Here is a puzzle: In our day-to-day life we do not treat
people as inanimate objects—but we try to measure them as if they are! We treat
the people in front of us as living, breathing, reacting entities, but few
consider the complexity and reactivity of human nature when developing or
managing with measures. Why the inconsistency?
Two Schools of Thought: The Taylor and Mayo Dichotomy
To solve this puzzle, you have to go back to school—graduate
school. As a graduate student, you’ll probably learn one of two different
approaches to talent measurement. One school of thought is focused on the technical aspect of measurement, and
the other on the human aspect. The
challenge for measurement professionals is to master both schools of thought.
The two are rarely reconciled, however. Professionals generally have expertise
primarily in one approach.
The technical or engineering school will teach you how to calculate
reliability and validity, and introduce you to different measurement methods.
This school of thought dates back to Frederick Taylor,
one of the first manufacturing engineers. Frederick Taylor is considered the
father of scientific
management, which emphasizes task analysis, efficiency studies,
time-and-motion studies, and using compensation schemes for motivation.
The human relations
school has a different point of view: Employees are complicated, and don’t work
mechanistically. If your graduate program emphasizes human relations, you’re
likely learn more about personality types or team functioning measures that
will facilitate interactions between people at work. You’ll be introduced to
validity and reliability, but you’ll be taught very little about the technology
and theory of measures. The human relations school of thought dates back to Elton Mayo, a
psychologist.
The ghosts of Taylor and Mayo haunt today’s organizations.
To this day, consultants, managers, and leaders adhere to one school or the other.
Taylor adherents tend to advocate for measurement as a formal and rigid process.
Mayo adherents focus more on group processes, interpersonal communication, and
intrinsic motivation.
Both Taylor and Mayo made essential contributions to the art
of management and leadership. But it’s not an either/or choice. It often takes
decades of experience to merge the two schools of thought into a practical
working knowledge of measurement. Some never see the dichotomy and its implications.
I’m writing this blog post in the hope that we can accelerate
the process of combining and ultimately uniting these two schools of
measurement.
The Engineer: Frederick Winslow Taylor (1856 – 1915)
“In the past the man has been first; in the future the system must be
first.”
|
|
As an engineer, he
first improved manufacturing technology such as lathes and forging equipment. Early
on, he noticed that these technical improvements demanded similar
organizational innovations to be effective. As his ideas developed, he saw
manufacturing as a larger system that could be improved by optimizing the
various pieces to contribute to the larger system. Over the course of his career,
he contributed his ideas to equipment (he had several important patents), business
processes (such as accounting methods), and methods of managing employees.
Taylor and Time-and-Motion Studies
As he looked at the
larger manufacturing picture, Taylor was concerned that laborers were not
working at full capacity. To fix this problem, he identified the optimum work-output
level, and provided incentive pay for this level of output.
Determining workers’
optimum output involved time-and-motion studies. Taylor divided the work
into steps, each of which he timed separately. He then combined the time for
each step into a total time for the job. By dividing the work day by the total
job time, he arrived at an optimum production rate.
Workers were paid on a graduated scale. Low levels of output
were paid very little, but as productivity approached the maximum, unit pay
increased. Workers attaining the optimum production rate would be paid 60% more
using Taylor’s methods.
While he became infamous
for his time-and-motion studies, it’s important to recognize that, for Taylor, these
studies were part of a larger system of managing employees. Taylor used worker productivity as a talent
measure. He studied measures of productivity to make decisions, organize
work, set production expectations, motivate employees, and identify employees
to retain. In the best cases, Taylor’s scientific management methods could
reduce costs and increase productivity by 50% to 100%.
Human reaction to measures and management methods didn’t
factor into Taylor’s thinking. He was convinced that employees only work for
money. Labor problems were simply an engineering challenge to be managed. Taylor
paid lip service to selecting and developing talent—he mostly set output targets.
Workers who were able to keep up the pace self-selected and developed their
capability.
Taylor’s blind spot—the human factor—can be seen in many
contemporary organizational improvement interventions, such as re-engineering,
which has a success rate as low as 30%. Human readiness and acceptance of
change is often a barrier to re-engineering success.
Taylor’s approach also was inconsistent. Sometimes it
worked, sometimes it led to significant problems.
Employee reactions to Taylor’s intervention often led to
work actions and strikes. Ultimately there
was an congressional investigation. By the time of Taylor’s death at age 59, Congress
had outlawed use of stopwatches and bonus payments in the federal government.
Scientific management was increasingly discredited.
The Humanist: George Elton Mayo
|
|
Mayo’s most important work coincided with the Great
Depression. He believed that the industrial revolution had shattered strong
social relationships in the workplace, and he found that workers acted
according to sentiments and emotion. He felt that if managers treated workers
with respect and tried to meet their needs, then both workers and management
would benefit.
Mayo’s research indicated
that belonging to a group is a more powerful motivator than money. In
his management philosophy, he saw attitudes, proper supervision, and informal
social relationships as the key to productivity.
Some consider Mayo’s work to be a reaction to Taylorism. But
Mayo was also concerned with output and productivity. Unlike Taylor, however, he
was interested in the social and psychological interventions that increased
productivity. These interventions are indeed helpful, and understanding the
human factor is critical.
Thanks to Mayo’s work, we recognize that, in organizations, informal social structures matter as
much as formal structures, such as the chain of command. For example, a likeable
senior engineer who dislikes a new manager could undermine the manager’s
authority by making jokes at his expense during every meeting. In effect, the
engineer becomes more influential than the manager—outside the hierarchy of the
organizational chart.
Today, many organizational interventions emphasize
team-building, and are based on the recognition that organizational culture is
important, and managers have ongoing relationships with employees. By
acknowledging the importance of the informal structure of an organization, factors
such as relationships, informal leadership, and influence can be aligned with
organizational needs and direction.
Mayo’s insights were synthesized into a school of thought
referred to as human relations. The human relations school continues strong to
this day, often in the form of leadership development, team building, or change
initiatives.
The insight missed by Mayo is that measurement—even Taylor’s
productivity measurements—are essentially a social process. Measurement is
simply a method of communication—a way to make meaning between groups.
Since Mayo, many people have failed to make this essential connection:
We can extend Mayo’s insight into the importance of informal (social)
structures into an understanding of the importance of the informal (connotative
or personal) meanings of measures. As I have discussed before, the informal
meanings of measures matter as much as, if not more than, their formal
meanings. Like social structures, these connotative meanings can be managed—but
only when their existence and importance are acknowledged.
If you’re creating an organizational, and
you follow Taylor, you may believe that compensation is the sole motivation for
performance and advancement. If you follow Mayo, you may believe that love,
fear, and other ineffable human factors are the primary motivators.
In the same
way, the designers of a formal measurement system may believe that their
measures will motivate by providing people with a positive opportunity to make
more money (the denotative meaning). Instead, the designers may find that the connotative
meanings provoke reactions that ultimately trump their intentions—reactions from
outright rejection to gaming the system.
It’s odd that many of our measurement systems haven’t
progressed beyond Taylor’s way of thinking. We have many tools to address the
informal meanings of measures—tools we can draw on from interpersonal
communications theory, management practices, and organizational learning.
Another danger of following Mayo’s approach is that it often
pays too much attention to the
informal and emergent social structures of an organization. While these informal
structures are powerful influences on individual performance, it is possible to
merge formal and informal organizational structures into a shared structure. This
is where measurement can be incredibly effective, if it is used as a means of communication:
It can create shared meaning that bridges the organizational and personal
definitions of performance, motivation, and reward.
Finding a Middle Ground
What’s most unfortunate about the Mayo vs. Taylor
bifurcation is that they were both right: The difference between the two schools
of thought is ideological, not practical. In practice, we use both approaches.
We need both engineers and social scientists (psychologist and sociologists) to
run organizations efficiently.
If we attend one graduate school, we may learn to develop
measures that are technically good, but we’ll have trouble assessing the human
reaction to measurement. If we attend another school, we may learn to
facilitate social interaction and meaning, but we won’t be trained to motivate,
direct, or improve performance through measurement and feedback. Personally, I
attended a more technical school, but my life and work experiences have led me to
appreciate a balanced approach.
What Taylor missed was the importance of social structures
in motivation, and the human factor in reaction to measurement. What Mayo
missed was that measurement in itself is a social process, and measures have informal
(social) meanings that can be managed.
Today, 80 years after Mayo’s Hawthorne studies, we should be
able to merge the two schools. There is a wealth of possibilities for applying
Taylor’s ideas in measuring individual productivity. At the same time, we’ve
vastly increased our understanding of human relations—there’s a huge industry
that’s evolved out of Mayo’s original insights.
Finally, in resolving the polarity of these two approaches,
we need to acknowledge that measurement is communication, and that
communication is shared meaning. By starting with a simple point—that people
always react to measurement, and that the reaction is unpredictable—we can take
the denotative and connotative meanings of measures, the formal and informal
structures in organizations, and the two schools of thought, and synthesize them
into an elegant, effective approach to talent measurement.
5 comments:
Great piece on Talent Assessment & Development. The middle ground is talent analytics - using data to predict how employees perform and how they are drive in order to understand them better. This embraces both Taylor's science and Mayo's humanist perspectives by getting to engagement through numbers.
Thanks Mike-- it was fun to find the insight.
Talent analytics, in the sense of personality assessment of entire organizations-- as your organization does-- is right on.
But many analytics professionals note that they have a problem with acceptance of their results. I suspect the problem stems from too much Taylorism and not enough Mayo!
Updating your home can be a lot of work. Additionally, if you’re a novice, there are many aspects you should consider as you tackle a project. No matter what type of home improvement project you have going on, this article will have some valuable information for you.
sendacardhome |
7thhome |
luxuryhomestogo |
myhavenhomes |
hailhomerepair |
mysincityhomes |
freehomedeposit |
freestonehomes |
hometownpenske |
homerunlotto |
I gathered useful information on this point as I am working on a business project. Thank you posting relative information and its now becoming easier to complete this assignment.
android-forensic-expert.com |
utilitysearches.co.uk |
turnermotorsportsllc |
www.atautomotivellc.com |
cheminees-focus.org |
myxtrahealth |
chasethestorm.co.uk |
http://www.stpetehealth.com |
phoenixlawpllc.com |
www.tartanarmymessageboard.co.uk |
That is greatly joyful for making use of the nice products in this particular Online Casinos blog page and by using the nice products in this Casino Games web log. Thanks a good deal for giving the good products within this Gala Bingo blog and truly like the great information.
diazepam online
Post a Comment