Several moons ago, Sunstone published an essay of mine with the title
above. In this post and next week’s I will reproduce the original essay I sent
them. What the good folks at Sunstone
actually printed included some material they insisted on adding. Since I was
sort of partial to the unexpanded version, I’ll post it here. This week’s
installment is about productivity. Next week’s will tackle the more intriguing
topic of the Mormon business ethic.
For nine years I
taught operations management at Brigham Young University’s Marriott School of
Management, and one of the topics I taught was productivity. The first year or
so I preached the corporate party line, namely, that increasing productivity is
a near cure-all for woes experienced by both businesses and economies. But then
I took a closer look at the idea of productivity and discovered something
unexpected. Not only does productivity improvement produce some distinct
disadvantages for both the labor force and the economy in general, but also,
when it comes to measuring
productivity, the numbers get as slippery as a greased pig and are as
meaningful as mud. Even more important, the way
we measure productivity in businesses sometimes produces unintentional
results, such as encouraging unfocused activity instead of the productive use
of time. This organizational tendency has ramifications beyond our workaday
lives and can even affect how we live our religion. (Bear with me; I’ll get to
this last point eventually.)
Playing with Numbers
Let’s take a
quick look at how productivity is measured. The basic formula for calculating
productivity is the simple ratio of output/inputs.
On a national level, this simple ratio can become a quagmire of confusing
statistics. For example, when the Bureau of Labor Statistics measures
productivity, it excludes many categories of economic endeavor, such as general
government, nonprofit institutions, and paid employees of private households.
Compounding the difficulty is the fact that in our economy less than 20 percent
of workers produce tangible (read “easily quantifiable”) goods. The rest of us
are secretaries, salespeople, lawyers, bus drivers, editors, insurance agents,
managers, custodians, computer support technicians, and others who perform
services to keep the economy running. The only way to estimate the output of
this majority is to translate their services somehow into dollars. This dubious
figure is then adjusted for inflation and divided by the number of hours these
people work. And here we run into a second problem. The Bureau of Labor
Statistics has no idea how many hours most people work. The government doesn’t
know how many lunch hours stretch to 70 minutes, how many workers leave the
office early for a dentist appointment or soccer game, or how many managers
burn the midnight oil. In addition, the government doesn’t even pretend to know
just how a manager’s activities affect the company’s product or service.
To compound the
measurement dilemma, the mixture of outputs and inputs in the economy is not
constant from year to year. In fact, as manufacturing declines as a portion of
the economy, easily measurable production and labor figures make up a smaller
portion of the whole with each passing year. This means that the government’s
productivity statistics can’t be compared to themselves accurately over time,
and they certainly can’t be compared with productivity statistics from other
countries. In other words, the numbers are virtually meaningless or, worse,
deceptive. Every time I see a newspaper article boasting of America’s
productivity gains, I am reminded of the quip “Torture numbers and they’ll
confess to anything.”
This predicament
improves only slightly for an individual business. Corporate executives may
feel they have a pretty good handle on the quantity of product their workers
turn out and how many hours these people work, but total product/labor hours is still a single-factor measurement. In
other words, it measures only labor productivity. But what about all the other
factors that influence productivity, such as capital investment, research,
energy, raw materials, and technology? If a manufacturer invests in new
equipment and the firm’s labor productivity rises dramatically, does this mean
the laborers are working harder or more efficiently? No. It may mean the exact
opposite. The entire productivity gain may be due to technology, and the
workers may be underutilized. Because of this dilemma, some have tried to come
up with a total-factor measurement, translating all inputs into dollars and
using this figure in the denominator of the ratio. This presents a different
view of productivity, but with total-factor measurements, how do you know which
factor is actually affecting the final quotient? It’s extremely difficult to
quantify exactly how much of the productivity increase is due to one factor and
how much is due to another.
The Service Economy and Quality
Perhaps the most
significant issue regarding productivity measurement for the economy as a whole
and for many individual businesses is that the United States has increasingly
become a service economy. Measuring the productivity of service workers is
notoriously difficult, to say nothing of increasing
it. For instance, how do you measure the productivity of a bus driver? Number
of stops per hour? Can you increase her productivity without destroying the quality of the product? How do you
measure the productivity of a night watchman or a customer service clerk at
Walmart or a receptionist? How do you even define their product?
Behind these
questions, however, lies an even more important question: Why do we want to
measure the productivity of workers in the first place? The only reason an organization
might want to measure productivity would be to increase it. Why? Because
increasing productivity is seen as a universal positive in business. But what
if the attempt to increase the productivity of most workers is actually
counterproductive? Hold that thought for a moment.
Some businesses
produce a tangible product, and yet the work that goes into that product is
inherently unquantifiable. Take the work of a magazine editorial staff, for
instance. How do you measure an editor’s productivity? Pages edited per day?
Articles per month? If the total printed pages of the magazine are fixed and do
not vary from week to week or month to month, you can’t really increase the
total output. You can decrease the input by reducing staff, but this may affect
the quality of the product and the morale of the remaining editors. What about
circulation? Obviously there’s a connection between editorial work and
circulation, but measuring that connection accurately is impossible. Is the
level of a magazine’s circulation a function of quality, or of effective
advertising, or of overall economic conditions, or of something we would have
to call serendipity or dumb luck, or of some completely undefinable factor? How
do you assign the credit for increasing subscriptions (or the blame when they
decrease)? With a magazine, as with many other products, quality is perhaps the
most important issue. But measuring quality statistically is virtually
impossible. It is too subjective. Quality, like beauty, is largely in the eye
of the beholder. Robert Pirsig, author of Zen
and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, went crazy trying to define quality.
For these reasons, trying to measure the productivity of a magazine editor is
an exercise in futility, and the very act of measuring work may create stress,
deflect the editor’s focus toward meaningless activity, and therefore be
counterproductive.
Frederick
Winslow Taylor
In spite of the
difficulty (or impossibility) of measuring productivity in a meaningful way,
most managers feel compelled to measure it anyway. If they are not increasing
their organization’s productivity, as evidenced by some sort of mathematical
proof—even if the numbers are a complete fiction—they somehow feel they are not
doing their job. Where this managerial measurement compulsion comes from is
debatable, but my money is on Frederick Winslow Taylor, who in 1892, with his
stopwatch, single-handedly ushered in the era of scientific management.
Taylor’s intention was to prescribe the most efficient way to perform factory production
tasks by eliminating any wasted motion. The assumption driving his efforts, of
course, was the notion that people are machines and should be treated as such.
His theory, that an engineer could devise the most efficient way to perform a
production task, totally ignored the fact that most workers, on their own, will
instinctively find the easiest, most efficient way to do the work they are
assigned. Workers are incredibly ingenious, they understand the work processes
better than any manager or engineer can, and they hide their ingenuity only
when their job security is in danger. So, what puts their job security in
danger? Productivity improvement. (Remember that thought you were holding? This
is where it comes in.) As productivity goes up, a business can produce the same
amount of product with fewer workers. But if workers have job security, know
that they are trusted, and receive rewards for their innovative ideas, they
will come up with all sorts of ingenious ways to save the company money and increase
the quality of the product. Do most managers understand this? No. Instead, they
lay people off as a reward for being more productive.
Taylor’s
scientific management, which still lies behind most managerial attempts at
making sure the workforce is efficient, is a theory based on the belief that
people can’t be trusted. And when irrelevant measurement tools are used in an
attempt to quantify essentially unquantifiable types of work, employees hear
the message loud and clear that their jobs are in jeopardy. Why else would
management focus on efficiency when quality is the major issue? They simply
want to “do more with less.” What that really means is “less money for the
workers and more for the owners and executives.” But when workers understand
what management is up to, they do two things: they hide their ingenuity
(because efficiency rather than innovation is being rewarded), and they become
activity oriented instead of results oriented. In other words, they act busy to preserve their jobs.
More on
encouraging pointless activity, or busywork, next week.
Work is, or should be, a humane endeavor. No one ever refers to something as warmly efficient, which I think means we're doing it wrong.
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