Preview

Poorly Written Report

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
426 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Poorly Written Report
Example of a Poorly Written Report

“Loose Bolts?”
February 30, 1973

The film "Loose Bolts?" is an analysis of what became known as the Lordstown syndrome by business week magazine. Interviews with workers, foremen, and union officials in this film show how a bored and dissatisfied works turns out cars (Chevy Vega's) with major flaws.

I recommend this film to anyone interested in the study of worker attitudes. - Paul Marshall, Professor of Management, Harvard Business School

“The filmmaker is skillful and perceptive in portraying the boredom and hopelessness of the men in this factory.” - Roberta Peterson

This case involves inserting ourselves at the anus level of management who supervise approximately many workers on an assembly line at the Lordstown, Ohio, GM plant in 1972. Our goal is to come up with some meaningful differences we could have made as a foremen in improving employee-management relations at that time. Our primary goal is to improve worker-management relationships.

From Loose Bolts, "The ideal foreman could not let the people he managed know he is in agreement with them. If he is in sympathy with the people, he is dead as a foreman or as a supervisor. He’s lost the ballgame as far as conducting his job satisfactorily as a member of management.” If we read this quote and believe in it, our analysis should stop right here, it ain't worth wasting our time no more....but we believe their are some things foremen could have been done to improve lots and lots of things in the plant.

High management often referred to assembly line workers as idiots. In spite of this, it was not necessary for a foreman to continue this behavior and treat and refer to his subordinates as "idiots", or treat them like dumb asses. It ain't that hard to treat people with a little r-e-s-p-e-k-t.

Workers had suggestions about how to improve work performance

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    | Sampled By IV | | Initials | | | Dated | | | Questioning Record | Issue No: | 1 | | | Issue Date: | 01/02/11 | | | Page | 1 | of | 2 | | | Approved By: | N Parr | | | Ref | I12-1 | Candidate Name: | Niccola Taylor | Date of Activity | | Award Title / Level | Level 2 | Evidence Ref No: | | Targeted Unit(s) | 4222-229 | | | Questioning to support standards: | YES | | Unit | *Learning Outcome and Criteria | Questions to be asked | 229 | 1.2 | Where are the pressure sites on the body? | | 1.3 | What factors might put the skin at risk of breakdown? | | 1.4 | How can incorrect moving and handling techniques cause damage to the skin?…

    • 331 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Dick Spencer Essay

    • 1909 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Therefore he requested a transfer out of the sales department and into a management role. Dick was named plant manager at Modrow. He came in at a hectic time when a lot of changes were being implemented. In his efforts to familiarize himself with the daily operations, Dick first struggle as a manager was micro-managing. He had his hand in everything possible which made his employees feel very un-easy. According to Dr. White, Dick possessed many symptoms of a Micromanager. For example, Dick interest in cutting costs required the expert knowledge of the accounting group. Knowing that accounting wasn’t his strongest subject he still spent numerous hours burying himself in details that he just could not understand. Micromanagers don’t allow any decisions be made with their approval (White, 2010). Dick had also taken on too many tasks at once making it almost impossible for any of them to be implemented successfully. Being the micromanager that he was, Dick didn’t delegate tasks very well, another symptom of a micromanager (White, 2010). Another example of Dick’s micromanaging is when he insisted on changing the disposal process of scraps. When discussing this change with his foremen, Dick didn’t listen to the foreman’s thoughts as to why the change wouldn’t work. Micromanagers tend to have the mentality; it’s my way or the highway. Traditional micromanagers will completely disregard new concepts offered by their subordinates (Weyand,…

    • 1909 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mla Quiz

    • 675 Words
    • 3 Pages

    4. An article by Leslie Kaufman and John McCormick, titled “Year of the Employee,” that appeared in the July 2, 1998, issue of Newsweek on pages 38-41.…

    • 675 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    ‘There are…two kinds of film makers: one invents an imaginary reality; the other confronts an existing reality and attempts to understand it, criticise it…and finally, translate it into film’…

    • 3963 Words
    • 16 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Good Essays

    There had been several rough quarters at the Engstrom Auto Mirror plant in Richmond, Indiana, a privately owned business that manufactured mirrors for trucks and automobiles and employed 209 people. For more than a year, plant manager Ron Bent and his assistant, Joe Haley, had focused their Friday meetings on the troubling numbers, but the tenor of their May 14, 2007, meeting was different. Both men sensed that they now faced a crisis at the plant. Bent was talking animatedly to Haley: “This is the third productivity problem in, what, two weeks? We can’t climb out of this downturn with performance like that.” He scowled as he signed the authorization to air-freight a large order to the Toyota plant where Sam Martinez managed the assembly line. The difference in cost was astronomical, and it had been necessitated by the slow pace of productivity at Engstrom, which meant in this case that a job due for completion on Monday wasn’t completed until Thursday. But Bent couldn’t afford to make a late delivery to Martinez; he was a prized but demanding customer who had designated Engstrom as a certified supplier one year earlier. Only one other supplier for Martinez’s plant had achieved certified supplier status—a recognition of both extraordinary reliability and quality. The worry lines on Bent’s face deepened. Certified status meant that Martinez had personally authorized Engstrom products to be used on the auto lines without a quality inspection. Along with productivity problems, product-quality issues had also been creeping into the work done at Engstrom. Bent hoped that he was not paying to air-expedite defective mirrors to Martinez. Haley said, “Ron, we both know the employees have been complaining for months, but yesterday and today the talk has been pretty hostile. I’m not saying there’s a definite connection between nearly late delivery and the grumbling I heard, but…

    • 4486 Words
    • 18 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    There’s a freshman in one of my classes who always wears thick, dark eyeliner and other excessive makeup. For a couple of days the other week, she stopped. The first time I saw her without makeup, it was weird; I had never seen her without it before. A few days later, she came back with eyeliner and a fresh layer of foundation on her face. I remembered the face I saw just the day before; even though the makeup was pretty, she was pretty without all the extra effects. That same day during class she told me about how there was a guy snapchatting her. They made a bet that she wouldn’t be able to go without makeup for two days. She continued to tell me how that morning, she put on her makeup and sent him a snapchat. He responded…

    • 1599 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    United Auto Workers

    • 680 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Rivethead: Tales from the Assembly Line, authored by a GM "shoprat", Ben Hamper, is testimony of the aches and distress of an auto worker on the rivet line in the 1970 's and 80 's. This book describes and gives a picture of the reality of working class life and the impact the United Auto Workers (UAW) had on Hamper and his colleagues ' working conditions. Hamper 's recollection of his and hundreds of other American workers experiences on the assembly line is simultaneously hilarious and tragic.…

    • 680 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    bad letter report

    • 852 Words
    • 4 Pages

    1) first discuss how energy can be converted from one form to another, giving specific examples.…

    • 852 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Alien Me!?

    • 1973 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Your Study Guide offers a discussion of “Thinking and Writing about Film” (Supplementary Unit 2, pp. 127-133) which is part of the assignment for the start-up, and again for the week when this paper should be completed. The accompanying broadcast (shown only in the first week during the summer term, but with repeated broadcasts in the longer spring…

    • 1973 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    johnny case study

    • 457 Words
    • 2 Pages

    After a two-hour discussion, Terrill concluded he had to get top management off the engineers’ backs. He promised the engineers, “My job is to stay out of your way so you can do your work, and I’ll try to keep top management off your backs too.” He called for the day’s reports and issued an order effective immediately that the originals be turned in daily to his office rather than mailed to headquarters. For three weeks, technical reports piled up on his desk. By month’s end, the stack was nearly three feet high. During that time no one called for the reports. When other managers entered his office and saw the stack, they usually asked, ‘what’s all this?’ Terrill answered, “Technical reports.” No one asked to read them.…

    • 457 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    When DGL International, a manufacturer of refinery equipment, brought in John Terrill tomanage its Sales Engineering division, company executives informed him of the urgentsituation. Sale Engineering, with 20 engineers, was the highest-paid, best-educated, andleast-productive division in the company. The instruction to Terrill: Turn it around. Terrillcalled a meeting of engineers. He showed great concern for their personal welfare andasked point blank: “What’s the problem? Why can’t we produce? Why does this divisionhave such turnover?Without hesitation, employees launched a hail of complaints. “I was hired as an engineer,not a pencil pusher.” “We spend over half of our time writing asinine reports in triplicatefor top management, and no one reads the reports.” We have to account for every penny,which doesn’t give us time to work with customers or new developments.”After a two-hour discussion, Terrill began to envision a future in which engineers were freeto work with customers and join self-directed teams for product development. Terrillconcluded he had to get top management off the engineers’ back. He promised theengineers, “My job is to stay out of your way so you ca do your work, and I’ll try to keeptop management off your backs, too.” He called for the day’s reports and issued an order effective immediately that the originals be turned in daily to his office rather than mailed toheadquarters. For three weeks, technical reports piled up on his desk. By month’s end, thestack was nearly three feet high. During that time no one called for the reports. When other managers entered his office and saw the stacks, they usually asked, “What’s all this?”Terrill answered, “Technical reports, No one asked to read them.Finally, at month’s end, a secretary from finance called and asked for the monthly traveland expenses report. Terrill responded, “Meet me at the president’s office…

    • 315 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Being that this is uncharted territory for the company, Jim Claussen, vice president for human relations, had been struggling with how to address the issue with employees. As the company’s fortunes worsened, he could see that employees were becoming more and more disaffected. Their insecurity about their jobs was taking a toll on attitudes. The company’s downsizing was big news, and the employees didn’t like what they were hearing.…

    • 1941 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Nursing Management

    • 2217 Words
    • 9 Pages

    Peter F. Ducker, who is known as the creator and inventor of modern management, states that the “workers should be treated as assets, not as liabilities to be eliminated,” (Grohar- Murray&Langan, 2011, p. 141). Mrs. Jackson used coercive power in her unit, using fear to guarantee obedience from subordinates (Grohar- Murray&Langan, 2011). She threatens the staff with her superior power by publicly degrading and demeaning them with the expectation…

    • 2217 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Helen Bowers

    • 310 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Although Helen grew up in the family business, she never understood her father’s approach. Jake had treated his employees like part of his family. In Helen’s view, however, he paid them more than he had to, asked their advice far more often than he should have, and spent too much time listening to their ideas and complaints. When Helen took over, she vowed to change how things were done. In particular, she resolved to stop handling employees with kid gloves and to treat them like what wisdom in this. People worked to make a buck and didn’t want all that participation stuff.…

    • 310 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Saari, L. M., & Judge, T. A. (2004). Employee Attitudes And Job Satisfaction. Human Resources Management.…

    • 7198 Words
    • 29 Pages
    Good Essays