This document discusses different perspectives on work, working, and workers. It covers:
- Fredrick Taylor's scientific management approach to studying work in the early 20th century.
- Elton Mayo's later focus on human relations and how people work together.
- There are multiple dimensions to working including physiological, psychological, economic, power, and how focusing on just one dimension is a fallacy.
- Different theorists like Maslow and Herzberg viewed the dominant dimensions differently, showing the complexity involved.
- Managers need to understand these various demands and develop new approaches to managing workers given this complexity.
2. Man is not truly
defined as the
toolmaker, but making
tools, the
systematic, purposeful,
and organized
approach to work, is
specific and unique in
human activity.
3. The worker has been
given less attention.
And the knowledge
worker has received so
far almost none
4. FREDRICK W. TAYLOR
Was the first person in
recorded history who
deemed work deserving
of systematic
observation and study
Taylor’s “scientific
management” has lifted
the working masses in
the developed countries
5. DURING WORLD WAR I
He studied aptitudes, that is, the relationship
between the demands of specific
Manual
work
Motor
coordination
Physical Skill
Reactions of
individual
worker
7. THE TOTALITY OF
Worker and Working
Task and Job
Perception and Personality
Work community, Rewards and Power Relations.
HAS RECEIVED PRACTICALLY NO ATTENTION
8. The Manager cannot wait till the scientists and
scholars have done their work.
The Manager has to try to make work productive
and the worker achieving.
It might, therefore be appropriate to put down what
we know about work and working.
9. ANALYSIS, SYNTHESIS, AND CONTROL
The most important thing we know is that work and
working are fundamentally different phenomena.
10. But what is needed to make work
productive is quite different from
what is needed to make the
worker achieving.
The worker must, therefore, be
managed according to both the
logic of the work and the
dynamics of working.
Personal satisfaction of the
worker without productive work is
failure.
11. WHAT IS WORK
Work is impersonal and
objective.
Work is a task.
It is a “something”.
Work has logic.
It requires
analysis, synthesis, and
control.
12. The first step toward understanding work is to
analyze it.
Taylor realised a century ago, means identifying the
basic operations, analyzing each of them, and
arranging them in logical, balanced, and rational
sequence.
13. PRINCIPLES OF PRODUCTION
Put together individual
operations into
individual jobs, and
individual jobs into
“production.”
14. GANTT CHART (1861-1919)
Gantt Chart tells us very little about the logic that is
appropriate to given kinds of processes.
The output of the knowledge worker always
becomes somebody else’s input
15. FIVE DIMENSIONS OF WORKING
Working is the activity of the worker; it is human
being’s activity and an essential part of humanity.
It does not have logic.
It has dynamics and dimensions.
16. Working has at least
five dimensions.
In all of them the
worker has to be
achieving in order to
be productive.
17.
18. Physiological Dimension
The human being is not a machine and does not
work like a machine.
Machines work best if they do only one task.
Complex tasks are done best as a step-by-step
series of simple tasks in which the work shifts from
machine to machine
19. The human being is
engineered quite
differently.
They lack strength.
They lack stamina
Altogether the human
being is a very poorly
designed machine tool.
20. Machines work best if run at the same speed, the
same rhythm, and with a minimum of moving parts
There is no “one right” speed and n “one right”
rhythm for human beings.
Speed, rhythm, and attention span vary greatly
among individuals
21. Psychological Dimension
Work is both a burden and a
need, both a curse and a
blessing.
Work is an extension of
personality.
It is one of the ways in which a
person defines himself or
herself, measures his or her worth
and humanity.
Work as Curse and Blessing
22. Psychological Dimension
It largely determines status.
Work has been the means to satisfy our need for
belonging to a group and for a meaningful
relationship to others.
Work as Social and Community Bond
23. Work is for most people the one bond outside of
their own narrow family.
The work place becomes their community, their
social club, their means of escaping loneliness, with
their husbands at their own jobs and the children
gone.
24. Economic Dimension
The moment people cease to be self-sufficient and
begin to exchange the fruits of their labour,
Work creates an economic bond that connects
them, but also an economic conflict
25. There is no resolution to this
conflict.
One has to live with it.
The workers needs more than
anyone else, to be protected
against the risk of uncertainty.
The worker, more than anyone
else, needs the jobs of
tomorrow.
26. WORK AS LIVING AND WORK AS
WAGE
There is even more fundamental conflict between
wage as living and wage as cost.
As “living”, wage needs to be
predictable, continuous, and adequate to the
expenditures of a family, its aspirations, and its
position in society and community..
27. As “costs,” wage needs to be appropriate to the
productivity of a given employment or industry.
America has socialized ownership without
nationalizing it.
This has by no means resolved or even lessened the
conflict between wage fund and capital fund &
between wage as living and wage as cost.
28. Power Dimension of Working &
Economics
People are promoted or
not promoted.
Authority is an essential
dimension of work.
Power relationships
which may affect
everybody directly & in
his or her capacity as a
worker
A need for authority
with respect to economic
shares.
There has to be a
redistribution and an
authority to make the
redistribution decisions.
29. THE FALLACY OF THE DOMINANT
DIMENSION
Each dimension of working are separate.
Each should be analyzed separately and
independently.
But they always exist together in the worker’s
relationship to work and job, fellow workers and
management.
30. Marx and most other economists saw the economic
dimension as dominating everything else.
Elton Mayo to give other radically different
example, saw the dominant dimension as the
interpersonal relations within the work group i.e in
psychological & social aspects
31. Abraham H. Maslow
Showed the human wants
in a form of a hierarchy.
Maslow put economic want
at the bottom and the
need for self-fulfillment at
the top.
What Maslow did not see
is that a want changes in
the act of being satisfied.
32. HERZBERG’S 2 FACTOR THEORY
In Herzberg’s
words, economic rewards
cease to be “incentives”
and become “hygiene
factors.”
If not properly taken care
of i.e, if there is
dissatisfaction with the
economic rewards, they
become deterrents.
33. Nevertheless, managers have to manage now.
They have to understand what the demands are.
They will have to develop new approaches, new
principles, and new methods and fast.