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Good management is more a matter of choosing appropriate incentives and restrictions than one of removing constraints.
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The Peter Principle - When people in a sufficiently large hierarchy are promoted because of their competence, the end result will tend to put everyone into a position for which they are not competent.
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The Dilbert Principle - the least competent workers are systematically and swiftly moved to the position where they can do the least damage: management. In other words, the persons who least deserve promotion (or most deserve to be fired) will be promoted instead of the competent.
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The Pareto Principle - a large fraction of any problem or benefit is caused by a small fraction of the constituents. Prioritize the important few over the less important many
The Basic Human Laws
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1 establishes a set of basic human laws from the perspective of management.
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Law of Self-Interest. People, not organizations, are self-optimizing. Individuals make their choices in accordance with their preferences or goals. Such goals may result in behavior that is counterproductive yet logical for the individual.
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Law of Individuality People are different. From an operations perspective, this means people behave and perform differently. 2
- Pushing responsibility for decision making down to the level of the worker will have varying success, depending on the workers.
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Law of Advocacy For almost any program, there exists a champion who can make it work-at least for awhile.
- To be truly effective, champions must be intimately involved with the systems they are trying to change.
- The sheer speed with which managers are rotated means that the originator of a program is very likely to leave it before it has become thoroughly institutionalized
- We should look at the ability to survive the loss of the originator as an important measure of the quality of a new system
- While champions can be highly influential in promoting change, we should probably strive for an environment in which they are helpful, but not all-important.
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Law of Burnout. People get burned out
- Use revolutionary ideas sparingly. Not every improvement needs to be presented as a new way of life.
- Do not skimp on training. If a major system change is necessary, make sure all workers are trained at an appropriate level.
- Use pilot programs to prototype the effect of a revolutionary change.
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Law of Responsibility Responsibility without commensurate authority is demoralizing and counterproductive
- Unrealistic targets are demoralizing to people.
- People should not be punished for things beyond their control.
- Effective management must be able to distinguish between real performance and noise (variations in this performance due to random chance)
- Having a clearly defined ultimate authority at all times is essential to making critical decisions on a split-second basis.
Links
Footnotes
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Taken from Hopp and Spearman Ch. 11 ↩
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One good example of how this is applied is the bucket brigade system where workers carry a task downstream until preempted by a downstream worker. This naturally balances work. ↩