Involvement and Partic LO4926

Roy Winkler (rwinkler@iquest.net)
Tue, 16 Jan 1996 08:24:59 -0800

Replying to LO4871 --

John Conover wrote:
> Several years ago, the MIT Prof. of Mgmt., Theoreou(sp?) cited the
> study at Westinghouse, (several decades ago,) where a scheme was
> devised to measure what incentives worked best in the assembly line
> environment. They divided a stable, mature, (telecommunications
> product line, if I remember correctly,) assembly line in half, one
> half being the control group, the other was offered various
> incentives; they were offered salary incentives, and productivity
> increased, then offered free coffee and more breaks, (if I remember
> correctly,) and productivity increased. This goes on for a while, and
> with every incentive, productivity increased.

Western Electric. The Hawthorne experiments. The "Hawthorne
Effect."

-- 
@__Roy_J._Winkler,_AAS,_BSM...
@__Consultant/Master-Facilitator/Master-Trainer
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