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Douglas McGregor developed a philosophical view of humankind with his Theory X and Theory Y in 1960. These are two opposing perceptions about how people view human behavior at work and organizational life.
Theory X - With Theory X assumptions, management's role is to coerce and control employees.
BackgroundDouglas McGregor (1906 - 1964) is one of the fore-fathers of management theory and one of the top business thinkers of all time. He was a social psychologist who became the President of Antioch College. He later became a professor of management at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (he was succeeded by Warren Bennis). His book The Human Side of Enterprise (1960) had a profound influence on the management field, largely due to his Theory X and Theory Y.McGregor's work is based upon Maslow's hierarchy of needs, in that he grouped the hierarchy into "lower order" (Theory X) needs and "higher order" (Theory Y) needs. He suggested that management could use either set of needs to motivate employees, but better results could be gained by the use of Theory Y, rather than Theory X.
Intellectual creativity cannot be 'programmed' and directed the way we program and direct an assembly line or an accounting department. This kind of intellectual contribution to the enterprise cannot be obtained by giving orders, by traditional supervisory practices, or by close systems of control. Even conventional notions of productivity are meaningless with reference to the creative intellectual effort. Management has not yet considered in any depth what is involved in managing an organization heavily populated with people whose prime contribution consists of creative intellectual effort. - Douglas McGregor essay, "New Concepts of Management"An excellent book on McGregor is Douglas McGregor, Revisited: Managing the Human Side of the Enterprise by Gary Heil, Warren Bennis, Deborah C. Stephens.
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Notes Big Dog's HRD Page About Page donclark@nwlink.com |
Copyright 1999 by Donald Clark Created December 1, 1999 Last Update January 22, 2000 http://www.nwlink.com/~donclark/hrd/history/history.html |