29 2022 via Internet Archive LCCN 74 7785 ISBN 0 8534 5340 3 OCLC 13085658 all editions Brown Percy Shiras 1883 1973 May 1925 The Works and Aims of the Taylor Society Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 119 134 139 doi 10 1177 000271622511900121 JSTOR 1015419 S2CID 143498508 doi 10 1177 000271622511900121 JSTOR 1015419 ISSN 0002 7162 OCLC 5546400949 5723415222 Copley Frank Barkley 1875 1941 1923 Frederick W Taylor Father of Scientific Management Harper amp Brothers 2 Vols LCCN 23 17530 OCLC 807494 all editions Vol 1 Taylor Society 1923 via HathiTrust University of Michigan Library Vol 2 Harper and Brothers 1923 via HathiTrust University of California Libraries pp 396 397 Taylor Society 1923 The first statement of his management methods in general he reserved for his paper A Piece Rate System read by him at the Detroit meeting of the A S M E in June 1895 D Aveni Richard Anthony Winter 2003 On Changing the Conversation Tuck and the Field of Strategy Tuck Today alumni magazine of the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth Hanover New Hampshire Archived from the original on August 4 2007 Retrieved November 22 2007 OCLC 18735559 all editions Drucker Peter F Spring 1993 The Rise of the Knowledge Society PDF The Wilson Quarterly 17 2 52 71 OCLC 5234803341 4595414907 8658889301 amp 30828911 Drucker Peter F 1974 Management Tasks Responsibilities Practices New York Harper amp Row via Internet Archive ISBN 978 1 4128 0627 5 Dumont Marie Jeanne September 2012 Si Les Femmes Faisaient Les Maisons la Croisade de Paulette Bernege If Women Made Houses The Crusade of Paulette Bernege Criticat re Paulette Bernege s 1928 book If Women Made Houses in French 10 36 40 Transcribed on EditionsD Fiction blog Archived from the original on May 6 2016 Retrieved June 5 2015 via Wayback Machine Drury Horace Bookwalter 1918 Scientific Management A History and Criticism Studies in History Economics and Public Law this is a re print of Drury s 1915 PhD dissertation at Columbia Edited by the Faculty of Political Science of Columbia University 65 1 whole no 157 100 via Internet Archive Cornell University Library Mr Taylor has taken out about one hundred patents his greatest invention being the discovery between 1898 and 1900 jointly with Mr Maunsel White of the Taylor White process of treating tungsten steel This invention according to the highest authorities has revolutionized the machine shops of the world enabling tools to cut metal at least three times as rapidly as before The inventors received 100 000 equivalent to 3 016 000 in 2021 for the English patents alone Fame again came to Mr Taylor upon his publication in 1906 of the results of the extended researches of himself and others in the art of cutting metals a work of genuine scientific character and of the highest practical importance Mr Taylor however regarded as of far greater moment than all this other work his share in the discovery of the principles of scientific management Epstein Marc J 1996 Taylor Frederick Winslow 1856 1915 In Chatfield Michael Vangermeersch Richard eds History of Accounting An International Encyclopedia New York Garland Publishing pp 579 580 ISBN 9780815308096 Retrieved August 29 2022 via Internet Archive Fayol Henri 1949 General and Industrial Management Retrieved August 29 2022 via Internet Archive Fayol Henri 1988 Revised by Irwin Gray ed General and Industrial Management Henri Fayol s Classic Belmont California Pitman Publishing ISBN 9780273029816 Retrieved August 29 2022 via Internet Archive Frederick Winslow Taylor A Memorial Volume Being Addresses Delivered at the Funeral of Frederick Winslow Taylor Cedron Indian Queen Lane Germantown Philadelphia Pa March 24 1915 At a Memorial Meeting Held Under the Auspices of the Society to Promote the Science of Management Now Taylor Society University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pa October 22 1915 And at Mr Taylor s Home Boxly Chestnut Hill Philadelphia Pa October 23 1915 Taylor Society 1920 Retrieved August 28 2022 via Internet Archive Library of Congress LCCN 21 1438 Frederick Taylor University About Frederick Winslow Taylor M E Sc D Retrieved March 30 2015 The M E represents Taylor s 1883 Bachelor s degree in Mechanical Engineering from Stevens Institute of Technology the Sc D was an honorary degree conferred by Penn in 1906 F W Taylor Collection Patents Samuel C Williams Library Stevens Institute of Technology 2001 Archived from the original on November 12 2007 Retrieved May 4 2008 Series III of the Collection Patents and Correspondence Relating to Patents OCLC 123905137 Harrison Charles Custis 1844 1929 October 8 1906 Letter to Taylor item no 053G001 Retrieved May 5 2008 via Stevens Institute of Technology Archives Frederick Winslow Taylor Collection OCLC 123905137 Head Simon 2003 The New Ruthless Economy Work and Power in the Digital Age Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 516601 9 Retrieved August 29 2022 via Internet Archive Lexington Public Library OCLC 762723768 all editions Henry Odile 2003 Femmes amp Taylorisme La Rationalisation du Travail Domestique Women amp Taylorism The Rationalization of Domestic Work Agone in French 28 5 Retrieved June 5 2015 doi 10 4000 revueagone 402 OCLC 4659970814 The article is also included in a compilation book Vincent Beatrice ed 2003 Lutte des Sexes amp Lutte des Classes Gender Struggle amp Class Struggle in French Marseille Editions Agone ISBN 2 7489 0003 0 978 2 7489 0003 3 OCLC 491458578 all editions Hough Jill Renee White Margaret Alice September October 2001 Using Stories to Create Change The Object Lesson of Frederick Taylor s Pig Tale Journal of Management Sage Publications 27 5 585 601 doi 10 1177 014920630102700505 ProQuest 197150631 ABI Inform Collection ISSN 0149 2063 OCLC 5568698486 4309090200 Hughes Thomas Parke 1989 American Genesis A Century of Invention and Technological Enthusiasm 1870 1970 New York Viking Press Penguin Books p 190 ISBN 9780140097412 Retrieved August 29 2022 via Internet Archive Marygrove College LCCN 89 39468 ISBN 0 1400 9741 4 978 0 1400 9741 2 OCLC 1016217167 all editions Jaffe William Julian 1910 2000 1957 L P Alford and the Evolution of Modern Industrial Management With an introduction by David B Porter See Leon Pratt Alford 1877 1942 New York University Press via HathiTrust University of Michigan LCCN 57 7915 OCLC 367967 all editions Kanigel Robert 1997 The One Best Way Frederick Winslow Taylor and the Enigma of Efficiency New York Viking Press ISBN 9780670864027 via Internet Archive ISBN 978 0 670 86402 7 Kipping Matthias October 1997 Consultancies Institutions and the Diffusion of Taylorism in Britain Germany and France 1920s to 1950s Business History Liverpool University Press Routledge Taylor amp Francis 39 4 67 83 doi 10 1080 00076799700000146 doi 10 1080 00076799700000146 ISSN 0007 6791 OCLC 4893274429 Kipping is a professor at the Schulich School of Business Lepore Jill October 12 2009 Not So Fast Scientific Management Started as a Way to Work How Did It Become a Way of Life The New Yorker book review The Management Myth Why the Experts Keep Getting It Wrong by Matthew Stewart Vol 85 no 32 p 114 1st page Retrieved June 28 2017 ProQuest 233147691 ISSN 0028 792X ISSN 2163 3827 OCLC 5326941980 In 1908 Edwin Gay a Harvard economics professor visited Taylor in Philadelphia Gay had been frustrated in his efforts to start a business school at Harvard I am constantly being told by businessmen that we cannot teach business After meeting Taylor Gay declared I am convinced that there is a scientific method involved in and underlying the art of business Maier Charles S 1970 Between Taylorism and Technocracy European Ideologies and the Vision of Industrial Productivity in the 1920s Journal of Contemporary History 5 2 27 61 doi 10 1177 002200947000500202 JSTOR 259743 S2CID 162139561 Retrieved August 29 2022 JSTOR 259743 ISSN 0022 0094 OCLC 651663797 5548943793 5723522076 Mee John Franklin PhD 1908 1985 Spring 1988 SAM A Short History PDF SAM Advanced Management Journal re Society for Advancement of Management Diamond Anniversary issue 53 2 5 12 EBSCOhost 4613584 Business Premier database ISSN 0749 7075 OCLC 8284291295 Mee wrote the article for SAM s Golden Anniversary issue Mee John Franklin PhD September 1963 SAM A Short History Advanced Management Journal 28 OCLC 311111459 OCLC 29085175 11028187 Miami University 2003 Frederick Winslow Taylor biographical essay Oxford Ohio Archived from the original on November 24 2003 Retrieved May 4 2008 via Wayback Machine Mintzberg Henry ed 1989 Mintzberg on Management New York The Free Press ISBN 9780029213711 Retrieved August 29 2022 via Internet Archive ISBN 978 1 4165 7319 7 Montgomery David 1989 The Fall of the House of Labor The Workplace the State and American Labor Activism 1865 1925 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521379823 via Internet Archive Boston Public Library For the stories about Schmidt Montgomery refers to Wrege Charles D Perroni Amadeo G March 1974 Taylor s Pig Tale A Historical Analysis of Frederick W Taylor s Pig Iron Experiments Academy of Management Journal 17 1 6 27 doi 10 2307 254767 JSTOR 254767 doi 10 5465 254767 JSTOR 254767 ISSN 0001 4273 OCLC 5260887207 5790939267 Nelson Daniel Melvin PhD born 1941 1980 Frederick W Taylor and the Rise of Scientific Management snippit view University of Wisconsin Press via Google Books LCCN 79 5411 ISBN 0 2990 8160 5 978 0 2990 8160 7 OCLC 6087867 all editions Papesh Mary Ellen February 14 1998 Frederick Winslow Taylor PDF student paper Joliet Illinois University of St Francis Business School Retrieved May 4 2008 Pascale Richard Tanner ed 1990 Managing on the Edge How Successful Companies Use Conflict for Competitive Advantage quoting Kōnosuke Matsushita Simon and Schuster p 27 ISBN 9780671624422 Retrieved August 29 2022 via Internet Archive LCCN 89 48997 OCLC 316016475 all editions Gramsci Antonio 1891 1937 1971 1929 1935 Hoare Quintin Smith Geoffrey Nowell eds Selections From the Prison Notebooks of Antonio Gramsci 11th printing International Publishers Retrieved August 30 2022 via Internet Archive LCCN 71 168985 1st ed LCCN 72 175271 ISBN 0 7178 0397 X OCLC 185485941 all editions Gramsci Antonio 1891 1937 1991 2011 1929 1935 Prison Notebooks Quaderni del Carcere translated eds 1991 1992 1996 2007 2008 2011 by Joseph Anthony Buttigieg II 1947 2019 See Prison Notebooks 3 volumes Columbia University Press LCCN 91 22910 ISBN 0 2311 5755 X 978 0 2311 5755 1 2011 ed OCLC 210400186 all editions Vol 1 1992 ed via Google Books limited preview ISBN 0 2310 6082 3 978 0 2310 6082 0 Vol 2 not available online 1992 ed ISBN 0 2311 0592 4 978 0 2311 0592 7 Vol 3 not available online 1992 ed ISBN 978 0 2311 3944 1 Vol 3 2007 ed 1992 via Internet Archive Trent University ISBN 978 0 2311 3944 1 Rinehart James W born 1933 1975 The Tyranny of Work Canadian Social Problems Series Don Mills Academic Press Canada p 44 ISBN 9780774730297 Retrieved August 29 2022 via Internet Archive LCCN 76 355264 ISBN 0 7747 3029 3 OCLC 2090135 all editions Roeber Eugene Franz 1867 1917 Parmelee Howard Coon 1874 1928 March 1909 The High Speed Tool Steel Patent Decision Electrochemical and Metallurgical Industry 7 3 105 107 Retrieved February 9 2016 via Google Books University of Michigan Library The famous patent suit of the Bethlehem Steel company against the Niles Bement Pond Company for infringement of two fundamental patents of F W Taylor and M White Maunsel White III 1856 1912 668 369 and 668 270 both of Feb 19 1907 has been decided in favor of the defendant The decision of the court emphasizes that there is no new composition of steel invented by Taylor and White SAM Society for Advancement of Management link Whitston Kevin PhD Summer 1997 The Reception of Scientific Management by British Engineers 1890 1914 The Business History Review 71 2 207 229 doi 10 2307 3116158 JSTOR 3116158 S2CID 145203181 OCLC 0007 6805 JSTOR 3116158 OCLC 5546532273 5235438781 Wrege Charles D Greenwood Ronald G Hata Sakae 1987 The International Management Institute and Political Opposition to its Efforts in Europe 1925 1934 Business and Economic History CiteSeerX 10 1 1 392 2216 JSTOR 23702641 ISSN 0894 6825 OCLC 5792788126 Wren Daniel Alan PhD June 8 2015 Implementing the Gantt Chart in Europe and Britain The Contributions of Wallace Clark Journal of Management History 21 3 309 327 doi 10 1108 JMH 09 2014 0163 doi 10 1108 JMH 09 2014 0163 ISSN 1751 1348 OCLC 5911249398 7054577907 1014430228 Online here Secondary sources news media New York Times The June 15 1883 Stevens Institute Graduates A Special Department of Applied Electricity to Be Established Vol 32 no 9914 p 8 Retrieved August 30 2022 via TimesMachine New York Times The March 22 1915 F W Taylor Expert in Efficiency Dies Vol 64 no 20876 p 9 col 5 Retrieved March 14 2008 via TimesMachine Also accessible via TimesMachine permalink Online reprint by the New York Times Leaning Network online education blog On This Day Times archive March 20 2018 Newspapers com Frederick Winslow Taylor originator of the modern scientific management movement Wall Street Journal The June 13 1997 Frederick Taylor Early Century Management Consultant p A17 Archived from the original on May 14 2008 Retrieved May 4 2008 via Wayback Machine Primary sources Taylor Frederick Winslow 1919 1911 The Principles of Scientific Management Harper amp Brothers via Internet Archive Prelinger Library LCCN 11 10339 OCLC 233134 all editions The Principles of Scientific Management via Project Gutenberg Taylor Frederick Winslow 1903 Shop Management New York American Society of Mechanical Engineers via Internet Archive Stanford University Libraries OCLC 2365572 all editions Shop Management via Project Gutenberg Shop Management began as an address by Taylor to a meeting of the ASME which published it in pamphlet form The linked publication is a 1912 re print Taylor Frederick Winslow 1947 Scientific Management Comprising Shop Management 1903 The Principles of Scientific Management 1911 Testimony Before the Special House Committee 1912 A Harper International Student Reprint With introduction by Harlow Stafford Person 1875 1955 New York Evanston London Harper amp Row LCCN 47 11978 OCLC 560540 all editions Further reading EditAitken Hugh George Jeffrey 1922 1994 1960 Taylorism at Watertown Arsenal Scientific Management in Action 1908 1915 see Watertown Arsenal Harvard University Press via Internet Archive Braverman Harry 1920 1976 1974 Labor and Monopoly Capital The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century see Labor and Monopoly Capital pp 43 52 Retrieved August 29 2022 via Internet Archive LCCN 74 7785 ISBN 0 8534 5340 3 OCLC 13085658 all editions Boddy David 2002 Management An Introduction 2nd ed New York Printice Hall ISBN 9780273655183 via Internet Archive ISBN 978 0 273 65518 3 Kakar Sudhir 1970 Frederick Taylor A Study in Personality and Innovation Cambridge The MIT Press ISBN 9780262110396 via Internet Archive LCCN 79 122260 Kanigel Robert 1997 The One Best Way Frederick Winslow Taylor and the Enigma of Efficiency London Little Brown and Company LCCN 96 37213 ISBN 0 6708 6402 1 978 0 6708 6402 7 OCLC 35814788 all editions Nelson Daniel Melvin PhD born 1941 1970 Frederick W Taylor and the Rise of Scientific Management Cambridge The MIT Press ISBN 978 0 299 08160 7 Nelson Daniel Melvin PhD born 1941 ed 1992 A Mental Revolution Scientific Management Since Taylor limited preview Ohio State University Press via Google Books LCCN 91 33381 ISBN 978 0 8142 0567 9 OCLC 24667484 all editions Weisbord Marvin Ross 2004 Productive Workplaces Revisited Chapter 2 Scientific Management Revisited A Tale of Two Taylors Chapter 3 The Consulting Engineer Taylor Invents a New Profession Jossey Bass ISBN 9780787971175 via Internet Archive LCCN 2003 24760 ISBN 978 0 7879 7117 5 See Also EditC Bertrand ThompsonExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frederick Winslow Taylor Wikiquote has quotations related to Frederick Winslow Taylor Works by Frederick Winslow Taylor at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Frederick Winslow Taylor at Internet Archive Special Collections Frederick Winslow Taylor The Samuel C Williams Library at the Stevens Institute of Technology has an extensive collection OCLC 123905137 Frederick W Taylor 1856 1915 Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments Harvard University OCLC 77066758 Charles D Wrege Research Papers Collection Number 6395 see Charles D Wrege 1924 2014 Kheel Center for Labor Management Documentation and Archives Cornell University Library OCLC 826068268Series III Frederick W TaylorSeries X Boxly Frederick Taylor s Residence Includes the 1921 Hawthorne Film a video tour of Boxly Frederick W Taylor s house and videos on management history and historical research Retrieved from https en 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