
Work and People
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Content
- Front Cover
- Work and People
- An Economic Evaluation of Job-Enrichment
- A volume in Research in Management Consulting
- Series Editor: Anthony F. Buono, Bentley University
- CONTENTS
- Research in Management Consulting
- Work and People
- An Economic Evaluation of Job-Enrichment
- by
- Henri Savall University Jean Moulin Lyon 3 and ISEOR
- Translated from French by
- M. A. Woodhall Professeur à l'Ecole Supérieure de Commerce de Lyon
- Director, Manchester Business School Language Learning Centre
- Information Age Publishing, Inc.
- Charlotte, North Carolina www.infoagepub.com
- Preface to the 2010 Reprint
- Anthony F. Buono
- REFERENCES
- Foreword to the Second Edition
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION
- NOTES
- Foreword to the First Edition
- PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION
- NOTES
- Table 1. High Profitability and Self-Financing (Endogenous) of Intangible Investments in Human Potential Development (Endogenous Investment and Strategy)
- Introduction
- Work and People in the Twenty-First Century: Origins and Development of the Socio-Economic Approach to Management
- Henri Savall
- Fundamental hypotheses and validated principles
- Positioning of the socio-economic theory of firms and organizations and mainstream theories
- emergence and Development of SEAM as a scientific intervention-research method and management theory
- The 1970s
- The 1980s
- 1. The use of project economic balances showing the compatibility between improvements in quality of working life (QWL) norms and standards and economic performance.
- 2. The involvement of each category of actors in the enterprise in identifying dysfunction costs in order to set up guidelines for the development improvement projects. The actors involved range from top management to executives to technicians, emplo...
- 3. The implementation of an intervention method consisting of simultaneous and complementary actions: a horizontal action ("HORI") and a vertical one ("VERT"). This method is referred to as the HORIVERT Method:
- The 1990s
- 1. Stimulating the will to change in order to avoid resistance to change. This method combines internal and external management interventions in order to create the dynamics for sustainable change. The method contains rules pertaining to the pace of ...
- 2. Synchronizing three axes of the intervention to accelerate the pace of change within the enterprise:
- The 2000s
- International Cooperation
- Comparison with other management approaches
- Benchmarking SEAM Versus Other Change Management Approaches
- Socio-Economic Diagnostic
- Project
- Implementation of the Project
- Evaluation of Results
- A Comprehensive and Integrative Approach
- implications of SEAM at the national and international level
- NOTES
- REFERENCES
- FURTHER READING
- Introduction
- Factual Observation: A Troubled Present
- The Conditions of Life at Work
- Repetitiveness and Monotony
- Rhythm and Pace
- Health and Hygiene
- The Universality of the Situation
- The Economic Approach to New Forms of Job-Design
- The Historical Precedence of the Contribution From Psychologists and Sociologists
- The Theoretical Insufficiency of the Socio-Psychological View
- The Pragmatic Insufficiency of the Socio-Psychological Method
- The Area of our Study
- NOTES
- Table 4. Average Hourly Earnings, by Sex, in the Whole of Industry in October 1970 (in National Currency)
- Table 1.
- Table 2.
- Table 3.
- The Problem of Job-Design
- THE HERITAGE OF THE PAST: The Dominant Theory Questioned
- F.W. Taylor's Theory
- 1. Scientific management implies a "complete revolution of one's state of mind." This revolution of reciprocal attitudes between workers, foremen, technicians, engineers, and employers will be made easier by a better flow of information, by an ...
- 2. For work to achieve the desired degree of efficiency it has to be subject to "prior scientific investigation of all stages of execution." This statement of the necessity to analyse and prepare work, the application for the first time of scient...
- 3. The employer (let us add "the hierarchy") has a duty to give technical assistance to workers at subordinate levels. Taylor saw clearly the role of the hierarchy as being that of transmitting knowledge at work by means of the optimal utilizatio...
- 4. One has to look for team spirit: teaching work methods leads to the creation of a team spirit between a group of men, where each one has his own specialized task. In this way work becomes a cooperative venture. On the other hand, though, specializ...
- Scientific Management or the Classical School of Organization
- 1. The scalar concept or the hierarchical principle. The firm is a collection of rungs arranged in sequence. Authority descends from the highest rung to the base, which has no authority. The continuous chain of command is made up of superior-subordin...
- 2. We owe the principle of the unity of command to Fayol. In fact Taylor, claiming that it was impossible to find a universal superior, had suggested that each worker should obey eight functional bosses. E. Rimailho was the first to formulate a compr...
- 3. The principle of organizational specialization, which was asserted more in Taylor's work than in Fayol's. The latter admits a growing polyvalence the higher one rises up the hierarchy. The principle of specialization, however, remains entrench...
- 4. The applications of scientific method. As a first attempt at a scientific analysis of the organization Taylor's theory presents the defects of its qualities. Whilst it is a laudable attempt at scientific construction over and against the pragmat...
- 5. The materialist concept is what characterizes Taylor's philosophy of man. Capitalism and Marxism are, moreover, two equally materialist systems.17
- The Criticisms
- Taylorism and its Deviations or Caricatures
- The Effects of Taylorism
- The Reasons for Progressive Deviationism
- The Taylor Paradox and the Internal Contradictions of Taylorisrn
- The Palliatives
- Compensations-Deviations
- Time Spent at Work and Productivity
- 1. To be really significant the measure of productivity has to refer to a homogenous population. Hence no single productivity index will be obtained but a matrix of different productivity indices. In an analysis at the level of the micro-organization...
- 2. The measure of differential productivity i1 = 114 for h1 = 40, against i2 = 100 for h2 = 48) has to be carried out under conditions which neutralize all effects other than those which one is trying to measure. In the American example (and the othe...
- 3. It is therefore important to make precise observations which show that a reduction in the working week brings with it an increase in hourly productivity, and which measure the size of this variation. We have to be very precise as to the combinatio...
- 4. Finally it must be remembered that production cannot be strictly measured in terms of isoquality. The average quality of a batch of items machined or assembled by one worker during a 40-hour week is higher than a batch completed during a longer wo...
- Reduction in the Number of Hours Worked: A Necessary and Insufficient Condition
- The Incorporation of Categories of Less-Qualified and/or More Docile Workers
- The Theories Inspired by Human and Social Sciences
- The Need to Understand the Enterprise in its Entirety, as a Living Being
- The School of Human Relations
- The Social Systems School
- Taylorism Overtaken
- The French Forerunners89
- Herzberg's Dichotomy of Motivation to Work
- 1. Indirect work-incitement methods: reduction of work-time, wage rises, hygiene or atmosphere (= part of the physical environment, in Herzberg's terminology), interest, development of human relationships, group dynamics, communication, dialogue, p...
- 2. Constraints which are external in origin cannot but give mediocre results. We have to discover the internal motor, man's motivation to work.
- 3. There is no symmetry between satisfaction and dissatisfaction. There is dichotomy between the different factors which condition work-life: the factors which cause job-dissatisfaction are different from those which cause satisfaction: satisfaction ...
- A Synthetic Vocation Theory: The Socio-Technical Approach
- 1. accomplishment of economic aims depends on the survival of the production process
- 2. the production process is in danger of collapse because of random events
- 3. the prevention of random events implies men's involvement, each to his function
- 4. economic constraint or economic motivation (wages) are both powerless to provoke involvement
- and
- 5. the structure must provoke individuals' involvement by means of autonomy, decentralized or auto-regulated planning at the job level.124
- 1. work content which demands more than physical effort and which is varied in aspect
- 2. to learn a job, to renew the learning process, and to have a certain degree of liberty in carrying out the work
- 3. to have power of decision in an area, no matter how small, which implies one's individual judgement
- 4. to have social contact and some consideration at the job
- 5. to be able to explain what one does and produces during one's life in the work community
- and
- 6. to feel that the job is leading to a desirable future.
- 1. Is there an optimum variety of tasks within the job being considered?
- 2. Is there a meaningful task model which gives each job the appearance of a single and complete job?
- 3. Is there an optimum length to the job cycle?
- 4. Is there room for the application of standards of quality and quantity, and efficient feed-back on the results obtained?
- 5. Does the job have to include preparatory and auxiliary tasks?
- 6. Does the task involved in the job imply a certain level of care, dexterity, knowledge, or effort-of everything that is necessary for respect in the community?
- 7. Does the job enable the worker to see at all the usefulness of the product to the consumer?
- THE PRESENT AND THE FUTURE OF WORK
- The Duality of the Work Universe: The Growing Gap between the Quality of the World of Work and Economic Performance
- The Myth of the Incompatibility Between the Quality of Life and Productivity
- The Heterogeneity of the Work Milieu
- A Refusal to Accept the Gap and the Duality
- Toward a Reconciliation of the Old Contradictions
- A Twofold Difficulty to Overcome
- NOTES
- PART I
- EXPERIMENTAL SOLUTIONS
- Descriptive Study- Attempt at a Concise Typology
- The Conflictual Origin of the Experiments
- Typology of Experimented Solutions
- Timorous Solutions: Job-Enlargement and Job-Rotation
- Job-Enrichment
- Semiautonomous Groups
- Diverse Solutions Relating to the Environment
- Three French Examples
- The Renault Projects54
- The Crédit Lyonnais Projects62
- The BSN-Gervais-Danone Projects65
- The Experimentation Methods
- The Field
- Definition of the Experiments
- Experiments of a Global Nature
- The Implantation Procedure
- 1. Communications: the project follows the classic path and risks coming across the usual stumbling-blocks which arise from inevitable interpersonnel opposition within the hierarchy, including supervisory grades and workers. This is a major inconveni...
- 2. Identification: by following the hierarchical path one runs the risk that few problems will come to the surface, because at each level of the hierarchy there will be a reflex action to the questioning of authority which will run counter to the sea...
- 3. Quality of the solutions: whenever operatives have been in a position to voice their opinions a rush of useful, serious, and practicable solutions (cf. DBA)72 have come to light. Imagination requires a very precise area in which it can be applied ...
- The Degree of Democratic Participation74
- THE FACTORS TO BE TAKEN INTO ACCOUNT IN ORGANIZATIONAL INNOVATION
- The Mental Factor: The Psychological and Cultural Heterogeneity of Men at Work
- The Social Factor
- The Trade-Union Attitude in France and Abroad
- The Behavior of the Hierarchy
- The Technological Factor: Determination or Indetermination
- The Educational Factor: Participation by Shareholders in Finding a Solution, and Continuing Education95
- The Economic Factor and the Power of the Myth of Specialization
- The Legal Factor
- NOTES
- PART II
- Table 1. Figures 8 and 9 Illustrate Clearly the Economic Results
- Table 2.
- Table 3.
- Table 4.
- Table 5.
- Table 9.
- Table 1. Balance Sheet as at 31/12/71 (in Dollars) After Distribution of Dividends
- Table 3. Balance Sheet by Value of the Effects of Organizational Change (end of March 1974)
- Table 2. Balance Sheet by Value of the Effects of Organizational Change (Beginning of March 1974)
- THE STRATEGY OF CHANGE
- THE NEED FOR CHANGE
- The Irreversibility of the Global Process of Aptitude Enrichment2
- Societal Development Within Micro-Organizations
- THE NECESSITY FOR CHANGE TO BE PLANNED
- The Planning of Organizational Change: A Corollary to Economy and Technical Planning
- The Dangers of the Nonplanning of Human Development
- The Content of the Planning of Change
- THE NEED TO EVALUATE CHANGE ECONOMICALLY14
- The Weaknesses of General and Cost Accounting18
- General Accounting
- Cost Accounting
- Suggestion for New Methods of Human Resource Accounting
- Criticism of Attempts at Accounting in Terms of Human Capital and the Balance Sheet21
- Attempts to Evaluate Human Capital22
- Criticism of the Search for the Evaluation of Human Capital
- A Meaningful and Useful Accounting System: Collection of the Financial and Real Flow Concerned With Human Resources
- The Adaptation of the Method to the Control of Change
- Adaptations to the Accounting System With a View to Taking Account of Movements of Human Resources
- Accounting for Human Resources: Three Methods of Allocating Costs Connected with Human Resources
- Time Adjustments Made in the Human Resource Investments
- Cost Accounting of Change
- Innovation: The Economic Calculation37
- 1. The balance is lasting and positive, at least in the short term. There is no major economic obstacle in the way of change.
- 2. The balance is negative, at least in the short term. It is necessary to set the differential cost of the new organization against the probable updated costs involved in the tension and disputes inherent in the status quo (traditional inhibiting or...
- 3. If the cost is offset, change is justified from a micro-economic point of view.39 If the cost is not offset, change can still be justified for reasons of external savings. By adjusting the costing and relative price system a new equilibrium can be...
- THE PROPAGATION OF CHANGE
- External Propagation of Change through the Market-Place
- The Market of Goods and Services
- Factors That Encourage and Impede Propagation
- The Job Market
- External Propagation Through Social Organization
- Professional Organizations
- Public Opinion
- Internal Propagation of Change
- Management and Consultants
- Educators
- Workers
- The Specific Role of Public Bodies
- The Legal Aspect
- The Economic, Financial, and Fiscal Aspect
- A METHOD FOR A SOCIO-ECONOMIC DIAGNOSTIC OF THE ENTERPRISE56
- Tracing Hidden Costs and Performance64
- Major Concepts
- Measure of Hidden Costs
- Outline of Models for Evaluating Hidden Costs and Numerical Results
- Tools used for the Socio-Economic Diagnostic: Toward a New Management Analysis
- Socio-Economic Control System: From the Control System of the Personnel Department to the Control System of the Operational Hierarchy
- Elaboration of Socio-Economic Models for Choosing Investments With a View to a Socio-Economic Strategy
- Applications of the Socio-Economic Analysis Method
- NOTES
- Part III
- Table 4.
- Table 5.
- Table 6.
- Table 8.
- Table 7.
- Table 10.
- Table 11. Model for Analyzing Socio-Economic Variables
- CONCLUSION
- THE CONDITIONS FOR THE VALIDATION OF OUR THESIS
- A SCIENTIFIC QUESTIONING
- The Probable Obsolescence of Certain Theories
- The Hesitant Nature of the Return to Man, a Return so Often Proclaimed by the Economists
- NOTES
- NAMES QUOTED AND BIBLIOGRAPHY
- ARTICLES, BOOKS, AND VARIOUS ANONYMOUS OR COLLECTIVE DOCUMENTS
- COMPLEMENTARY BIBLIOGRAPHY TO SECOND EDITION
- ABOUT THE AUTHOR
- Back Cover
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