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Human Resource Management. The Industrial Revolution. Began in the United States in 1860 Just before the Civil War Period during which a country develops an industrial economy Before the Industrial Revolution, economy based on agriculture
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The Industrial Revolution • Began in the United States in 1860 • Just before the Civil War • Period during which a country develops an industrial economy • Before the Industrial Revolution, economy based on agriculture • By the late 1800s, economy depended on industries such as oil, steel, railroads, and manufactured goods
Causes of the Industrial Revolution • Many people left their farms to work in factories • Professional managers supervised their work • Changes in technology, communication, and transportation • Telegraph and cable lines extended across the U.S. after the Civil War • Railroad lines, canals, roads, steamships
Cornelius Vanderbilt(steamships & railroads) James B. Duke (tobacco) John D. Rockefeller (Oil) Andrew Carnegie (steel) J. P. Morgan (banking) Captains of Industry • Powerful businesspeople who created enormous business empires dominated and shaped the U.S. economy
Creation of Monopolies • The captains of industry often pursued profit and self-interest above all else • Drove competitors out of business • Created giant companies that maintained monopolies in their industries • Monopoly • Occurs when one party maintains total control over a type of industry • Trust: giant industrial monopoly • By 1879, Rockefeller controlled >90% of the country’s refining capacity and pipelines
The Break-Up of Trusts • People became worried about the concentration of wealth in the hands of a only a few • In response, the government began regulating business Cornelius Vanderbilt
The Break-Up of Trusts • The Interstate Commerce Act, 1887 • The railroads gave rebates to some customers but not others • This act forced railroads to publish their rates and forbade them to change rates without notifying the public • Established the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) to supervise the railroads
The Break-Up of Trusts • The Sherman Act, 1890 • Made it illegal for companies to create monopolies • Intended to restore competition • Example • Standard Oil Company was broken into smaller companies so that other oil companies could compete with the former giant • John D. Rockefeller
New Challenges for Management • When most Americans worked on farms, sophisticated management techniques were not necessary • By the end of the nineteenth century, giant companies employed thousands of people and distributed products all over the country • Workers performed tasks that needed to be coordinated • These changes demanded new ideas about how to manage people working in large corporations
Frederick W. Taylor and Scientific Management • Wanted to find ways to motivate workers to work harder • To increase efficiency, he tried to figure “one best way” to perform a particular task • Used a stopwatch to determine which work method was most efficient • These time and motion studies lead to scientific management principles
Frederick W. Taylor and Scientific Management • Scientific management seeks to increase productivity and make work easier by carefully studying work procedures and determining the best methods for performing particular tasks
Frederick W. Taylor and Scientific Management • Employers should gather, classify, and tabulate data in order to determine the “one best way” of performing a task or series of tasks. • Employers should study worker strengths and weaknesses and match workers to jobs. Employers should also train employees in order to improve their performance. • The principles of scientific management should be explained to workers. • Management and workers should be interdependent so that they cooperate.
Frederick W. Taylor and Scientific Management • Companies today continue to use the principles of scientific management • Marriott Corporation • Customer satisfaction
The Hawthorne Studies of Productivity • Researchers began to look at the relationship between working conditions and productivity • Series of experiments at the Hawthorne plant of Western Electric in Cicero, IL • Raised Workplace Illumination • Productivity Increase • Lowered the lighting expecting productivity to fall • What happened? • Productivity Increased!
The Hawthorne Studies of Productivity • Baffled by results, a team of psychologists from Harvard University were called upon • Over five years, hundreds of experiments were conducted at the plant • Different wage payments • Rest periods • Work hours • What were the results?
The Hawthorne Studies of Productivity • Researchers concluded that productivity rose because workers worked harder when they received attention • Hawthorne effect • Change of any kind increases productivity • Factors other than the physical environment affected worker productivity • Psychological and social conditions, effective supervision
Abraham H. Maslow and the Hierarchy of Needs • According to Maslow • All people have five basic types of needs • People fulfill lower-level needs before seeking to fulfill higher-level needs • One set of needs must be met before another is sought • “Hierarchy of needs” is his grouping and ordering of physical, security, social, status, and self-actualization needs
Applying Maslow’s Theory to Management • At the lowest level, workers are motivated by basic needs • Wages or salary, physical conditions • Safety or security needs • Providing insurance, retirement benefits, job security • Safe from physical, psychological, or financial harm
Applying Maslow’s Theory to Management • Social needs • Provide a work environment in which colleagues interact • Company lunch rooms, company retreats • Status needs • Provide workers with signs of recognition that are visible to others • Job titles, private offices, designated parking spaces, awards, promotions
Applying Maslow’s Theory to Management • Self-fulfillment needs • Provide employees with opportunities to be creative at work • Include employees in decision making • Example • ITT’s Ring of Quality Control
Empowering Employees • As organizations grew in size and complexity, new styles and methods of management began to emerge • Different philosophies developed on how best to manage employees
Theory X • Assumes that people are basically lazy and will avoid working if they can • Managers impose strict rules and make sure that all important decision are make only by them
Theory Y • Assumes that people find satisfaction in their work • Managers believe that people will work productively if put in the right environment • People are creative and will come up with good ideas if encouraged to do so • Employees given more freedom and allowed to make mistakes
Centralization vs. Decentralization • Centralization • The concentration of power among a few key decision makers • Decentralization • Process by which decisions are made by managers at various levels within an organization
Total Quality Management • W. Edwards Deming used mathematics to help solve problems of quality control • Studied how companies ensure that the products they produce are not defective • Came up with a mathematically based approach to quality control • Total quality management (TQM)
Total Quality Management • TQM is a system of management based on involving all employees in a constant process of improving quality and productivity by improving how the work • Focuses on totally satisfying both customers and employees • Deming’s 14 points Handout
Japanese Management Practices • Managers . . . • encouraged more employee participation in decision making • showed deeper concern for the personal well-being of their employees • tended to facilitate decision making by teams of workers
Theory Z • William Ouchi, management researcher • Integrates Japanese and American business practices • Japanese emphasis on collective decision making and concern for employees • American emphasis on individual responsibility • Johnsonville Foods