The Industrial Revolution in Great Britain - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

The Industrial Revolution in Great Britain

Description:

The Industrial Revolution in Great Britain The Steam Engine James Watt perfected the Steam Engine making it a reliable source of power for factories and transportation. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:446
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: Julia189
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Industrial Revolution in Great Britain


1
The Industrial Revolution in Great Britain
  • The Steam Engine
  • James Watt perfected the Steam Engine making it a
    reliable source of power for factories and
    transportation.
  • It became more economical to bring people to the
    work (factory) rather than taking the work home
    (domestic system).
  • As factories grew, management/leadership became
    more important.

2
The Steam Engine
  • Milling wheat into flour
  • A human turning a millstone can covert one-half
    bushel of wheat into flour in one hour.
  • Three bushels can be ground in one hour with a
    horse-driven mill.
  • A steam driven mill can do 10 bushels per hour.

Steam Engine at British Science Museum Jones, D..
http//pics.tech4learning.com
3
Innovations in Textile production
  • Flying shuttle,
  • Spinning jenny,
  • Arkwright waterframe

4
Management The Fourth Factor of Production
  • Management joins land, labor and capital as a
    recognized factor of production.
  • Richard Cantillon, currency speculator
  • First to use the term entrepreneur
  • The work of any to sell to another at an
    uncertain price
  • Jean Baptiste Say also wrote about entrepreneurs
    and noted their frequent roles as managers for
    others.
  • Also know that Joseph Schumpeter said that
    entrepreneurs break down the old economic order
    and rebuild a new one
  • Say versus SmithDifference in views on returns
    to the entrepreneur

5
Management Problems in the Early Factories
  • Labor
  • Recruiting workers
  • Training (most were illiterate)
  • Discipline/Motivation
  • Wage incentives (the carrot)
  • Punishment or fines (the stick)
  • Use of religious morals and values to create the
    proper work attitudes and behaviors (the factory
    ethos)
  • Finding qualified managers
  • The Ludite movement

6
Management Problems in the Early Factories
  • Developing Managers/Leaders was also difficult.
  • No body of management knowledge existed.
  • The general view of leadership depended on
    character of the leader and personal traits.
  • James Montgomery first management texts of
    managerial advice
  • How to discern quality quantity of work
  • How to adjust repair machinery
  • How to keep costs down
  • How to avoid unnecessary severity in
    disciplining subordinates
  • Early advocate for worker incentivization (See
    last paragraph on page 51)

7
Management Problems in the Early Factories
  • Management Functions in the Early Factory
  • Planning operations
  • Planning against worker organization and Luddites
  • Planning of power sources and connections
  • Planning flow of work
  • Controlling performance
  • Check out pgs. 52-54 for early examples of
    organizing, motivating and control

8
Cultural Consequences of the Industrial Revolution
  • Condition of the Worker
  • Economists Thomas Malthus and David Ricardo view
    worker condition as dismal and inevitable.
  • Robert Owen, Karl Marx, and Friedrich Engels saw
    people as powerless in their environment.
  • However
  • Rise of capitalism released people from drudgery.
  • Incentive plans, steady employment and regular
    hours improved worker well-being.
  • Workers real wages and conditions improved.

9
Cultural Consequences of the Industrial Revolution
  • Child and Female Labor
  • Primarily found in the textile industry.
  • Entrepreneurs ranged from exploiters to good
    employers such as Josiah Wedgwood, Matthew
    Bolton, James Watt and Robert Owen.
  • Contradictory evidence, religious and moral
    concerns affect understanding of the true
    situation.
  • Over time, legislation and capitalism made it
    uneconomical to employ children.
  • Industrial capitalism created a method to gain
    leverage for a better life.

10
Cultural Consequences of the Industrial Revolution
  • Industrial Revolution inherited worker poverty.
  • Industrial efficiency reduced prices of goods and
    raised real wages.
  • Child and female labor existed long before
    factories began.
  • Victorian values of keeping women at home created
    the atmosphere for critics of the factory system
    like Charles Dickens.

11
Industrial Revolution Summary
  • Overall
  • Wages were rising
  • Infant mortality was declining
  • Machinery replaced some of the drudgery
  • The Industrial Revolution was the beginning of
    improving peoples standard of living.

12
Summary
  • The Industrial Revolution created a new cultural
    environment and new management challenges.
  • Organizations changed by infusions of capital,
    division of labor, and the need for performance.
  • The role of the entrepreneur-manager and its need
    was recognized.

13
Chapter Four
  • Management Pioneers in the Early Factory

14
Management Pioneers in the Early Factory
  • Robert Owen problems in human terms
  • Charles Babbage systematic management
  • Andrew Ure trained managers
  • Charles Dupin took Ures ideas to France

This illustration of power loom weaving appeared
in Edward Baines's The History of Cotton
Manufacture in Great Britain (1835)
15
Robert Owen,(1771- 1858)Utopian Socialist
  • Learned about management by observing and trial
    and error on the job.
  • Contributions
  • Reformed the factory system by improving workers
    working living conditions.
  • Employed child labor but worked to get a law
    passed to regulate hours of work.
  • Silent Monitor which relied on peer pressure or
    public knowledge of performance vs. corporal
    punishment.

Robert Owen
Wren, History of Management Thought
16
Robert Owen, Biographical Notes
  • Self-made, successful entrepreneur
  • Founded his first factory in Manchester, England
    at 18
  • Established New Lanark, Scotland partnership with
    new vision in 1795
  • Applied new ideas about the welfare of society to
    the workplace
  • Established utopian community New Harmony in
    Indiana, USA

Robert Owen, Courtesy of Dr. Steven Kreis
http//www.historyguide.org
17
Robert Owens Philosophy
  • Entrepreneurs should invest in the vital
    machine (people) as a means of increasing
    profitability.
  • He desired a communal society
  • All would share equally, regardless of
    contribution.
  • There would be no division of labor.
  • There would be no wage system.
  • Individuals were creatures of their
    environment character developed if the material
    and moral environment was proper.

18
Charles Babbage (1792-1871)Irascible Genius
  • Never a manager, however a keen observer of the
    factory and a brilliant inventor and scientist.
  • The Difference Engine a mechanical calculator
  • The Analytical Engine the first computer

19
Wrote On the Economy of Machinery and
Manufactures
  • Contributions
  • Scientific, systematic approach in analyzing
    industrial operations
  • Descriptive cost accounting (not standard costing
    that Emerson developed later)
  • Mutual interests between the workers and
    management
  • Bonus for suggestions
  • Profit sharing

20
Andrew Ure (1778-1858)Management Education
Pioneer
  • First teacher of management
  • Well known scientist his courses attracted
    those seeking technical knowledge to obtain a
    managerial job

Andrew Ure, courtesy of Strathclyde
University Archives OP4/18
21
Andrew Ure
  • Ure wrote about the operations of the factory
    including
  • Admonishing the workers to accept the
    introduction of machinery.
  • Organizing the factory into an organic system
    of the mechanical, the moral and the commercial
    (production, personnel, and sales finance
    areas).

22
Andrew Ure
  • Had an early notion of the task of the general
    manager to integrate the parts to contribute to
    the whole (organic system).
  • Defended the factory claiming it enabled more
    benefits to society.
  • Believed that workers were generally
    non-appreciative of managements efforts.
  • Defended the factory system using comparison data
    from the cotton mills of 1833 and 1804. (See
    pages 71 and 72)

23
Charles Dupin (1784-1873)Industrial Education in
France
  • Taught courses similar to Ures management
    classes in France.
  • Unique Insights
  • Technical/manual work was different from managing
    others Special Study
  • This Special Study could be taught rather than
    gained by experience alone.
  • Technological advancement did not lead to
    unemployment.
  • Through education, workers could share in
    industrial prosperity.

Charles Dupin
24
Charles Dupin
  • Was influenced by colleague Jean Baptiste Say,
    industrial economist.
  • Influenced the work of Henri Fayol indirectly.
  • His materials on management and his Discours sur
    le Sort des Ouvries, published in 1831,
    influenced thousands in France.

25
Summary
  • Why did management fail to develop in this
    period?
  • Early writings emphasized techniques and not
    managing.
  • The period was dominated by the inventor-pioneer.
  • Illiteracy and difficulty in disseminating
    knowledge prevented practicing managers from
    knowing the works of Owen, Babbage, Ure, and
    Dupin.

26
Summary continued
  • The genesis of modern management can be found in
    Great Britain and France after the Industrial
    Revolution
  • Robert Owen searched for harmony between the
    human factor and the age of machines.
  • Charles Babbage applied a scientific approach to
    management.
  • Andrew Ure taught and developed managers in
    Glasgow.
  • Charles Dupin taught management courses in
    France.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com