industrial management
From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
|
Date: 2008
industrial management term applied to highly organized modern methods of carrying on industrial, especially manufacturing, operations.
The Rise of Factories
Before the Industrial Revolution people worked with hand tools, manufacturing articles in their own homes or in small shops. In the third quarter of the 18th cent. steam power was applied to machinery, and people and machines were brought together under one roof in factories, where the manufacturing process could be supervised. This was the beginning of shop management. In the next hundred years factories grew rapidly in size, in degree of mechanization, and in complexity of operation. The growth, however, was accompanied by much waste and inefficiency. In the United States many engineers, spurred by the increased competition of the post-Civil War era, began to seek ways of improving plant efficiency.
The Development of Industrial Management
Studies of Worker Performance
The first sustained effort in the direction of improved efficiency was made by Frederick Winslow Taylor , an assistant foreman in the Midvale Steel Company, who in the 1880s undertook a series of studies to determine whether workers used unnecessary motions and hence too much time in performing operations at a machine. Each operation required to turn out an article or part was analyzed and studied minutely, and superfluous motions were eliminated. Records were kept of the performance of workers and standards were adopted for each operation. The early studies resulted in a faster pace of work and the introduction of rest periods.
Management of the Machine
Industrial management also involves studying the performance of machines as well as people. Specialists are employed to keep machines in good working condition and to ensure the quality of their production. The flow of materials through the plant is supervised to ensure that neither workers nor machines are idle. Constant inspection is made to keep output up to standard. Charts are used for recording the accomplishment of both workers and machines and for comparing them with established standards. Careful accounts are kept of the cost of each operation. When a new article is to be manufactured it is given a design that will make it suitable for machine production, and each step in its manufacture is planned, including the machines and materials to be used.
Other Aspects of Management
The principles of scientific management have been gradually extended to every department of industry, including office work, financing, and marketing. Soon after 1910 American firms established the first personnel departments, and eventually some of the larger companies took the lead in creating environments conducive to worker efficiency. Safety devices, better sanitation, plant cafeterias, and facilities for rest and recreation were provided, thus adding to the welfare of employees and enhancing morale. Many such improvements were made at the insistence of employee groups, especially labor unions.
Over the years, workers and their unions also sought and often won higher wages and increased benefits, including group health and life insurance and liberal retirement pensions. During the 1980s and 1990s, however, cutbacks and downsizing in many American businesses substantially reduced many of these benefits. Some corporations permit employees to buy stock; others make provision for employee representation on the board of directors or on the shop grievance committee. Many corporations provide special opportunities for training and promotion for workers who desire advancement, and some have made efforts to solve such difficult problems as job security and a guaranteed annual wage.
Modern Trends
Modern technological devices, particularly in the areas of computers, electronics, thermodynamics, and mechanics, have made automatic and semiautomatic machines a reality. The development of such automation is bringing about a second industrial revolution and is causing vast changes in commerce as well as the way work is organized. Such technological changes and the need to improve productivity and quality of products in traditional factory systems also changed industrial management practices. In the 1960s Swedish automobile companies discovered that they could improve productivity with a system of group assembly. In a contrast to older manufacturing techniques where a worker was responsible for assembling only one part of the car, group assembly gave a group of workers the responsibility for assembling an entire car.
The system was also applied in Japan, where managers developed a number of other innovative systems to lower costs and improve the quality of products. One Japanese innovation, known as quality circles, allowed workers to offer management suggestions on how to make production more efficient and to solve problems. Workers were also given the right to stop the assembly line if something went wrong, a sharp departure from U.S. factories. By carefully controlling the manufacturing process, Japanese managers were able to cut waste, improve productivity, and reduce inventory, thus significantly reducing costs and improving quality. By the early 1980s, Japanese companies, which had once been criticized for producing for producing low-quality goods, had established a reputation for efficiently producing high-quality, high-tech products. In the 1980s and early 90s many U.S. companies looked to increase their competitiveness by adapting Japanese methods for improving manufacturing quality.
Bibliography
See study of Taylor by R. Kanigel (1997). Also see G. Friedmann, Industrial Society: The Emergence of the Human Problems of Automation (1955); S. Haber, Efficiency and Uplift: Scientific Management in the Progressive Era, 1890-1920 (1964); J. Barbash, The Elements of Industrial Relations (1984); D. DelMar, Operations and Industrial Management (1985).
Author not available, INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
For permission to reuse this article, contact Copyright Clearance Center.
Related articles from HighBeam Research:
|
Institutional stability in management practice and industrial relations: the influence of the Anglo-American Council for Productivity, 1948-52.
Business History; 7/1/1999; Clark, Ian; 14567 words;
... stability in British industrial relations and management practice during the ... achieve a modernisation of management and industrial practice. It is plausible ... of the AACP to reform management practice. Industrial relations was one of ...
|
|
Integrated water resource management at the industrial park level: A case of the Tianjin Economic Development Area
International Journal of Sustainable Development and World Ecology; 2/1/2006; Geng, Yong; Yi, Jun; 7551 words;
... parks. However, integrated industrial water management systems at an industrial ... nonsystematic. An integrated industrial water management system at an industrial ... realities. In order to do so, industrial park management can help establish a committee ...
|
|
Employment Relations: Integrating Industrial Relations and Human Resource Management
Problems and Perspectives in Management; 1/1/2007; Abbott, Keith; 6374 words;
... words: human resource management, industrial relations practices ... organisation's approach to industrial relations (i.e., management driven, gatekeeper ... Human Resource Management, Trade Unions and Industrial Relations', in J ...
|
|
Strategic management of industrial clusters in Thailand.
Innovation: Management, Policy, & Practice; 10/1/2006; Wonglimpiyarat, Jarunee; 6039 words;
... The strategic management of the reorganization of industrial clusters undertaken ... manifestation for industrial development and effective research management to support Thailand ... in the strategic management of industrial clusters. The paper ...
|
|
Knowledge management: a new commission for industrial engineers.
Industrial Management; 1/1/2004; Desouza, Kevin C.; 3421 words;
... management have to do with industrial management? At first glance, many ... ends of the spectrum. Industrial management is a well-defined science ... the problems faced by industrial engineers, the knowledge management problem in organizations ...
|
|
COST AND MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING IN PRE-INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION SPAIN
The Accounting Historians Journal; 6/1/2005; Gutiérrez, Fernando; Larrinaga, Carlos; Núñez, Miriam; 10141 words;
... The Development of Industrial Cost and Management Accounting before ... Entrepreneurs and Pre-Industrial Revolution Evidence of Cost Management," Accounting Review ... Genesis of Modern Management: A Study of the Industrial Revolution in Great ...
|
|
50 YEARS OF CHANGE IN INDUSTRIAL RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT
Research Technology Management; 1/1/2007; Larson, Charles F; 3957 words;
... years. OVERVIEW: Industrial R&D has undergone ... Research-Technology Management (RTM) was first ... organization called the Industrial Research Institute ... called Research Management (RM). The chair ... Change, Research Management, Vol. 23, No ... Charles F. 1998. Industrial R&D in ...
|
|
University Support for Establishing a Strategy for Industrial and Special Waste Management in Sarajevo Canton
Critical Reviews in Analytical Chemistry; 1/1/2003; Vatrenjak-Velagic, Velida; Mirovic, Vanes; Memic, Mustafa; Hadzovic, Alen; Et al; 2676 words;
... science and society. Industrial (particularly hazardous) waste management is of paramount ... of prevention and management of industrial waste. Waste minimization ... targets. 3. PROJECT OF INDUSTRIAL AND SPECIAL WASTE MANAGEMENT IN SARAJEVO CANTON ...
|
|
A solution to academia and practitioners' concerns: how should industrial management be taught?
Industrial Management; 1/1/1990; Houshyar, Abdolazim; 2073 words;
... Concerns: How Should Industrial Management be Taught? Traditionally ... involves a blend of management concepts, accounting ... statistics, computing, industrial engineering ... and Inventory Management, 38-40, Second ... Sample Survey of Industrial Operations Research ...
|
|
Concurrent engineering, global competitiveness, and staying alive: an industrial management roundtable. (part 2)(IM Management Roundtable) (panel discussion)
Industrial Management; 9/1/1990; Cotton, Charlie Edmonson, Hal Mackenzie, William F. Matson, John M. Balestrero, Greg Everett, Paul Wilson, Iva M. Voller, L.A. Selby, Bill; 7998 words;
... and Staying Alive: An Industrial Management Roundtable, Part II ... trade-offs. That's the news that I see happening ... worked (in), let's say, industrial engineering, manufacturing ... OK, what does that management structure do? Well ... brings us together as an industrial engineering ...
|
|
Challenges and trends in HR/IR programs: bridging the gap for global competitiveness.(human resource management and industrial relations)
SAM Advanced Management Journal; 6/22/1999; Benham, Philip; 3896 words;
... programs in human resource management and industrial relations (HR/IR) that ... 1990). Human resource management and international trade. Industrial Relations, 29(2), 189-2 ... School of Human Resource Management and Industrial Relations at Saint ...
|
|
US INDUSTRIAL WATER MANAGEMENT CHEMICAL DEMAND TO REACH $2.3 BILLION IN THE YEAR 2004.
Research Studies - Freedonia Group; 4/25/2000; 596 words;
... Industrial Water Management Chemicals, a new ... a Cleveland-based industrial market research firm ... largest application for industrial water management chemicals in 2004 ... largest market for industrial water management chemicals through ... an important one. Industrial ...
|
|
Quality management for industrial engineers.
Industrial Management; 7/1/1996; Andre, Lawrence Lavelle, Jerome P.; 2484 words;
... examination of industrial engineering and quality management uncovers the ... microscopic views of industrial engineering ... into quality management principles ... Today, if industrial engineers ... of quality management, they will ...
|
|
Proactive government steps in improving U.S. industrial hazardous waste management.
Industrial Management; 9/1/1993; Petrick, Joseph A. Rankin, Kevin D.; 6408 words;
... large number of industrial firms showed ... percent had risk management tools in place ... large number of industrial firms showed ... percent had risk management tools in place ... hazardous waste management techniques ...
|
|
Human Resource Management in China: Past, Current and Future HR Practices in the Industrial Sector
The China Journal; 1/1/2006; Chan, Anita; 840 words;
Human Resource Management in China: Past ... Practices in the Industrial Sector, by Cherrie ... of reforms in industrial enterprises ... human resource management (HRM) in China ... model of "Western management" that Chinese ... concept in business management and industrial relations ...
|
See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.
Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:
|
|