Control Based Processes
April 3, 2025
To function efficiently any organization has to achieve “homeostasis”. This word is used to describe the state of affairs wherein an organization adapts to its environment and continues its normal operational activities. At a human level, our ability to adapt to hot or cold weather and continue living is an example of “homeostasis”. At an…
Polar opposite to the concept of Business Process Re-Engineering is the concept of continuous improvement. It was developed by the Japanese after World War-2. Whilst BPR relies on radical change, lean management relies on small incremental change. It stems from Japanese term called “Kaizen” which means small improvement. The concept relies on successive small improvements…
Events: Events are the conditions which must exist for the process to be performed. It is something that happens as opposed to something that is done on purpose. It can think of as the effect which occurs after sufficient cause is provided. Each process starts and ends with an event. Tasks: A task is the…
Fredrick Taylor was one of the earliest thinkers in the field of business process management and also one of the most controversial figures. Some regard him as the guru who gave the world a new paradigm called scientific management while others (especially labor unions) regard him as the mastermind who created conditions suitable for the exploitation of labor. However these are views on how gains which result from increased productivity be shared between the capitalist owner and the laborers. Regardless of who gets the benefit, Fredrick Taylor can be credited with showing the world a pathway to increase productivity i.e. obtain more and more outputs from the same inputs.
Here are some of the salient features of his theory known as “Theory of Scientific Management”
However at the same time knowledge was both rare and expensive. His theory therefore advocated that knowledge from various workers be captured into a system. Thus the organization would become knowledgeable and not individual workers. This skill set should be managed in such a way that it can be transferred to another employee when required thereby reducing the bargaining power of laborers and reducing disruption of effective functioning of business. In his own words he wanted to transform craft production into mass production.
Protests against Taylor’s method call it the “machine model”. They think that this model reduces labor to a mindless task and stalls the mental development of human beings. Laborers are like the parts in a machine that perform the same task repetitively without thinking. Slightest deviation from adopted best practices are discouraged by negative incentives that have been imposed on them.
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