The Expanded and Annotated My Life and Work


CHARACTERISTICS OF THE IDEAL INDUSTRIAL LEADER



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The Expanded and Annotated My Life and Work Henry Ford's Universal Code for World-Class Success ( PDFDrive )

CHARACTERISTICS OF THE IDEAL INDUSTRIAL LEADER
Ford’s pessimistic view of the hourly worker as somebody who wants to 
be led, and who does not want to exercise creativity or leadership, is real-
istic. “Many workers prefer the mechanistic system; the worker has less 
initiative, but also less responsibility” (Miller, 1985). Another example 
consists of enlisted soldiers who, even if they have the ability to learn the 
job, do not want promotion to officer or even noncommissioned officer 
rank despite the higher pay.
Ford recognizes this issue, and he then defines the characteristics of the 
ideal leader who can deliver high wages to even those workers who wish 
only to do what they are told. This requires “plans that will profit the other 
fellow as he is,” as opposed to the other fellow as one might like him to be. 
This book has already shown, though, that the Ford organization encour-
aged rather than stifled worker initiative and creativity. The following 
paragraph also reaffirms the behavioral leg of Ford’s universal code. Ford 
ranks the ability to “deal with the laws of personality” higher than artistic 
laws of color or music.
The Russian field marshal Alexander V. Suvorov was even more progressive 
than Ford, and modern practitioners should look to his approach to worker 
empowerment. The Russian private, who was often a conscripted serf, was 
also a lower organizational participant who expected to be told what to do. 
Suvorov believed that even a private should understand his job instead of 
simply doing only what his superiors told him to do. The result was that, even 
if the officer became a casualty or was not present at a crisis point, the men 
would form self-directed teams and accomplish the desired mission.
* * *
There are far too many assumptions about what human nature ought to be 
and not enough research into what it is. Take the assumption that creative 
work can be undertaken only in the realm of vision. We speak of creative 
“artists” in music, painting, and the other arts. We seemingly limit the cre-
ative functions to productions that may be hung on gallery walls, or played in 
concert halls, or otherwise displayed where idle and fastidious people gather 


The Terror of the Machine  •  91
to admire each other’s culture. But if a man wants a field for vital creative 
work, let him come where he is dealing with higher laws than those of sound, 
or line, or colour; let him come where he may deal with the laws of personal-
ity. We want artists in industrial relationship. We want masters in indus-
trial method—both from the standpoint of the producer and the product. 
We want those who can mould the political, social, industrial, and moral 
mass into a sound and shapely whole. We have limited the creative faculty 
too much and have used it for too trivial ends. We want men who can cre-
ate the working design for all that is right and good and desirable in our 
life. Good intentions plus well-thought-out working designs can be put into 
practice and can be made to succeed. It is possible to increase the well-being 
of the workingman—not by having him do less work, but by aiding him to do 
more. If the world will give its attention and interest and energy to the mak-
ing of plans that will profit the other fellow as he is, then such plans can be 
established on a practical working basis. Such plans will endure—and they 
will be far the most profitable both in human and financial values. What this 
generation needs is a deep faith, a profound conviction in the practicability 
of righteousness, justice, and humanity in industry. If we cannot have these 
qualities, then we were better off without industry. Indeed, if we cannot get 
those qualities, the days of industry are numbered. But we can get them. We 
are getting them.
If a man cannot earn his keep without the aid of machinery, is it ben-
efiting him to withhold that machinery because attendance upon it may be 
monotonous? And let him starve? Or is it better to put him in the way of a 
good living? Is a man the happier for starving? If he is the happier for using 
a machine to less than its capacity, is he happier for producing less than he 
might and consequently getting less than his share of the world’s goods in 
exchange?

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