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Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company

The Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company (CTR)[1] was a holding company of manufacturers of record-keeping and measuring systems subsequently known as IBM.

Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company
IndustryBusiness machines
PredecessorBundy Manufacturing Company
International Time Recording Company
Tabulating Machine Company
Computing Scale Company of America
FoundedJune 16, 1911; 112 years ago (1911-06-16)
DefunctFebruary 14, 1924; 99 years ago (1924-02-14)
FateRenamed as International Business Machines
SuccessorInternational Business Machines, today known as IBM
Key people

In 1911, financier and noted trust organizer, "Father of Trusts", Charles R. Flint amalgamated (via stock acquisition) four companies: Bundy Manufacturing Company, International Time Recording Company, the Tabulating Machine Company, and the Computing Scale Company of America; creating a fifth company – the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company.[2][3]

CTR was initially located in Endicott, New York[4] The amalgamated companies had 1,300 employees and manufactured a wide range of products, including employee time-keeping systems, weighing scales, automatic meat slicers, and punched card equipment.[5][6]

CTR was renamed as the International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) in 1924.[7]

The individual companies continued to operate using their established names until the businesses were integrated in 1933, and the holding company was eliminated.[8][9]

Companies amalgamated edit

Bundy Manufacturing Company edit

 
Front cover of a January 1920 sales catalog showing clocks, scales and tabulating equipment)

The first time clock was invented on November 20, 1888, by Willard Bundy, a jeweler in Auburn, New York. A year later, his brother, Harlow Bundy, organized the Bundy Manufacturing Company,[10] and began mass-producing time clocks.[11]

In 1900, Bundy Manufacturing sold its time recording business to a new company, the International Time Recording Company. Bundy Manufacturing went on to produce adding machines.[citation needed]

In 1906 Harlow Bundy moved his business into a new three-story brick building in Endicott, New York.[12]

International Time Recording Company edit

In 1894, J. L. Willard and F. A. Frick of Rochester, New York, formed the Willard & Frick Manufacturing Company as the first time card recorder company in the world.[13]

In 1900 George W. Fairchild, an investor and director of the Bundy Manufacturing Company, led the formation in Jersey City, New Jersey,[14] of the International Time Recording Company (ITR) which consolidated the time recording business of Bundy with the Willard & Frick Manufacturing Co.[15] In 1901, the company was re-incorporated in Binghamton, New York. The same year, it acquired the Chicago Time-Register Co., the first autograph time recorder company in the world and a manufacturer of key, card, and autograph employee time recorders.[16]

In 1906, ITR relocated to Endicott, New York, where it built a larger factory next to the new building of the Bundy Manufacturing Company. Before the CTR amalgamation, Harlow Bundy would be named ITR's treasurer and general manager.[17]

Dr. Alexander Dey invented the first dial recorder in 1888, and in 1907 ITR acquired the Del Ray Register Company.[18][19] In 1908, ITR acquired the Syracuse Time Recorder Company, a manufacturer of dial recorders.[20]

ITR's 1935 catalog lists various clocks, from industrial timeclocks, recording clocks, and program clocks to ornamental store-front clocks. It also lists the Series 970 Intercommunicating Telephone System.[21] Since 1907 or earlier ITR had published a magazine, Time, for employees and customers; in 1935 IBM renamed the magazine Think.[22]

Tabulating Machine Company edit

 
Hollerith's plant in 1893

Herman Hollerith initially did business under his own name, as The Hollerith Electric Tabulating System, specializing in punched card data processing equipment.[23] In 1896 he incorporated as the Tabulating Machine Company and in 1905 reincorporated as The Tabulating Machine Company.[24] Hollerith's series of patents on tabulating machine technology, first applied for in 1884, drew on his work at the U.S. Census Bureau from 1879 to 1882. Hollerith initially tried to reduce the time and complexity needed to tabulate the 1890 Census. His development of punched cards in 1886 set the industry standard for the next 80 years of tabulating and computing data input.[25]

In 1896 the Tabulating Machine Company leased some machines to a railway company[26] but quickly focused on the challenges of the largest statistical endeavor of its day – the 1900 US Census. After winning the government contract and completing the project, Hollerith faced the challenge of sustaining the company in non-Census years. He returned to targeting private businesses in the United States and abroad, attempting to identify industry applications for his semiautomatic punching, tabulating, and sorting machines.[27] Flint bought the business for $2.3 million (of which Hollerith got $1.2 million) in 1911.[citation needed]

Computing Scale Company of America edit

The Computing Scale Company of America was a holding company, organized in 1901 and amalgamating as subsidiary companies The Computing Scale Company, Dayton, Ohio; The Moneyweight Scale Company, Chicago, Illinois; The W.F. Simpson Company of Detroit, Michigan; and The Stimpson Computing Scale Company of Elkhart, Indiana.[17] In 1891, Edward Canby and Orange O. Ozias, two businessmen from Dayton, Ohio, purchased the patents for the newly invented computing scale and incorporated the Computing Scale Company to produce commercial scales.[28][29][30][31]

Amalgamation edit

 
Charles Ranlett Flint had already created several successful consolidations, including creating industrial giant U.S. Rubber.

Flint amalgamated the four companies into the new CTR holding company.[32][33][34] CTR had a bonded indebtedness of $6.5 million, three times its current assets, of which the Guaranty Trust Company had loaned $4 million.[35] Flint assigned it a value of $17.5 million, while its tangible assets only added up to $1 million. Flint stated that the various manufacturers produced similar but not identical products and that the

..."allied consolidation", instead of being dependent for earnings upon a single industry, would own three separate and distinct lines of business so that in normal times the interest and sinking funds on its bonds could be earned by any one of these independent lines, while in abnormal times the consolidation would have three chances instead of one to meet its obligations and pay dividends.[36]

CTR's 1911 stock prospectus reported net earnings, from May 1, 1910, to April 30, 1911, of $950,000 for the four companies.[37]

Organization and leadership edit

CTR and the four amalgamated companies had 1,300 employees, with offices and plants in Endicott and Binghamton, New York; Dayton, Ohio; Detroit, Michigan; Washington, D.C.; and Toronto, Ontario. CTR was located in Endicott.[38] The chairman was George Winthrop Fairchild, who, having been a member of Congress since 1906, was not expected to take an active part in management. When the first president left after just one month, however, Fairchild took over and ran CTR until 1912, when Frank N. Kandolf, formerly CEO of the International Time Recording subsidiary, took over. Flint was a member of the board of CTR (and later IBM) until his retirement in 1930.[6][39][40] Herman Hollerith served as a consulting engineer until he retired in 1921.[41]

Early Watson era edit

 
Thomas J. Watson
 
1917 organizational chart. This style of chart, pyramids divided into five parts, was required by Patterson and one of the many things Watson brought from NCR to CTR.[42]

Thomas J. Watson Sr., along with 29 other NCR officials, had been convicted in 1913 of various antitrust violations for their roles in a widespread National Cash Register scheme to run used cash register retailers out of business (see NCR Corporation § Expansion).[43] Watson's extortionate writings were used as evidence against him. That lesson taught Watson to keep very little in writing after that. In 1914, having been fired from NCR Corporation and with a prison sentence threatening his future, Thomas J. Watson approached Flint, a leading financier, for assistance in finding a similar job. Despite his apparently perilous situation, he was still very clear about the type of job he wanted. He had already turned down several offers. He wanted control of the business to earn a share of the profits. Flint offered him CTR. Flint was, as described earlier, a great promoter of trusts and was presumably less worried about Watson's impending jail sentence. The other members of the CTR board were less optimistic, asking who was to run the company while he was in prison. As a result, they only gave him the title of general manager.[44] After Watson had been at CTR for 11 months, the Appeals Court ordered a retrial. Although he refused to sign a Consent Decree, a new trial never took place, and the board of CTR duly promoted him to the position of president.[citation needed] Among the many things Watson brought to CTR from NCR was the motto Think.[45]

Watson's strategies edit

Surprisingly, given his record at NCR and his later colossal influence on IBM, Watson initially maintained a very low profile (almost tantamount to seeking obscurity) for the next decade until 1924, when the chairman George W. Fairchild died, and he finally took over sole control.[46] For the whole of the previous decade, in some ways uncharacteristically, he consistently deferred to Flint, Fairchild, and Hollerith.[citation needed]

 
IBM songbooks with Think signs in several languages and punched cards

In the meantime, he took personal charge of 400 demoralized and poorly-supervised salesmen. His stated objective was to produce a sales force in the NCR mold and advanced machines that would be superior to any of the competitors' machines. He presented his 'competitive proposition' in several small meetings to the sales force. Despite the aggressive-sounding title, right from these beginnings, there was as much emphasis on the ethics and philosophies of the business as there was on sales techniques. In particular, he stressed sincerity, integrity, and loyalty, saying that they should do nothing that could be construed as 'unfair competition' and should conduct themselves in an 'honest, fair and square way' – something which would be radical even today. Musical events, even IBM songs, were introduced to improve and maintain employee morale.[47]

The other philosophies that motivated CTR and IBM for the next three-quarters of a century were also evident. The company motto was to be 'We sell and deliver service'; CTR was to be in the business of genuinely assisting its customers. Watson strongly believed that both sides came out ahead when a sale was made.[citation needed]

Organizational change and strategies edit

CTR was a company with three separate elements:

  • Computing Scale interested Watson the least, and the largest element of this (Dayton Scale) was eventually sold off in 1933 to Hobart Manufacturing. After the sale, the company, to Watson's chagrin, began making money.[48]
  • Time Recording was at first the primary revenue earner and was used by Watson as a vehicle for diversification, though none of these was a great success.[citation needed]
  • The tabulating business most interested Watson, perhaps because it was closest to his NCR experience. This was where he directed much of his attention, and by the early 1930s, this had indeed become the largest piece of CTR.[49]

In the 1920s, while still under Fairchild's domination, Watson focused on achieving significant growth. Revenue grew from $4.2 million in 1914, when he took over, to a peak of $16 million in 1920. The price of this, however, was a precarious cash position. In 1921, sales fell to $10.6 million, and Watson faced a cash-flow crisis. Once again, Guaranty Trust was to fund and rescue CTR. Watson cut costs, including reducing research and development and laying off employees. He never again allowed his cash position to fall so low. He subsequently maintained a policy of low dividends, high revenues, and careful cost controls. He adopted very conservative accounting principles.[citation needed]

Hollerith, beginning with the 1890 census, had rented his machines so that his company could provide the maintenance necessary to ensure reliable operation.[50] Watson recognized other benefits including the idea that renting equipment was inherently more stable since the income continued when equipment orders would otherwise have dried up. Less obviously, it forced sales personnel, aware that they might lose the rental, to maintain regular contact with customers, thus ensuring – even as early as the 1930s – that customer relationships were well-managed. This approach became central to IBM's activities.[citation needed]

After that, Watson deliberately lagged in introducing new products, though not on research. Even after competitors launched new products, he waited until the market was ripe for large-scale development. Watson recognized the importance of sound R&D, appointing James W. Bryce in 1922 to manage this (moving him from its Time Recording Division, which he had joined in 1915). However, Watson continued to be personally involved in R&D, not least through his insistence on rigorous standards.[citation needed]

"Watson had never liked the clumsy hyphenated title of the CTR" and chose to replace it with the more expansive title International Business Machines,[51] first as a name for a 1917 Canadian subsidiary, then as a line in advertisements. For example, McClure's magazine, vol. 53, May 1921, ran a full-page ad with the following tag at the bottom:

 International Time Recording Company of New York Subsidiary of Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company, New York Makers of International Business Machines 

Patterson died in 1922, and Fairchild died on December 31, 1924. On February 5, 1924, Watson applied to list International Business Machines (IBM) on the New York Stock Exchange, and the name C-T-R disappeared.[52] Watson began to mold the company in his image and took it to new levels of success for the next quarter of a century until he was 75.[53] He celebrated his new status with the first Quarter Century Club. Even though CTR had only been going for 13 years, he based qualifications on the subsidiary companies. The holding company itself disappeared in 1933 after most of the subsidiaries had been merged into one company, IBM.[54]

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ IBM Archives: Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company (1911–1924).
  2. ^ "Tabulating Concerns Unite: Flint & Co. Bring Four Together with $19,000,000 capital" (PDF). New York Times. June 10, 1911. (PDF) from the original on February 25, 2021.
  3. ^ Flint uses allied consolidation. See Flint, Memories of an Active Life, Putnam's, 1923, p. 312.
  4. ^ Certificate of Incorporation of Computing-Tabulating-Recording-Co ... Fifth. The location of the principal business office is to be in the Town of Endicott, County of Broome, and State of New York.
  5. ^ "IBM Archives: 1911". www.ibm.com. January 23, 2003.
  6. ^ a b Campbell-Kelly, Martin; Aspray, William (2004). Computer: A history of the information machine (2nd ed.). Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press. pp. 37–39. ISBN 978-0-8133-4264-1.
  7. ^ IBM Archives: History of the Time Equipment Division and its Products, IBM, circa 1956
  8. ^ For example, the last page of The Inventory Simplified October 4, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, published in 1923, stated "The Tabulating Machine Company – Division of – International Business Machines Corporation.
  9. ^ Rodgers, Williams (1969). Think. Stein and Day. p. 83.
  10. ^ "IBM Archives: Bundy Manufacturing Co". www-03.ibm.com. January 23, 2003.
  11. ^ IBM Archives: George W. Fairchild.
  12. ^ North Street, Endicott.
  13. ^ IBM Archives: 1894.
  14. ^ "American Machinist - A Practical Journal of Machine Construction". American Machinist. 23 (14): 45. April 19, 1900.
  15. ^ IBM Archives: 1900.
  16. ^ IBM Archives: 1901.
  17. ^ a b Bennett, Frank P.; Company (June 17, 1911). United States Investor. Vol. 22, Part 2. p. 1298 (26).
  18. ^ IBM Archives: 1880.
  19. ^ IBM Archives: 1907.
  20. ^ IBM Archives: 1908.
  21. ^ "International Time Recording Catalog, 1935" (PDF).
  22. ^ Aswad (2005) p. 18.
  23. ^ Austrian, 1982, p. 153.
  24. ^ Engelbourg, 1954, p. 52.
  25. ^ Officemuseum.com – early Hollerith history, with good photographs of period equipment
  26. ^ Austrian, Geoffrey D.; Herman Hollerith: Forgotten Giant of Information Processing Columbia University Press NY NY ISBN 0-231-05146-8, p. 138.
  27. ^ Brooks, Frederick P.; Iverson, Kenneth E. (1963). Automatic Data Processing. Wiley. p. 94 "semiautomatic".
  28. ^ IBM Archives: Computing Scale Company.
  29. ^ IBM Archives: Computing Scale Company scale.
  30. ^ IBM Archives: Dayton Computing Scale.
  31. ^ IBM Archives: Dayton meat choppers.
  32. ^ Flint, Charles R. (1923). Memories of an Active Life: Men, and Ships, and Sealing Wax. G.P. Putnam's Sons. p. 312.
  33. ^ Since the 1960s or earlier, IBM has described its formation as a merger of three companies: The Tabulating Machine Company (1880s origin in Washington, DC), the International Time Recording Company (ITR; 1900, Endicott), and the Computing Scale Company of America (1901, Dayton, Ohio). (Austrian, 1982, p. 312.) (Belden, 1961) (IBM Archives). However, there was no merger; it was an amalgamation and an amalgamation of four, not three, companies. The 1911 CTR stock prospectus also included the Bundy Manufacturing Company. While ITR had acquired its time recording business in 1900, Bundy had remained a separate entity producing an adding machine and other wares (see Early Office Museum)
  34. ^ "IBM Archives: Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company (1911–1924)". January 23, 2003.
  35. ^ Flint (1923), p. 312-313.
  36. ^ Flint (1923), p. 312.
  37. ^ Bennett, Frank P.; Company (June 17, 1911). United States Investor. Vol. 22, Part 2. p. 1298 (26).
  38. ^ "Certificate of Incorporation of Computing-Tabulating-Recording-Co", Appendix to Hearings Before the Committee on Patents, House of Representatives, Seventy-Fourth Congress, on H. R. 4523, Part III, United States Government Printing Office, 1935 [Incorporation paperwork filed June 16, 1911]
  39. ^ "IBM Archives: Charles R. Flint".
  40. ^ IBM Archives: 1910s.
  41. ^ O'Connor, J.J.; Robertson, E.F. "Herman Hollerith". The MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive. School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of St Andrews, Scotland. Retrieved February 2, 2014.
  42. ^ Crowther, Samuel (undated). John H. Paterson – The Romance of Business, Geoffrey Bliss
  43. ^ Austrian, 1982, p. 329.
  44. ^ IBM Archives: Thomas J. Watson, Sr. CTR's general manager, in 1914.
  45. ^ IBM Archives: Thomas Watson Comments on Think.
  46. ^ IBM Archives: Thomas Watson & George Fairchild.
  47. ^ IBM Archives: IBM Music On a happy note.
  48. ^ Pugh, Emerson W., Building IBM, MIT, 1995, p. 28.
  49. ^ Belden, 1962, p. 107.
  50. ^ Austrian, G. D. (1982). Herman Hollerith: The Forgotten Giant of Information Processing. Columbia. p. 53. ISBN 0-231-05146-8.
  51. ^ Belden, 1962, p. 125.
  52. ^ Maney, Kevin (2003) The Maverick and His Machine, Wiley, p. 89.
  53. ^ Rodgers, Think, p. 82-83
  54. ^ Rodgers, Think, p. 83.

Further reading edit

  • Aswad, Ed; Meredith, Suzanne M. (2005). IBM in Endicott. Arcadia.
  • Engelbourg, Saul (1954). International Business Machines: A Business History (PhD). Columbia University. p. 385. Reprinted by Arno Press, 1976, from the best available copy. Some text is illegible.
  • IBM Archives: Reference / FAQ / Predecessor Companies.
  • IBM Archives: CTR product ad (1911).

External links edit

  • IBM Archives: History of the Time Equipment Division and its Products, IBM, circa 1956
  • Early Office Museum: Punched Card Tabulating Machines

computing, tabulating, recording, company, holding, company, manufacturers, record, keeping, measuring, systems, subsequently, known, industrybusiness, machinespredecessorbundy, manufacturing, companyinternational, time, recording, companytabulating, machine, . The Computing Tabulating Recording Company CTR 1 was a holding company of manufacturers of record keeping and measuring systems subsequently known as IBM Computing Tabulating Recording CompanyIndustryBusiness machinesPredecessorBundy Manufacturing CompanyInternational Time Recording CompanyTabulating Machine CompanyComputing Scale Company of AmericaFoundedJune 16 1911 112 years ago 1911 06 16 DefunctFebruary 14 1924 99 years ago 1924 02 14 FateRenamed as International Business MachinesSuccessorInternational Business Machines today known as IBMKey peopleGeorge W Fairchild Chairman Thomas J Watson Sr President 1915 1924 Charles R Flint Founder financier In 1911 financier and noted trust organizer Father of Trusts Charles R Flint amalgamated via stock acquisition four companies Bundy Manufacturing Company International Time Recording Company the Tabulating Machine Company and the Computing Scale Company of America creating a fifth company the Computing Tabulating Recording Company 2 3 CTR was initially located in Endicott New York 4 The amalgamated companies had 1 300 employees and manufactured a wide range of products including employee time keeping systems weighing scales automatic meat slicers and punched card equipment 5 6 CTR was renamed as the International Business Machines Corporation IBM in 1924 7 The individual companies continued to operate using their established names until the businesses were integrated in 1933 and the holding company was eliminated 8 9 Contents 1 Companies amalgamated 1 1 Bundy Manufacturing Company 1 2 International Time Recording Company 1 3 Tabulating Machine Company 1 4 Computing Scale Company of America 2 Amalgamation 3 Organization and leadership 3 1 Early Watson era 4 Watson s strategies 5 Organizational change and strategies 6 See also 7 Notes and references 8 Further reading 9 External linksCompanies amalgamated editBundy Manufacturing Company edit Main article Bundy Manufacturing Company nbsp Front cover of a January 1920 sales catalog showing clocks scales and tabulating equipment The first time clock was invented on November 20 1888 by Willard Bundy a jeweler in Auburn New York A year later his brother Harlow Bundy organized the Bundy Manufacturing Company 10 and began mass producing time clocks 11 In 1900 Bundy Manufacturing sold its time recording business to a new company the International Time Recording Company Bundy Manufacturing went on to produce adding machines citation needed In 1906 Harlow Bundy moved his business into a new three story brick building in Endicott New York 12 International Time Recording Company edit In 1894 J L Willard and F A Frick of Rochester New York formed the Willard amp Frick Manufacturing Company as the first time card recorder company in the world 13 In 1900 George W Fairchild an investor and director of the Bundy Manufacturing Company led the formation in Jersey City New Jersey 14 of the International Time Recording Company ITR which consolidated the time recording business of Bundy with the Willard amp Frick Manufacturing Co 15 In 1901 the company was re incorporated in Binghamton New York The same year it acquired the Chicago Time Register Co the first autograph time recorder company in the world and a manufacturer of key card and autograph employee time recorders 16 In 1906 ITR relocated to Endicott New York where it built a larger factory next to the new building of the Bundy Manufacturing Company Before the CTR amalgamation Harlow Bundy would be named ITR s treasurer and general manager 17 Dr Alexander Dey invented the first dial recorder in 1888 and in 1907 ITR acquired the Del Ray Register Company 18 19 In 1908 ITR acquired the Syracuse Time Recorder Company a manufacturer of dial recorders 20 ITR s 1935 catalog lists various clocks from industrial timeclocks recording clocks and program clocks to ornamental store front clocks It also lists the Series 970 Intercommunicating Telephone System 21 Since 1907 or earlier ITR had published a magazine Time for employees and customers in 1935 IBM renamed the magazine Think 22 Tabulating Machine Company edit nbsp Hollerith s plant in 1893Herman Hollerith initially did business under his own name as The Hollerith Electric Tabulating System specializing in punched card data processing equipment 23 In 1896 he incorporated as the Tabulating Machine Company and in 1905 reincorporated as The Tabulating Machine Company 24 Hollerith s series of patents on tabulating machine technology first applied for in 1884 drew on his work at the U S Census Bureau from 1879 to 1882 Hollerith initially tried to reduce the time and complexity needed to tabulate the 1890 Census His development of punched cards in 1886 set the industry standard for the next 80 years of tabulating and computing data input 25 In 1896 the Tabulating Machine Company leased some machines to a railway company 26 but quickly focused on the challenges of the largest statistical endeavor of its day the 1900 US Census After winning the government contract and completing the project Hollerith faced the challenge of sustaining the company in non Census years He returned to targeting private businesses in the United States and abroad attempting to identify industry applications for his semiautomatic punching tabulating and sorting machines 27 Flint bought the business for 2 3 million of which Hollerith got 1 2 million in 1911 citation needed Computing Scale Company of America edit The Computing Scale Company of America was a holding company organized in 1901 and amalgamating as subsidiary companies The Computing Scale Company Dayton Ohio The Moneyweight Scale Company Chicago Illinois The W F Simpson Company of Detroit Michigan and The Stimpson Computing Scale Company of Elkhart Indiana 17 In 1891 Edward Canby and Orange O Ozias two businessmen from Dayton Ohio purchased the patents for the newly invented computing scale and incorporated the Computing Scale Company to produce commercial scales 28 29 30 31 Amalgamation edit nbsp Charles Ranlett Flint had already created several successful consolidations including creating industrial giant U S Rubber Flint amalgamated the four companies into the new CTR holding company 32 33 34 CTR had a bonded indebtedness of 6 5 million three times its current assets of which the Guaranty Trust Company had loaned 4 million 35 Flint assigned it a value of 17 5 million while its tangible assets only added up to 1 million Flint stated that the various manufacturers produced similar but not identical products and that the allied consolidation instead of being dependent for earnings upon a single industry would own three separate and distinct lines of business so that in normal times the interest and sinking funds on its bonds could be earned by any one of these independent lines while in abnormal times the consolidation would have three chances instead of one to meet its obligations and pay dividends 36 CTR s 1911 stock prospectus reported net earnings from May 1 1910 to April 30 1911 of 950 000 for the four companies 37 Organization and leadership editCTR and the four amalgamated companies had 1 300 employees with offices and plants in Endicott and Binghamton New York Dayton Ohio Detroit Michigan Washington D C and Toronto Ontario CTR was located in Endicott 38 The chairman was George Winthrop Fairchild who having been a member of Congress since 1906 was not expected to take an active part in management When the first president left after just one month however Fairchild took over and ran CTR until 1912 when Frank N Kandolf formerly CEO of the International Time Recording subsidiary took over Flint was a member of the board of CTR and later IBM until his retirement in 1930 6 39 40 Herman Hollerith served as a consulting engineer until he retired in 1921 41 Early Watson era edit nbsp Thomas J Watson nbsp 1917 organizational chart This style of chart pyramids divided into five parts was required by Patterson and one of the many things Watson brought from NCR to CTR 42 Thomas J Watson Sr along with 29 other NCR officials had been convicted in 1913 of various antitrust violations for their roles in a widespread National Cash Register scheme to run used cash register retailers out of business see NCR Corporation Expansion 43 Watson s extortionate writings were used as evidence against him That lesson taught Watson to keep very little in writing after that In 1914 having been fired from NCR Corporation and with a prison sentence threatening his future Thomas J Watson approached Flint a leading financier for assistance in finding a similar job Despite his apparently perilous situation he was still very clear about the type of job he wanted He had already turned down several offers He wanted control of the business to earn a share of the profits Flint offered him CTR Flint was as described earlier a great promoter of trusts and was presumably less worried about Watson s impending jail sentence The other members of the CTR board were less optimistic asking who was to run the company while he was in prison As a result they only gave him the title of general manager 44 After Watson had been at CTR for 11 months the Appeals Court ordered a retrial Although he refused to sign a Consent Decree a new trial never took place and the board of CTR duly promoted him to the position of president citation needed Among the many things Watson brought to CTR from NCR was the motto Think 45 Watson s strategies editSurprisingly given his record at NCR and his later colossal influence on IBM Watson initially maintained a very low profile almost tantamount to seeking obscurity for the next decade until 1924 when the chairman George W Fairchild died and he finally took over sole control 46 For the whole of the previous decade in some ways uncharacteristically he consistently deferred to Flint Fairchild and Hollerith citation needed nbsp IBM songbooks with Think signs in several languages and punched cardsIn the meantime he took personal charge of 400 demoralized and poorly supervised salesmen His stated objective was to produce a sales force in the NCR mold and advanced machines that would be superior to any of the competitors machines He presented his competitive proposition in several small meetings to the sales force Despite the aggressive sounding title right from these beginnings there was as much emphasis on the ethics and philosophies of the business as there was on sales techniques In particular he stressed sincerity integrity and loyalty saying that they should do nothing that could be construed as unfair competition and should conduct themselves in an honest fair and square way something which would be radical even today Musical events even IBM songs were introduced to improve and maintain employee morale 47 The other philosophies that motivated CTR and IBM for the next three quarters of a century were also evident The company motto was to be We sell and deliver service CTR was to be in the business of genuinely assisting its customers Watson strongly believed that both sides came out ahead when a sale was made citation needed Organizational change and strategies editCTR was a company with three separate elements Computing Scale interested Watson the least and the largest element of this Dayton Scale was eventually sold off in 1933 to Hobart Manufacturing After the sale the company to Watson s chagrin began making money 48 Time Recording was at first the primary revenue earner and was used by Watson as a vehicle for diversification though none of these was a great success citation needed The tabulating business most interested Watson perhaps because it was closest to his NCR experience This was where he directed much of his attention and by the early 1930s this had indeed become the largest piece of CTR 49 In the 1920s while still under Fairchild s domination Watson focused on achieving significant growth Revenue grew from 4 2 million in 1914 when he took over to a peak of 16 million in 1920 The price of this however was a precarious cash position In 1921 sales fell to 10 6 million and Watson faced a cash flow crisis Once again Guaranty Trust was to fund and rescue CTR Watson cut costs including reducing research and development and laying off employees He never again allowed his cash position to fall so low He subsequently maintained a policy of low dividends high revenues and careful cost controls He adopted very conservative accounting principles citation needed Hollerith beginning with the 1890 census had rented his machines so that his company could provide the maintenance necessary to ensure reliable operation 50 Watson recognized other benefits including the idea that renting equipment was inherently more stable since the income continued when equipment orders would otherwise have dried up Less obviously it forced sales personnel aware that they might lose the rental to maintain regular contact with customers thus ensuring even as early as the 1930s that customer relationships were well managed This approach became central to IBM s activities citation needed After that Watson deliberately lagged in introducing new products though not on research Even after competitors launched new products he waited until the market was ripe for large scale development Watson recognized the importance of sound R amp D appointing James W Bryce in 1922 to manage this moving him from its Time Recording Division which he had joined in 1915 However Watson continued to be personally involved in R amp D not least through his insistence on rigorous standards citation needed Watson had never liked the clumsy hyphenated title of the CTR and chose to replace it with the more expansive title International Business Machines 51 first as a name for a 1917 Canadian subsidiary then as a line in advertisements For example McClure s magazine vol 53 May 1921 ran a full page ad with the following tag at the bottom International Time Recording Company of New York Subsidiary of Computing Tabulating Recording Company New York Makers of International Business Machines Patterson died in 1922 and Fairchild died on December 31 1924 On February 5 1924 Watson applied to list International Business Machines IBM on the New York Stock Exchange and the name C T R disappeared 52 Watson began to mold the company in his image and took it to new levels of success for the next quarter of a century until he was 75 53 He celebrated his new status with the first Quarter Century Club Even though CTR had only been going for 13 years he based qualifications on the subsidiary companies The holding company itself disappeared in 1933 after most of the subsidiaries had been merged into one company IBM 54 See also editHistory of IBM History of computing hardware Time clockNotes and references edit IBM Archives Computing Tabulating Recording Company 1911 1924 Tabulating Concerns Unite Flint amp Co Bring Four Together with 19 000 000 capital PDF New York Times June 10 1911 Archived PDF from the original on February 25 2021 Flint uses allied consolidation See Flint Memories of an Active Life Putnam s 1923 p 312 Certificate of Incorporation of Computing Tabulating Recording Co Fifth The location of the principal business office is to be in the Town of Endicott County of Broome and State of New York IBM Archives 1911 www ibm com January 23 2003 a b Campbell Kelly Martin Aspray William 2004 Computer A history of the information machine 2nd ed Boulder Colo Westview Press pp 37 39 ISBN 978 0 8133 4264 1 IBM Archives History of the Time Equipment Division and its Products IBM circa 1956 For example the last page of The Inventory Simplified Archived October 4 2013 at the Wayback Machine published in 1923 stated The Tabulating Machine Company Division of International Business Machines Corporation Rodgers Williams 1969 Think Stein and Day p 83 IBM Archives Bundy Manufacturing Co www 03 ibm com January 23 2003 IBM Archives George W Fairchild North Street Endicott IBM Archives 1894 American Machinist A Practical Journal of Machine Construction American Machinist 23 14 45 April 19 1900 IBM Archives 1900 IBM Archives 1901 a b Bennett Frank P Company June 17 1911 United States Investor Vol 22 Part 2 p 1298 26 IBM Archives 1880 IBM Archives 1907 IBM Archives 1908 International Time Recording Catalog 1935 PDF Aswad 2005 p 18 Austrian 1982 p 153 Engelbourg 1954 p 52 Officemuseum com early Hollerith history with good photographs of period equipment Austrian Geoffrey D Herman Hollerith Forgotten Giant of Information Processing Columbia University Press NY NY ISBN 0 231 05146 8 p 138 Brooks Frederick P Iverson Kenneth E 1963 Automatic Data Processing Wiley p 94 semiautomatic IBM Archives Computing Scale Company IBM Archives Computing Scale Company scale IBM Archives Dayton Computing Scale IBM Archives Dayton meat choppers Flint Charles R 1923 Memories of an Active Life Men and Ships and Sealing Wax G P Putnam s Sons p 312 Since the 1960s or earlier IBM has described its formation as a merger of three companies The Tabulating Machine Company 1880s origin in Washington DC the International Time Recording Company ITR 1900 Endicott and the Computing Scale Company of America 1901 Dayton Ohio Austrian 1982 p 312 Belden 1961 IBM Archives However there was no merger it was an amalgamation and an amalgamation of four not three companies The 1911 CTR stock prospectus also included the Bundy Manufacturing Company While ITR had acquired its time recording business in 1900 Bundy had remained a separate entity producing an adding machine and other wares see Early Office Museum IBM Archives Computing Tabulating Recording Company 1911 1924 January 23 2003 Flint 1923 p 312 313 Flint 1923 p 312 Bennett Frank P Company June 17 1911 United States Investor Vol 22 Part 2 p 1298 26 Certificate of Incorporation of Computing Tabulating Recording Co Appendix to Hearings Before the Committee on Patents House of Representatives Seventy Fourth Congress on H R 4523 Part III United States Government Printing Office 1935 Incorporation paperwork filed June 16 1911 IBM Archives Charles R Flint IBM Archives 1910s O Connor J J Robertson E F Herman Hollerith The MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive School of Mathematics and Statistics University of St Andrews Scotland Retrieved February 2 2014 Crowther Samuel undated John H Paterson The Romance of Business Geoffrey Bliss Austrian 1982 p 329 IBM Archives Thomas J Watson Sr CTR s general manager in 1914 IBM Archives Thomas Watson Comments on Think IBM Archives Thomas Watson amp George Fairchild IBM Archives IBM Music On a happy note Pugh Emerson W Building IBM MIT 1995 p 28 Belden 1962 p 107 Austrian G D 1982 Herman Hollerith The Forgotten Giant of Information Processing Columbia p 53 ISBN 0 231 05146 8 Belden 1962 p 125 Maney Kevin 2003 The Maverick and His Machine Wiley p 89 Rodgers Think p 82 83 Rodgers Think p 83 Further reading editFor more on punched card history and technology see Unit record equipment Further reading For IBM see IBM Further reading and History of IBM Further reading Aswad Ed Meredith Suzanne M 2005 IBM in Endicott Arcadia Engelbourg Saul 1954 International Business Machines A Business History PhD Columbia University p 385 Reprinted by Arno Press 1976 from the best available copy Some text is illegible IBM Archives Reference FAQ Predecessor Companies IBM Archives CTR product ad 1911 External links editIBM Archives History of the Time Equipment Division and its Products IBM circa 1956 Early Office Museum Punched Card Tabulating Machines Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Computing Tabulating Recording Company amp oldid 1180651713 International Time Recording Company, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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