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The Human Side of Work: The Socio‐Technical Approach to Work System Design

James C. Taylor (Assistant Professor, Quality of Working Life Programme, Graduate School of Management, University of California, Los Angeles)

Personnel Review

ISSN: 0048-3486

Article publication date: 1 March 1975

424

Abstract

For me, the human side of work is the most important aspect in any consideration of jobs and organizations. Hospital organizations, for example, are made up of people, their jobs are, of course, done by people, and the results of that work are for people — whether they be direct recipients such as patients, or customers; or whether they be the indirect recipients such as the community, or the employees themselves. The dilemma is highlighted by asking, why do we so often separate the effects of work on the humans involved in its production, from the effects on humans as recipients of its end result? I will posit that if work is consciously designed as a meaningful activity for the people involved in its production, then chances are good that its product will also better suit its human users. That is, there is a systemic relationship between the quality of working life and the quality of the product of that work. In so saying however we must likewise acknowledge the importance of the technical requirements of the work — for having meaning to the people involved is not enough. Work that is meaningfully arranged, both for the humans involved in its execution and for its technical requirements, typically results in a higher quality product and, not infrequently, in greater productivity as well. In our experience results are frequently accompanied by lowered absenteeism and turnover and greater feelings of satisfaction with the work activity. Work system design, or socio‐technical system design, is a powerful approach to this human side of work — work that is meaningful in both that human sense, as well as the technical sense.

Citation

Taylor, J.C. (1975), "The Human Side of Work: The Socio‐Technical Approach to Work System Design", Personnel Review, Vol. 4 No. 3, pp. 17-22. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb055286

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1975, MCB UP Limited

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