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Industrial
Management
Dr.Vidyashankar.S
Professor
Dept. of Mechanical Engg.
Bangalore Institute of Technology
Bangalore-04

Part A
Unit - I
Introduction
Chapter 1

The branch of engineering that deals with the creation


and management of systems that integrate people and
materials and energy in productive ways
Definition
Industrial Management
DEFINTION OF MANGAEMENT
According to Henry Fayol “Management is to forecast and plan, to
organise, to command, to co-ordinate and to control.”
It attempts to describe management in terms of what a manager does and
not what management is?
According to Oliver Sheldon, “the term management is commonly used to
cover the formation of policy, its execution, the designing of the
organisation and its employment.”
According to E.F.L. Breech – “Management can be defined as a social
process entailing responsibility for the effective and efficient planning and
regulation of the operations of an enterprise,’’
suc

Historical Perspective
• Since the beginning of time, humans have been managing—managing
other people, managing organizations, and managing themselves.

• Management is a process used to accomplish organizational goals.


• To some, management is thought of as an art; to others, as a science.

• Each of those perspectives is grounded in the early writings and


teaching of a group of managerial pioneers

The Pre-modern Era


 Ancient massive construction projects
Egyptian pyramids
 Great Wall of China
 Michelangelo, the manager.
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
• While it can be argued that management began well before the
Industrial Revolution, it is often felt that what emerged as
contemporary management thought was begin with the beginning
of industrial development.
• The Industrial Revolution began in the mid-eighteenth century
when factories were first built and laborers were employed to
work in them.

The Industrial Revolution’s Influence On


Management Practices
 Industrial revolution

 Machine power began to substitute for human


power
 Lead to mass production of economical
goods

 Improved and less costly transportation systems


became available
 Created larger markets for goods.
 Larger organizations developed to serve larger
markets
 Created the need for formalized
management practices.

Adam Smith’s Contribution To The Field Of Management


 Wrote the Wealth of Nations (1776)

 Advocated the economic advantages that


organizations and society would reap from the
division of labor:

 Increased productivity by increasing each worker’s


skill and dexterity.

 Time saved that is commonly lost in changing tasks.

 The creation of labor-saving inventions and


machinery.
Adam Smith’s
Classical Contributions
 Classical approach

 The term used to describe the hypotheses of the


scientific management theorists and the general
administrative theorists.

 Scientific management theorists


 Fredrick W. Taylor, Frank and Lillian Gilbreth, and
Henry Gantt

 General administrative theorists


 Henri Fayol and Max Weber

Scientific Management
 Frederick W. Taylor
 The Principles of Scientific Management (1911)
 Advocated the use of the scientific method to define
the “one best way” for a job to be done

 Believed that increased efficiency could be


achieved by selecting the right people for the job and
training them to do it precisely in the one best way.

 To motivate workers, he favored incentive wage


plans.

 Separated managerial work from operative work.

Scientific Management Contributors


 Frank and Lillian Gilbreth
 Bricklaying efficiency improvements
 Time and motion studies (therbligs)
 Henry Gantt
 Incentive compensation systems
 Gantt chart for scheduling work operations

General Administrative Theory


 General administrative theorists
 Writers who developed general theories of what
managers do and what constitutes good
management practice

 Henri Fayol (France)


 Fourteen Principles of Management: Fundamental or
universal principles of management practice

 Max Weber (Germany)


 Bureaucracy: Ideal type of organization characterized
by division of labor, a clearly defined hierarchy, detailed
rules and regulations, and impersonal relationships
BEHAVIORAL MANAGEMENT

• The behavioral school of management grew out of the efforts of some to recognize
the importance of the human endeavor in an organization.

• These people felt that if managers wanted to get things done, it must be through
people—the study of workers and their interpersonal relationships.
Henry L. Gantt (1861–1919)

• was one of the earliest of theses behavioral theorists.

• Some people would classify him in more than one category, but his passionate
concern for the worker as an individual and his pleas for a humanitarian
approach to management exemplify the behavioral approach.

• His early writing called for teaching and instructing workers, rather than driving
them

Mary Parker Follett (1868–1933)


• Although trained in philosophy and political science, shifted her interests to
vocational guidance, adult education, and social psychology.

• These led to her lifetime pursuit of developing a new managerial philosophy


that would incorporate an understanding of the motivating desires of the
individual and the group.
Elton Mayo (1880–1949)

• Best known for his Hawthorne experiments, introduced rest pauses in


industrial plants and in so doing reduced employee turnover from 250
percent to 5 percent in some cases.

• He was concerned about human performance and working conditions.

• The work pauses, better known as breaks, reduced employee pessimism


and improved morale and productivity.

Henri Fayol (1841–1925),

• The father of the management process school of thought was the Frenchman a mining
engineer.
• He spent his entire working career with the same company, involved with coal mining
and iron production.

• From his experiences as the managing director of the company, Fayol developed his
general principles of administration

• He thought that the study, analysis, and teaching of management should all be
approached from the perspective of its functions, which he defined as forecasting and
planning, organizing, commanding, controlling, and coordinating.

James D. Mooney (1884–1957)

• whose writings and research lent credence to the management process school of
thinking, is credited with the notion that all great managers use the same principles of
management.
MANAGEMENT PROCESS
- Frederick Taylor,

-Henry Fayol,

-Gilbert,
-Charles Babbage,

- Henry Gantt
contribution

Frederick Winslow Taylor


“Father of Modern
Management”
 In 1895- proposed a Piece Rate System:

 Observe & Analyze – set the “standard” for job


(use Time and Motion studies)
 Pay workers for meeting/exceeding standard
 Pay individual worker – not everyone, or
group/department, or the “job” = pay according to
individual value to business

Frederick Taylor – Cont.


 Biography: Wealthy Philadelphia Quaker family
Worked in hydraulics factory as laborer/foreman/chief
engineer

 At 25 earned college degree in engineering

 At 35- consultant: introduced functional foreman,


production planning, differential pay= cut costs/increased
production)

 1905 – wrote Shop Management

 1909-14: Lecturer at Harvard

 Management consultant – US Navy and Army

 1911- Wrote Scientific Management

Taylor’s Four Principles of Management


 Develop a science for each element of an individual’s work, which replaces
the old rule-of-thumb method.
 Scientifically select and then train, teach, and develop the worker.
(Previously, workers chose their own work and trained themselves as best they
could.)

 Heartily cooperate with the workers so as to ensure that all work is done in
accordance with the principles of the science that has been developed.

 Divide work and responsibility almost equally between management and


workers. Management takes over all work for which it is better fitted than the
workers. (Previously, almost all the work and the greater part of the
responsibility were thrown upon the workers.)

Henri Fayol’s
Henri Fayol’s Principles of
Management
 Division of Labor: allows for job specialization.

 Authority and Responsibility: both formal and informal authority result from
special expertise.
 Unity of Command: workers have only one boss.

 Line of Authority: clear chain of command, top to


bottom of the firm.

 Centralization: degree to which authority rests at the top of the organization.

 Unity of Direction: single plan of action to guide the organization.

 Equity - The provision of justice and the fair and impartial treatment of all
employees.

Fayol - Continue
 Order: place workers where most useful and have career opportunities.

 Initiative: encourage employees to act on their own.

 Discipline: workers need to obey

 Remuneration of Personnel: pay what is fair.


 Stability of Tenure of Personnel: Long-term employment is important

 Subordination of Individual Interest to the


Common Interest: interest of organization priority

 Esprit de corps: Have enthusiasm

Frank Gilbreth
 Born in 1871 in Fairfeild, Maine.

 Ambition to be a Construction Engineer.

 First job as a bricklayer.

 Introduced improvements in brick laying.


 Promoted to Foreman then superintendent.

 Became involved in the contracting business.

Frank Gilbreth
 Started contracting business in 1895.
 1911, started a firm of Consulting Industrial
Engineers.

 Gained international fame as a consultant.

 Had 12 children with Lillian Gilbreth.

Frank Gilbreth
 Developed “time and motion” study as an
approach to scientific management.

 Motion study: finding the best method to perform


a task.

 Time study: establish work standards for a job.


 Used Cine camera in analysis.

 Constructed 3 dimensional models of motion

Frank Gilbreth
 Devised several systems of analyzing work.

 Flow Process Chart breaking work into basic


elements of operations, inspections,
transportations, storages and delays.

Frank Gilbreth
 Developed “therbligs” e.g Grasp-begins when
hand or body member touches an object, consists
of gaining control of an object, ends when control is
gained.

 Therbligs held the stage for many years in work


analysis.

Frank Gilbreth
 The Principle of Motion Economy

 Lead to minimum effort and fatigue and


maximum achievement.

 Identified Two factors affecting job execution:


1) Worker 2) Enviroment
Frank Gilbreth
Contribution:
 Workers were trained and placed in suitable areas
of work.

 Performance of the workers were monitored.

 Workers were restated if the were of low


performance.

 Believed in the value of questions and the need


to ask questions.

Frank Gilbreth
 Scientific management was a philosophy of life
achieved by cooperation of engineers, educators,
physiologists, psychologists, psychiatrists,
economists, sociologists, staticians and managers.

 Died in 1924.
Biography

Lillian Moller Gilbreth


Early Days and Education
 Date of Birth: 24th of May 1878

 Place of Birth: Oakland, California

 First Degree:BS degree in Literature (1900),


University of California (Berkeley)

 MS Degree: Literature (1902)

 Doctorate: Literature (got married)

Family Life and Career


 Ph.D.: Psychology (4 children)

 Second degree: Engineering


(husband's encouragement)
 Partnership with her husband Frank

 Difference in their natures and its effect on business:

 Frank: technical aspects of time management

 Lillian: human aspects of working efficiency

Partnership with Lillian’s


Husband
• Partnership lasted 20 years

• Shared work and ideas

• A sum up of their idea found in 2 books


• “Applied Motion Study ”

• “Fatigue Study”

Radical Changes in Lillian’s


Life
• Husband’s early death (1924)

• Struggle with business career in convincing


the companies of her ideas of efficiency

• New techniques to perform household tasks


(efficient kitchens)
Lillian’s Work
 Applying efficiency techniques for

 handicapped to facilitate their lives

 Directing doctors in treating patients

 Wrote on homemaking and parenting

 “Living with Children”


 “Homemaker and her Job”
 “Foreman and Power Management in the
Home”

Lillian’s Late Achievements


 Education at the age of 50
 MS in Engineering
 Doctorate in Engineering

 Served in the New Jersey State Board of Regents

 Delegate to the World Power Congress

 Professor at Purdue

 Advisor for American Presidents

 Retired at the age of 90

 Passing away at the age of 92

Lillian Gilbreth
Charles
Babbage
1791-1871
“Father of the modern computer”

Early childhood
 Born in Totnes, Devonshire, England in 1791

 Was a very sickly child


 Started school at age 10

 He was a very curious child

 Science and +math were favorite subject

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