George Elton Mayo was a pioneering Australian psychologist and sociologist who conducted the famous Hawthorne Studies between 1924-1932. The studies sought to understand the impact of workplace conditions like lighting and breaks on productivity. However, Mayo discovered that social factors had a greater influence on workers than physical conditions alone. He found that informal work groups formed and greatly impacted motivation and output. Mayo concluded that managers must understand and address employees' social and psychological needs to optimize productivity. His research revolutionized understandings of human motivation and management practices. However, Mayo was also criticized for potentially overgeneralizing findings from small, isolated study groups.
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Elton mayo
1.
2. 26TH December, 1880
South Australia was
blessed with
social scientist of the age.
Skilled and charming lecturer
Psychologist, industrial
researcher
Internationally acclaimed, ETC.
4. Mayo was the eldest son of
George Gibbes Mayo, a draftsman
and later a civil engineer, and his
wife Henrietta Mary.
He attended several schools in Australia (Queen’s
School, Collegiate School of St Peter, and University of
Adelaide) and after 1901 attended medical school in
Edinburgh and London, neither of which he completed.
In 1903 he went to West Africa, and upon returning to
London, began writing articles for magazines and teaching
English at the Working Men’s College.
5. Professor of English
literature language
Literature, Mental
and Moral
Philosophy at the
University of
Adelaide from
1894–1922
“SIR” returned to Adelaide in 1905
to a partnership in the printing firm
of J. H. Sherring & Co., but in 1907
he went back to the university to
study philosophy and psychology under
SIR WILLIAM MITCHELL.
He won the Roby Fletcher prize in
psychology and graduated with honours
(B.A., 1910; M.A., 1926 and was named
the David Murray research scholar.
6. In 1911 he became foundation
lecturer in mental and moral
philosophy at the new University
of Queensland and in 1919–23 held
the first chair of philosophy there.
“SIR” moved on to the University of Pennsylvania, but spent
most of his career at Harvard Business School (1926–1947),
where he was professor of industrial research.
Two influences on his career from his time at the University of
Queensland were Mayo’s friendship with the social anthropologist
and his work with shell-shock cases.
7. The work with shell-shock soldiers provided
a focus for Mayo’s interests in clinical
psychology and developed his skills in
psychotherapy.
In this he was
strongly influenced by
the work on hysteria
and obsession of the
French psychiatrist,
.
9. STUDIES CONDUCTED
THE HAWTHORNE STUDIES
CONDUCTED IN EARLY
1920s TILL 1930s AT THE
WESTERN ELECTRIC
HAWTHORNE WORK IN
CHICAGO, TO EXAMINE
PRODUCTIVITY AND WORK
CONDITIONS.
SPECIFICALLY, MAYO WANTED
TO FIND OUT WHAT EFFECT
FATIGUE AND MONOTONY
HAD ON JOB PRODUCTIVITY
AND HOW TO CONTROL THEM
THROUGH SUCH VARIABLES
AS ,
, AND
. IN THE PROCESS,
HE STUMBLED UPON A
PRINCIPLE OF HUMAN
MOTIVATION THAT WOULD
HELP TO REVOLUTIONIZE
THE THEORY AND PRACTICE
OF MANAGEMENT.
10. EXPERIMENT
WAS
CONDUCTED IN
FOUR PHASE
ILLUMINATION EXPERIMENT
RELAY ASSEMBLY TEST ROOM EXPERIMENT
INTERVIEW PHASE
BANK WIRING OBSERVATION ROOM
ILLUMINATION EXPERIMENT
• HE FIRST, A SEQUENCE OF ILLUMINATION TESTS FROM 1924 TO 1927, SET
OUT TO DETERMINE THE EFFECT OF LIGHTING ON WORKER EFFICIENCY IN
THREE SEPARATE MANUFACTURING DEPARTMENTS.
• ACCOUNTS OF THE STUDY REVEALS NO SIGNIFICANT
CORRELTION BETWEEN PRODUCTIVITY AND LIGHT LEVELS.
• THE RESULTS PROMPTED RESEARCHERS TO INVESTIGATE OTHER
FACTORS AFFECTING WORKER OUTPUT.
11. IN THE FIRST SERIES TWO GROUPS WERE MADE.
ONE GROUP WAS EXPOSED TO VARYING INTENSITIES OF ILLUMINATION
SINCE THE GROUP WAS SUBJECT TO EXPERIMENTAL CHANGES, IT WAS
TERMED AS EXPERIMENTAL GROUP.
ANOTHER GROUP WAS CALLED CONTROL GROUP, CONTINUED TO WORK UNDER
CONSTANT INTENSITIES OF ILLUMINATION
THE RESEARCHERS FOUND THAT AS THEY INCREASE THE ILLUMINATION IN THE
EXPERIMENTAL GROUP BOTH GROUP INCREASED PRODUCTION.
WHEN THE INTENSITY IS DECREASED THE PRODUCTION CONTINUED TO
INCRESE IN BOTH THE GROUPS.
THE PRODUCTION DECREASED WHEN THE ILLUMINATION WAS BELOW THE
LEVEL OF MOONLIGHT.
12. MAYO TOOK FROM THE
ASSEMBLY LINE, SEGREGATED THEM
FROM THE REST OF THE FACTORY AND
PUT THEM UNDER THE EYE OF A
SUPERVISOR WHO WAS MORE A
FRIENDLY OBSERVER THAN
DISCIPLINARIAN. MAYO MADE FREQUENT
CHANGES IN THEIR WORKING
CONDITIONS,
HE CHANGED THE HOURS IN THE WORKING WEEK, THE
HOURS IN THE WORKDAY THE NUMBER OF REST BREAKS.
THE TIME OF THE LUNCH HOUR. OCCASIONALLY, HE WOULD
RETURN THE WOMEN TO THEIR ORIGINAL, HARDER
WORKING CONDITIONS.
RELAY ASSEMBLY TEST ROOM
EXPERIMENT
ALWAYS DISCUSSING AND EXPLAINING THE
CHANGESIN ADVANCE.
13. S.NO CONDITION RESULTS
1. They were then put on piece-work for eight weeks. Output went up
2. Two five minute rest pauses, morning and afternoon, were
introduced for a period of five weeks.
Output went up
3. The rest pauses were lengthened to ten minutes each. Output went up sharply
4. Six five minute pauses were introduced, and the girls complained
that their work rhythm was broken by the frequent pauses.
Output fell slightly
5. Return to the two rest pauses, the first with a hot meal supplied
by the Company free of charge.
Output went up
6. The girls were dismissed at 4.30 p.m. instead of 5.00 p.m. Output went up
7. They were dismissed at 4.00 p.m. Output remained the same
14. Finally, all the improvements were taken
away, and the girls went back to the
physical conditions of the beginning of the
experiment: work on Saturday, 48 hour
week, no rest pauses, no piece work and
no free meal. This state of affairs lasted for
a period of 12 weeks.
OUTPUT WAS THE HIGHEST EVER RECORDED AVERAGING 3000 RELAYS
A WEEK.
What happened was that six individuals became a and
the team gave itself and spontaneously to
in the experiment. The consequence was that they
felt themselves to be participating and without
afterthought and were happy in the knowledge that they were
working from above or limitation from
below..
15. They were themselves satisfied at the consequence
for they felt that they were working under
than ever before. In fact regular medical
checks showed no signs of cumulative fatigue and
from work per cent.
It was noted too, that each girl had her own of putting the
component parts of the relay together - sometimes she varied this
technique in order to avoid monotony and it was found that the more
intelligent the girl, the greater was the number of variations.
The experimental group had considerable
. They were not pushed around or by
anyone. Under these conditions they developed an
and instead of discipline
from higher authority being imposed, it came from within
the itself.
16. INTERVIEW PHASE
21000 PEOPLE WERE INTERVIEWED BETWEEN 1928-1930
TO DETERMINE EMPLOYEE ATTITUDE TOWARDS THE
COMPANY AND THERE JOB
IT WAS CONDUCTED THAT PRODUCTIVITY CAN BE INCREASED IF WORKERS ARE ALLOWED
TO TALK FREELY ABOUT MATTERS THAT ARE IMPORTANT TO THEM.
INITIALLY, A DIRECT APPROACH WAS USED WHEREBY INTERVIEWS ASKED QUESTIONS
CONSIDERED IMPORTANT BY MANAGERS AND RESEARCHERS.
THE RESEARCHERS OBSERVED THAT REPLIES OF THE WORKERS WERE
GUARDED DUE TO WHICH THEY ADOPTED INDIRECT APPROACH IN WHICH
INTERVIEWER SIMPLY LISTENED TO WHAT WORKMEN HAD TO SAY.
AND FINDINGS CONFIRMED THE IMPORTANCE OF SOCIAL FACTORS AT WORK
17. BANK WIRING OBSERVATION ROOM
CONDUCTED DURING 193-1932
A GROUP OF 14 MALE WORKERS IN THE BANK WIRING
ROOM WERE PLACED UNDER OBSERVATION FOR SIX
MONTHS.
A WORKER’S PAY DEPENDED ON THE PERFORMANCE OF A
GROUP AS A WHOLE. RESEARCHERS THOUGHT THAT THE EFFICIENT WORKERS WOULD
PUT PRESURE ON THE LESS EFFICIENT WORKERS TO COMPLETE THE WORK.
HOWEVER IT WAS FOUND THAT THE GROUP ESTABLISHED ITS OWN
STANDARDS OF OUTPUT AND SOCIAL PRESSURE WAS USED TO ACHIEVE
THE STANDARD OUTPUT.
18. THE HYPOTHESIS WAS THAT IN ORDER TO EARN MORE
WORKERS WOULD PRODUCE MORE AND IN ORDER TO
TAKE ADVANTAGES OF GROUP BONUS, THEY WOULD
HELP EACH OTHER TO PRODUCE MORE.
BUT THE REASON FAILED AS THE WORKERS DECIDED
THE TARGET WHICH WAS LOWER THAN COMPANIES
TARGET.
• FEAR OF UNEMPLOYMENT
• FEAR OF RAISING STANDARDS
• PROTECTION OF SOWER
WORKERS
• SATISFACTION ON THE
PART OF
MANAGEMENT
EX. TARGET FOR A DAY WAS CONNECTING 6600 TERMINALS AGAINST 7300 TERMINALS AS
THE STANDARD GIVEN BY CO. WORKER GAVE FOLLOWING REASONS OF DEFICIENCY.
19. Individual workers cannot be treated in isolation but
must be seen as members of a group.
Monetary incentives and good working conditions are
less important to the individual than the need to
belong to a group.
Informal or unofficial groups formed at work have
strong influence on behavior.
Managers must be aware of these ‘social needs’ and cater for them
to ensure that employees work with the organisation rather than
against it.
SIR’S CONCLUSIONS
20. BOOKS BY SIR
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF
PIERRE JANET
THE HUMAN
PROBLEM OF AN
INDUSTRIAL
CIVILIZATION
THE SOCIAL
PROBLEMS OF AN
INDUSTRIAL
CIVILIZATION
CRITICAL
EVALUATION IN
BUSINESS AND
MANAGEMENT
21. Many, including and Lloyd H. Fisher,
criticized Mayo for generalizing his results of the
Hawthorne studies. The two state that Mayo's
research concerned small, isolated groups, and it was
not clear that the conditions and supervision he
achieved could have been replicated in large groups
and factory settings . Recently, james hoopes
criticized for “substituting therapy for democracy’’ in
2003.
CRITICISMS:
Mayo's contributions to management theory were criticized by
intellectual . Writing in 1947, Bell criticized Mayo and
other social scientists for "adjusting men to machines," rather
than enlarging human capacity or human freedom .
22. SIR DIED ON
1ST SEPTEMBER 1949
IN SURRAY.
BUT THEIR RESEARCHES
AND CONTRIBUTIONS
IN DIFFERENT FIELDS
ARE EVERLASTING LIKE
HIM.