Reaction paper on Classical Approaches and Organizational Structure chapter - Business Finance
Im attaching the chapter bewlo. Please read it and do the followingChapter Reaction Paper PromptA 400-500 word reaction paper will demonstrate that you have critically read, analyzed, processed, and critiqued the chapter for class discussion. Your writing will show your full engagement with the content of the chapter. You should focus your writing on one section, theory, or concept in the chapter to demonstrate both your knowledge of the content and your ability to apply it to organizational communication. Chapter Reaction Papers should follow APA stylistic guidelines and are required to be submitted by the end of the instructional module covering the chapter(s) you choose.
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Introduction:
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the Industrial Revolution exerted profound changes
on soci- ety. In America, this revolution was in full swing. Society fairly rapidly moved from an agrarian
and artisan environ- ment, where individuals or small groups of skilled workers produced goods, to
manufacturing processes involving the widespread use of machinery and division of labor in both
farming and the production of goods in factories. With the advent of the Industrial Revolution, changes
in both the management and communication of workers became necessary, as organizational structure
adapted to follow the new function and flow of mass-production work. As factories became more
prominent, rapidly increasing levels of organizational bureaucracy and hier- archy had profound and
disruptive social and economic implications. In this chapter, we will look at a number of theories that
gained prominence during this period of substantial change in industrial expansion, organization, and
communication. Classical theorists such as Frederick Taylor, Max Weber, Henri Fayol, and Mary Parker
Follett had a tremendous impact on the way industry under- stood and practiced organizing and
communicating to more efficiently and effectively complete tasks.
CASE STUDY: iPhones and Suicide Nets?
In 2010, at a Foxconn plant in Shenzhen, China, nine factory workers committed suicide, leaping to their
deaths from an iPod and iPhone supply-chain production facility over a three-month span. In 2012, 150
workers at the same facility threatened to do the same thing. Workers complained of overly strict
management (with workers forced to remain standing for their entire shift), extraordinarily long work
shifts (up to twelve hours per day, six days a week), dangerous working conditions (alleged exposure to
toxic chemicals), horrible living conditions (cramped dorms with an average of seven room- mates),
boring and repetitive job tasks, and low pay ($1.78 per hour). Workers believed that if they complained,
they would be fired and face no future job prospects. One of Foxconn’s responses was to install nets to
physically catch any workers who attempted to commit suicide at the plant. What do you think of
Foxconn’s approach to its suicide problem? In 2012, Apple reported over $13 billion in profits. Is this fact
relevant to any discussion of a solution? Does Foxconn’s approach pose any ethical issues or concerns?
In this chapter, we study classical approaches and debates about management and organizational
structure. This has relevance today, as emerging economies struggle through their own industrial
revolutions and as workers in industrial- ized countries confront a more mobile—yet less stable and
secure— employment environment.
FREDERICK TAYLOR
We begin our study with Frederick Taylor, the pioneer of thought in regard to organizational efficiency
and management. Taylor (1856–1915) was an American me- chanical engineer and management
consultant who de- veloped a system of management in an effort to improve industrial efficiency and is
generally regarded as the father of scientific management. Taylor believed there should be a distinction
between the mental activity of planning the work to be done and the physical activity/ manual labor of
executing that plan of work. Planning and administration were the purview of managers, and optimized
labor efficiency and skill development both the responsibility and goal of workers. Taylor’s system was
explained in his book The Principles of Scientific Management (Taylor, 1911). Taylor recognized that the
“best” way to do things (prior to scientific management) had been handed down over the years by
instruction and observation, but as a result, many best practices had developed for any given task.
Taylor believed that using science to determine which of these were, in reality, the most efficient and
effective means of completing a given task was the app- roach organizations should follow.
Furthermore, Taylor believed that past management approaches had resulted in managers and workers
viewing each other as enemies competing for their share of the organization’s profits. Labor wanted
profits to go to increased wages, whereas managers would view labor as a source of cost that should be
minimized. Taylor argued that this resulted in a situation of dis- trust between management and
workers, whereby work- ers would do the least amount of work possible (working slowly), while seeking
to demonstrate to their superiors that they were giving the most (working fast). Taylor be- lieved his
system would help to correct this “soldiering” or slow work. Incentives were necessary (quick
promotion, higher pay, bonuses, shorter hours, better working condi- tions, etc.), but Taylor suggested
that incentives were only one subordinate piece of a good management system. Under his scientific
management system, managers as- sumed new duties.
Taylor was convinced that developing a science in the workplace, one that established rules and laws by
systematically recording and indexing best practices, could replace the haphazard judgment of the
individual worker. His system also called for a room or office in which the planner might maintain a desk
and his books, records, and other information, thus providing a foundation for organizational
“administration.” Probably the most important and well-known element of the sci- entific management
approach is the idea of a task. Management was ex- pected to fully plan out the work of every worker
ahead of time. Taylor demonstrated this idea at the Bethlehem Steel Company through the process of
handling pig iron. His plan increased the rate of pig iron moved by each man from 12.5 to 47 tons per
day. This decreased the Key Point: Scientific management espoused both a distinct separation of labor
between management and workers, but also worker– management cooperation. At times in his
writings, Taylor exhibited low regard for the mental capacity of a typical worker. The basic tenant of the
scientific management approach was that employees were not highly educated and therefore would be
unable to perform any but the simplest tasks. Taylor essentially suggested that production efficiency in a
shop or factory could be greatly enhanced by elimination of wasted time and motion in a worker’s
performance of tasks. Applications of Taylor’s ap proach in the workplace were often one-sided,
however. Organizations’ 16 CHAPTER 2 Classical Approaches and Organizational Structure number of
yard laborers required from between 400 to 600 to 140. The average number of tons per man per day
increased from 16 to 59. Earnings per man per day increased from $1.15 to $1.88, and the average cost
of handling a ton of 2,240 pounds went from $0.072 to $0.033 (Taylor, 1998). Thus, Taylor’s system
involved the systematic development of a scientific method through processes such as time and motion
studies that allowed manage- ment to select workers and train them for each job. He believed that
laborers did what any healthy laborer could do with the proper system and training. Pay was increased
to a fair wage, but workers were not overcompensated. It was the science behind the work, not just the
worker’s initiative, that allowed for increased produc tivity. The proper rate of pay in the Bethlehem
Steel case was determined by careful experiments to identify what compensation was in the workers’
true best interest based on their contribution when all factors were considered (Taylor, 1998, p. 121).
For Taylor, then, there was a best way to do any job, and it was the job of managers and science to
figure this out. It was also important for managers to find the proper fit between worker and job and to
train the workers appropriately. And, importantly, for Taylor’s system, there is a clear distinction
between management and workers. embrace of only select elements of scientific management, such as
time-motion stud- ies, optimized worker productivity, and enhanced supervision of workers, provoked
resentment and opposition on the part of labor unions that pointed to a dehuman- ized work
environment, a profound lack of appreciation for worker contributions, and inequity in the division of
profits. Such developments frustrated Taylor as well, as his theory called for a mental revolution on the
part of both sides—management and workers—in working cooperatively to enhance profitability and in
equitably sharing any scientifically derived improved surplus.
Despite these conflicts, the value of scientific management in rationalizing pro- duction was indisputable
and its impact on the development of mass-production techniques immense. Thompson (1974)
suggested the scientific approach always raised wages for a majority of employees without any trace of
injury to health or increase of accidents. Thompson also indicated that under such a system, employees
were more loyal, more sober (immoderate drinkers were not able to keep up with the workload!), and
more quickly promoted. Thus, Thompson argued that Taylor’s system did not dehumanize the worker.
Indeed, Taylor would insist that if you found the right job for a worker, paid him what he was worth
given his skills, and also paid him well for any increased output (resulting from enhanced profit from
worker‒management cooperation), labor unions would be unnecessary.
MAX WEBER
Max Weber (1864–1920) was a German sociologist and political economist. While he was a
contemporary of Taylor (and Fayol and Follett, whom we will discuss later on), all these other theorists
likely did not know of his work during their lifetime. Stewart R. Clegg writes, “While he wrestled with
questions of rationality and came up with an analysis that far exceeded the insights of early
20th-century management scholars, as he had published them only in German, few English writers knew
of his work” (Clegg, 2005, p. 528). It wasn’t until the 1940s that his works were introduced to the United
States when they were translated into English (Weber, 1946, 1947).
His impact on the workplace is primarily the result of his bureaucratic theory or the legal-rational model.
Weber did not offer a particular prescrip- tion for managers but instead his understanding of the
characteristics of an ideal type of organization. Weber described three basic types of authority:
charismatic (based on a leader’s personal qualities); traditional (based on tradition and powers of
control as they have been handed down in the past); and legal (a rational, coherent system). Weber
encouraged a rationallegal approach in his bureaucratic model: “Bureaucratic administration means
fundamentally the exercise of control on the basis of knowledge” (Weber, 1947, p. 339).
The main principles of Weber’s model included a clearly defined hierarchy, division of labor or
specialized roles (including a separation of personal and work life), a firmly established chain of
command, adherence to a strict set of rules, re- cruitment based on merit, a uniform system of
promotion, and emphasis on em- ployment as a career. You might recognize many of these
characteristics as elements that we take for granted in our contemporary workplace. It answers the
questions of organizational structure, including “What is the basis for our organizational ac tions?”
“What am I supposed to do at work?” “To whom am I supposed to report or go to if I have an issue?”
Weber saw bureaucracy not nec- essarily as the only way, but as the most efficient and techni- cally
superior way to operate.
Weber’s bureaucratic model is an impersonal system that relies on rationality and a highly formalized
system of rules. “The dominant norms are concepts of straightforward duty without regard to personal
considerations” (Weber, 1947, p. 340). Weber’s position is that “the development of bureau cracy
greatly favours the leveling of social classes and this can be shown historically to be the normal
tendency” (p. 340). Among the criticisms is that bureaucracy can lead to excessive rule-following, lower
levels of creativity, flexibility in adapting to rapidly changing industry competition, and overspecialization in work tasks, leading to employee boredom, dissatisfac- tion, and reduced motivation and
performance. And perhaps as in the case study “iPhones and Suicide Nets?”, excessive bu reaucracy can
lead to worker alienation and despair.
HENRI FAYOL
Henri Fayol (1841–1925) was a French mining industri- alist in the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries who offered a comprehensive prescriptive theory for how organizations should be run. He
proposed five primary functions of management and fourteen principles of man- agement. His functions
of management include planning, organizing, commanding (or leading), controlling, and co- ordinating.
His fourteen principles are:
1. Division of labor: specialization
2. Authority: entrusting managers with the right to give orders
3. Discipline: carrying out orders and instructions and
trusting policies
4. Unity of command: employees taking orders from only
one boss
5. Unity of direction: orders emanating from one superior
6. Subordination of individual interests to general interests:
subordinates’ submission to the rules and direction established by their managers; climate in which the
interests of the individual remain subordinate to those of the organization
7. Remuneration:paymentofafairwagetoworkers
8. Centralization:centralizeddecision-making
9. Scalarchain:lineofauthoritywithverticaldirectionofcommunication
10. Order: assignment of a specific place to every employee
11. Equity: kindliness and justice toward all
12. Stability of tenure of personnel: limited turnover and orderly planning to replace
workers
13. Initiative: allowing employees to initiate and carry out plans, thus encouraging
high levels of effort
14. Esprit de corps: unity of purpose
Thus, an effective organization is highly structured, and every person in the organ- ization knows where
he or she fits in. Fayol’s work may be viewed as strongly comple menting that of Weber on
bureaucracy, by providing additional operational detail. Though the activities of managers have changed
as organizational life has changed, Fayol’s theory of classical management continues to impact how
basic management is taught.
CLASSICAL MANAGEMENT COMMUNICATION
By now, it should be clear that the view of theorists like Taylor, Weber, and Fayol em- phasized a
machine metaphor in understanding the common worker. From this per- spective, communication was a
tool to complete the task at hand. Managers focused on control, hierarchy, and division of labor, and
communication was for getting the job done. Fayol’s principle calling for the subordination of the
individual’s interest to the general interest of the organization, along with Taylor’s focus on the
distinction between the mental activity of planning the work and the physical activity of doing it, meant
that communication should be task-oriented. While there are a number of ways that communication
can flow in an organization (vertically, up or down, diagonally, horizontally), in classical organizations
communication was narrowly focused, spe- cific to the task at hand. Communication was also formalized
with a vertical (down- ward) direction flow and usually written. Discussion between workers concerning
better ways to complete a task was discouraged, as that was the job of the planner.
Because there is “one best way” to do a task, the classical organization likely favored a written channel
of communication (memos, manuals, instructions, hand- books, etc.). That is not to say that face-to-face
communication would have been outright forbidden; the preference would simply have been a more
formal, writ- ten form of communication. Such would also be consistent with the ideas of order inherent
to, and rules of, the classical approach. The emphasis on hierarchy and chain of command would
encourage this more formal style of communi- cation, emphasizing the use of full names and titles like
supervisor or assistant coordinator instead of first names.
MARY PARKER FOLLETT
Mary Parker Follett (1868‒1933) was an American social worker and manage ment consultant. One
might argue that including her work in a discussion of scientific/classical approaches to management is
not appropriate because of her emphasis on the individual in groups and society, but her ideas were
important to this period and served as a bridge to the human behavior approaches that later evolved
from it. As noted by Rosabeth Moss Kanter, “Follett’s espousal of mutual problem solving foreshadows
employee involvement, participative management, quality circles, and other team-based approaches to
involving the workforce in di- agnosis, analysis, and solution finding” (Graham, 1995, p. xiii).
Many in the early 1900s ignored Follett perhaps because her ideas were very different from the
prevailing status quo approach to management in practice and strongly asserted by other theorists.
Perhaps her critics didn’t want to hear what she was saying because she was a woman; there certainly
were cultural issues related to gender at the time. Regardless, her work was very important and influential in management theory. In the introduction to Graham’s book of readings by Mary Parker Follett,
Peter Drucker identifies her four postulates:
1.
Use conflict to understand.
2.
Management is not exclusive to business but the generic function of all organi-zations. In other
words, business is a social, not economic, institution.
3.
Management is a function.
4.
Reinvent the citizen. (Graham, 1995, pp. 4–8)
With regards to control, Parker indicates the need for a shared sense of control:
The period of laissez-faire is indeed over, but I do not think we want to put in its place a forcibly
controlled society, whether it be controlled by the state of the socialists or the experts of a planning
board. The aim and the process of the organisation of government, of industry, of international
relations, should be, I think, a control not imposed from without the regular functioning of society, but
one which is a co-ordinating of all those functions, that is, a collective self-control. (Graham, 1995, pp.
225–226)
This is not a concept included in Taylor, Weber, or Fayol’s approaches. Sharing control would not fit into
their systems. Parker emphasizes group principles in the work environment, and that power derives
from joining with others:
The growing recognition of the group principle in the business world is particularly interesting to us. The
present development of business methods shows us that the old argument about cooperation and
competition is not fruitful. Cooperation and competition are being taken into a larger synthesis.
We are just entering on an era of collective living. “Cutthroat” competition is beginning to go out of
fashion. What the world needs today is a cooper- ative mind. The business world is never again to be
directed by individual intelligences, but by intelligences interacting and ceaselessly influencing one
another. (Graham, 1995, p. 233)
Remember that Follett wrote these words in the 1920s. And although Taylor shared her views about
enhanced cooperation within organizations, he did not foresee the potential power Follett insists will
occur if the strict management‒worker role dichotomy and boundaries are crossed. The business
assumptions under which Taylor, Weber, and Fayol were operating emphasized a rigid hierarchic
system, keeping power in the hands of managers. Follett’s idea of the collective changes the machine
metaphor:
A man is a point in the social process rather than a unit in that process, a point where forming forces
meet straightway to disentangle themselves and stream forth again. In the language of the day, man is
a ...
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