________ was regarded as a father of scientific management
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Taylor was a mechanical engineer who sought to improve industrial efficiency. Taylor is regarded as the father of scientific management, and was one of the first management consultants and director of a famous firm.
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Frederick Winslow Taylor is widely regarded as the "Father of Scientific Management," or "Taylorism."
- Manufacturing plant managers, Taylor believed, had the task and obligation of determining the optimum strategy for a worker to execute a job and providing the necessary tools and training.
- He was also a firm believer in rewarding incentives for great performance.
- He dissected each action down into very small motions and timed each motion with a stopwatch to identify the optimal way to execute a job.
- He'd then examine the action to minimise any extraneous motion, resulting in the most efficient way to complete a task.
- Each employee was taught to complete the task in the same manner, resulting in a smooth operation with constant quality and output.
- In 1881, he presented his time and motion study theory to the Midvale plant.
- This thesis served as the foundation for his subsequent management science theory.
- According to the hypothesis, careful observation of time and motion, as well as the eradication of inefficient motions, would yield the most efficient way of production.
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