WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Industrial Progress and Human Economics cover

Industrial Progress and Human Economics

Chapter 11: "DEAD" ORGANIZATIONS.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

A practical outline for advancing industry by prioritizing human welfare, presenting policies and methods for creating and managing productive enterprises. It argues for higher value per unit of labor through improved tools, specialization, efficient organization, and cooperative management, offering guidance for investors, managers, and workers to assess prospects and reduce investment risk. Emphasizing unified public purpose after wartime disruption, it promotes steady policy, team work, and personal development as keys to state and individual economic progress, and is framed as both a textbook and a reference for those involved in industrial development.

"DEAD" ORGANIZATIONS.

In all cities we can see "dead" organizations. Many of these companies that are actually "dead" seem to have life in them because they continue to move, but in many instances the motion is only due to the momentum of a push that was given years ago.

A "dead" organization may show signs of life in its gradual growth in size, but its real character is to be seen in the extent to which it is departing from specialization or by the continued use of antiquated methods and buildings.

The departure from specialization is generally due to either lack of courage to discard obsolete designs or to an inclination to consider the business from the selling end only.

It takes courage to discard an old model and it also takes courage to refuse to build some new invention.

The indifferent management carries the old and takes on the new. This policy covering many years creates a condition that is far removed from the specialization plan.

The management that views everything from the selling side of the business is also inclined to go on indefinitely increasing the line of goods manufactured.

The drift away from specialization may not be disasterous today or tomorrow, especially, if there are no competitors who are specialists, but the inevitable result will be the burial of the "dead" organization when a real competitor comes into the field.

The calamity of the existence of "dead" industrial organizations is something more than the ultimate loss to the stockholders, it is the deplorable stagnation in which the workers find themselves with their progress blocked by lifeless management.