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Have you ever tried to boost the productivity of your team, but failed? Perhaps you’ve given a
rousing speech or explained how important it is that the company hits its targets for the year?
Boosting your team’s motivation and productivity can sometimes feel like a black art. And it
can be frustrating when you try and fail to boost your team’s motivation. But it need not be this
way.
Motivation theories can be helpful in giving you research-based tools and models to use when
attempting to raise the performance of your team.
He was the first management consultant and the first to look at work and productivity » Career Skills
scientifically. He is known as the father of Scientific Management and the efficiency
movement. » Change Management
» Communication Skills
» Decision Making
Taylor’s Scientific Management » Finance
Taylor’s Scientific Management attempts to find the most efficient way of performing any job.
He believed that there were universal laws which governed efficiency and that these laws were » Human Resources
independent of human judgment. The goal of Scientific Management was to find this “one
best way” of doing things as efficiently as possible. » Interpersonal Skills
» Leadership
Taylor brought a very scientific approach to productivity. He did not value the human needs of
workers. This can be seen from the following quotes: » Marketing
» Personal Development
“ …what the workmen want from employers beyond anything else is higher wages:
what employers want from workmen most of all is low labor costs in manufacture.
Frederick Taylor
» Program Management
» Strategy
» Team Management
“ In our scheme, we do not ask the initiative of our men. We do not want any
initiative. All we want of them is to obey the orders we give them, do what we say,
and do it quick. Follow Us
Frederick Taylor
= q w m
Because Taylor believed that workers were only motivated by pay and money, then:
» Workers don’t usually enjoy work. Because of this, they need to be monitored and
controlled closely. Essentially, Taylor believed that employees had a natural tendency to take
it easy of slack off whenever they could. He called this natural soldiering.
» To help with this, managers should break down each employee’s job into more
manageable, bite-sized tasks.
» Training should be given so that all employees perform these tasks in a standard way.
» Workers should be paid based on how much they produce (piece rate).
» This will create a win-win situation. Workers are incentivized to work hard to earn more and
the businesses production is as efficient as it can be (profits are maximized).
Relevance Today
Since Taylor’s Motivation Theory is based on managers telling employees what to do, it is
closely related to an autocratic style of leadership.
Taylor’s work heavily influenced production methods at the start of the 20th century. It formed
the foundation upon which Henry Ford introduced his mass-production techniques to the
production of cars.
Whilst Scientific Management, sometimes simply called Taylorism, may sound obsolete, it is
actually still in use today. This is especially so if you need to remain competitive in a labor-
intensive industry by keeping costs as low as possible. Examples include:
» Amazon: Pay certain warehouse staff using a piece rate basis according to how productive
they are. In fact, Amazon is even using a wrist-based tracking system to monitor staff. You
can read more about this here.
» McDonald’s: Every McDonalds across the globe looks the same, and the instructions to
create a burger are exactly the same in every branch across the globe. Even the process of
mopping the floor is exactly the same across the globe. This breaking down jobs into bite-
sized chunks and then describing the most efficient way to do that job is an example of
Taylorism in use today.
As you can see from the diagram, the principles of Scientific Management are:
Taylor advocated using time and motion studies as the way to do this. This often involved
looking at the most efficient workers to identify why they were so efficient.
The ultimate aim is to describe in a repeatable way how to do the job in the most efficient
manner. That way, everyone in the organization doing this job can be trained to do it in the
most efficient way.
Taylor didn’t want employees thinking for themselves, he simply wanted a simple task
performed as quickly (as efficiently) as possible. In a nutshell, workers should be paid for
doing, not thinking.
» Cooperate: Work with employees to retrain and recalibrate them, so that they are exactly
following the most efficient way to perform their job.
One consequence of this was that organizational structures had to change. Rather than a
factory having one single foreman, Taylor advocated several, each one specifically focused on
efficiency for a particular area of the factory.
The aim of this step is to maximize production, unlike in situations where ‘soldiering’ occurs.
That is situations where workers naturally slack off because they are not being monitored.
» Managers should be responsible for developing the processes, ways of working and
monitoring employees.
The use of piece-rate pay focuses workers minds on their productivity. If they don’t produce,
then they don’t earn.
Note: Most online sources provide just four principles of Scientific Management. We’ve
included the fifth principle, pay, as we feel its a key component, necessary to really understand
Scientific Management.
Criticisms of Taylor
The following criticisms have been leveled at Scientific Management:
» It was conceived to benefit both worker and company, but the reality is that it benefits the
company far more than the worker. This has resulted in much industrial action and strikes in
the last 100 years.
If you’re looking to boost the productivity of your team, then other motivation theories to
investigate include:
» Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
Summary
You can think of Scientific Management as being:
Taylor’s Motivation Theory is premised on the fact that employees are motivated to be
productive by one thing. Money.
Because of this, Taylor believed that management should exercise close control over
employees, to ensure that they were getting their money’s worth.
He advocated using science to study jobs and break them down into manageable parts.
These parts could then be described in an efficient, repeatable way. Every employee could
then be trained to perform the task in this way.
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