They both realize that when they substitute friendly cooperation and mutual helpfulness for antagonism and strife they are together able to make this surplus so enormously greater than it was in the past that there is ample room for a large increase in... Frederick W. Taylor: Father of Scientific Management - Page 11by Frank Barkley Copley - 1923 - 499 pagesFull view - About this book
| Patricia K. Hymson - 1983 - 204 pages
...matter, and together turn their attention toward increasing the size of the surplus " He believed further that "there is ample room for a large increase in wages for the workmen and an equally large increase in profits for the manufacturer."5 Taylor stressed the idea that managers could "scientifically"... | |
| Carroll Pursell - 1990 - 340 pages
...their attention toward increasing the size of the surplus until this surplus becomes so large . . . that there is ample room for a large increase in wages for the workman and an equally large increase in profits for the manufacturer." While he expressed sympathy... | |
| R. Baden Hellard - 1995 - 226 pages
...in the same direction, the size of the surplus created by their joint efforts is truly astounding. They both realize that when they substitute friendly...surplus so enormously greater than it was in the past. Frederick Winslaw Taylor 1912 This chapter sets the scene for the whole of the construction project... | |
| Mark Rupert - 1995 - 282 pages
...this surplus becomes so large that it is unnecessary to quarrel over how it shall be divided . . . They both realize that when they substitute friendly...together able to make this surplus so enormously greater . . . that there is ample room for a large increase in wages for the workmen and an equally great increase... | |
| Mark Rupert - 1995 - 282 pages
...helpfulness for antagonism and strife they are together able to make this surplus so enormously greater ... that there is ample room for a large increase in wages...equally great increase in profits for the manufacturer. 3 In American industry a consensus on productivity and growth would indeed eventually emerge, but not... | |
| Franklin Hugh Adler - 2002 - 484 pages
...together turn their attention toward increasing the size of the surplus until the surplus becomes so large that there is ample room for a large increase in wages for the workman and an equally large increase in profits for the manufacturer.*4 Thus, distribution, hitherto... | |
| Andy Danford - 1999 - 280 pages
...their attention toward increasing the size of the surplus until this surplus becomes so large . . . that there is ample room for a large increase in wages for the workmen and an equally large increase in profits for the manufacturer' (Taylor, 1947, cited in Bendix, 1956, p. 276). Notwithstanding... | |
| Reinhard Bendix - 1963 - 464 pages
...their attention toward increasing the size of the surplus until this surplus becomes so large . . . that there is ample room for a large increase in wages for the workmen and an equally large increase in profits for the manufacturer.40 88 Taylor, Testimony . . . , op. cit., p. 48. 8oIbid.,pp.... | |
| John Cunningham Wood, Michael C. Wood - 2002 - 442 pages
...their attention toward increasing the size of the surplus until this surplus becomes so large . . . that there is ample room for a large increase in wages for the workman and an equally large increase in profits for the manufacturer.8 In short, what Taylorism offered... | |
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