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Article

'The machine should fit the work': Organisation and Method and British approaches to new technology in business

Details

Citation

Guerriero Wilson R (2008) 'The machine should fit the work': Organisation and Method and British approaches to new technology in business. History and Technology, 24 (4), pp. 321-333. https://doi.org/10.1080/07341510802044702

Abstract
‘Organisation and Method’ (O&M) was a discipline promoted in Britain in the first half of the twentieth century as a way of improving the efficiency of administrative enterprises. O&M practitioners were influential actors in the implementation of various information technologies in British businesses. When computers became the new technology, their introduction was seen as a natural adjunct to O&M work. The O&M practitioners understood the connections between the individual tasks to be done, the final outcome desired, and the technologies available. The practice of organizational ‘insiders’ acting as the dedicated mediators of technological introduction resulted in some remarkable successes in computer introduction in Britain in those years. Eventually the O&M approach would be superseded by purely technical experts, arguably to the detriment of user satisfaction.

Keywords
computerization; history; information resources management; ‘Organisation and Method’; United Kingdom; Organizational effectiveness Case strudies; Administrative agencies Management Case studies; Industrial productivity Case studies; Information technology Great Britain

Journal
History and Technology: Volume 24, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2008
Publication date online29/08/2008
URL
PublisherTaylor & Francis
ISSN0734-1512
eISSN1477-2620