George Elton Mayo – (26 December 1880 – 7 September 1949)
Mayo
went on to his most famous experiments – those at the Hawthorne Works of the
General Electric Company in Chicago between 1924 and 1927. He undertook further
experimentation to find out what effect fatigue and monotony had on job
productivity and how to control them through varying rest breaks, work hours,
temperature and humidity.
Modern
human resources gained a permanent role within organizations during the human
relations movement initiated during the late 1920s. This movement acknowledged
that social and psychological factors could better explain worker productivity
and output. The Hawthorne Studies conducted at the Western Electric Company in
the late 1920s initiated the human relations movement.
Mayo
is known as the founder of the Human Relations Movement, and is known for his
research including the Hawthorne Studies (The “Hawthorne effect” refers to
improvements in worker productivity or quality that results from the mere fact that
workers are being studied or observed. This observation came from studies
carried out at Western Electric’s Hawthorne plant during the late 1920s. The
experiments validated the idea that people are motivated by additional factors
rather than by purely economic factors.) and his book The Human Problems of an
Industrialized Civilization (1933). The research he conducted under the
Hawthorne Studies of the 1930s showed the importance of groups in affecting the
behavior of individuals at work. Mayo’s employees, Roethlisberger and Dickson,
conducted the practical experiments. This enabled him to make certain
deductions about how managers should behave. He carried out a number of
investigations to look at ways of improving productivity, for example changing lighting
conditions in the workplace. What he found however was that work satisfaction
depended to a large extent on the informal social pattern of the work group.
Where norms of cooperation and higher output were established because of a
feeling of importance, physical conditions or financial incentives had little
motivational value. People will form work groups and this can be used by
management to benefit the organization.
He
concluded that people’s work performance is dependent on both social issues and
job content. He suggested a tension between workers’ ‘logic of sentiment’ and
managers’ ‘logic of cost and efficiency’ which could lead to conflict within
organizations.
Disagreement
regarding his employees’ procedure while conducting the studies:
The members of the groups whose behavior has been studied were allowed to choose themselves.
Two women have been replaced since they were chatting during their work. They were later identified as members of a leftist movement.
The members of the groups whose behavior has been studied were allowed to choose themselves.
Two women have been replaced since they were chatting during their work. They were later identified as members of a leftist movement.
One
Italian member was working above average since she had to care for her family
alone. Thus she affected the group’s performance in an above average way.
Summary
of Mayo’s Beliefs:
Individual
workers cannot be treated in isolation, but must be seen as members of a group.
Monetary incentives and good working conditions are less important to the individual than the need to belong to a group.
Monetary incentives and good working conditions are less important to the individual than the need to belong to a group.
Informal
or unofficial groups formed at work have a strong influence on the behavior of
those workers in a group.
Managers
must be aware of these ‘social needs’ and cater for them to ensure that
employees collaborate with the official organization rather than work against
it.
Mayo’s simple
instructions to industrial interviewers set a template and remain influential
to this day i.e.
A.
The simple rules of interviewing:-
1. Give your full attention to the person interviewed, and make it evident that you are doing so.
2.
Listen – don’t talk.
3.
Never argue; never give advice.
4.
Listen to: what he wants to say; what he does not want to say; what he cannot
say without help.
5.
As you listen, plot out tentatively and for subsequent correction the pattern
that is being set before you.
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