{"id":3987,"date":"1971-05-01T00:00:00","date_gmt":"1971-05-01T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/may-1971-vol-52-no-5-system-and-order\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:46:49","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:46:49","slug":"may-1971-vol-52-no-5-system-and-order","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/may-1971-vol-52-no-5-system-and-order\/","title":{"rendered":"May 1971 &#8211; VOL. 52, NO. 5 &#8211; System and Order"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">System, planning and orderliness                     are not different words for the same thing, but they fit very                     well together as a guide to more efficient business and personal                     life. A plan may consist of static blue-prints&nbsp;; a system                     deals with living human beings and inevitable change. Order                     is arrangement; system is movement.<\/p>\n<p> System is the product of intelligence. A person framing                     a system for his firm, his household or himself is thinking                     things through. He is using his head to save steps and work                     and money.<\/p>\n<p>System and order are not ends in themselves but means toward                     carrying out plans. System gets all departments and workers                     pulling in the same direction, and it is the result of the                     pull that counts.<\/p>\n<p>System is not a matter of picayune niceties but of programmed                     actions leading to desired ends. Methods and techniques are                     secondary in importance to the aims for which the system is                     devised. The system provides a sense of direction, poise and                     preparedness.<\/p>\n<p>One of Aesop&#8217;s fables tells about the boar that stood whetting                     his tusks against a tree. A fox happened to pass by, and asked                     him what he meant by such warlike preparation, there being                     no enemy in sight. &#8220;That may be,&#8221; answered the boar, &#8220;but                     when the enemy is in sight it is time to think about something                     else.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The need for system<\/h3>\n<p>It is not unusual to come upon people who brush aside matters                     pertaining to system and organization so that they may deal                     with what they consider more &#8220;practical&#8221; problems. But there                     can be nothing more practical than to get workers to co-ordinate                     their efforts in carrying on the factory or office operations.<\/p>\n<p>All business implies things to be done, and anything can                     be done better by system than by haphazard. Much of the expensive                     waste in industry and homes is due to ineffective planning                     and lack of system. These lead to inefficient use of materials,                     equipment, time and labour. They disregard the fact that elimination                     of loss is as necessary to successful business as the making                     of profit.<\/p>\n<p>Some people think that everything will come out all right                     if only they work harder. That is not always the solution:                     they need to work more effectively. They need to organize                     their jobs into straight-line operations, applying system                     instead of sweat. Improving work habits is part of improving                     system and system is part of improving work methods.<\/p>\n<p>System in work represents an economy of energy. It helps                     us to avoid getting into those rush periods that are so wearing                     on the nerves and contribute so greatly to unsatisfactory                     results. It helps to develop skill. It increases productivity.                     It relieves tedium and takes the feeling of drudgery out of                     work because it releases time that can be devoted to many                     pursuits.<\/p>\n<p>The principles of system are illustrated by two widely-separated                     writers: J. M. Scott in his account of an expedition to Labrador,                     called <em>The Land that God Gave Cain<\/em>, and Dr. Paul H.                     Nystrom, Professor of Marketing, Columbia University, in <em>Marketing                     Handbook<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>There are three systems of harnessing sledge dogs in Canada&#8217;s                     northland, Mr. Scott tells us: in pairs on a single trace,                     in single file, or spread out in the shape of a fan. The fan                     system is the safest way on thin ice, because there is little                     danger of all the dogs going through at the same time. But                     the weight of several different traces is a telling feature                     against the fan; the dogs get their traces twisted up, so                     that it may be necessary to stop travelling every hour or                     so to unwind them; the dogs at the sides of the fan are not                     getting a direct pull on the sledge, and thus a great deal                     of energy is being wasted.<\/p>\n<p>As if following up this illustration, Dr. Nystrom writes:                     &#8220;A system in business is a harness within which men work.                     A tangled harness reduces teamwork, results in people working                     at cross-purposes, and produces friction and wasted efforts.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Conditions change<\/h3>\n<p>Many business men are feeling their way through the perplexities                     of changing to electronic data processing, just as their great-grandfathers                     did with the typewriter, and their grandfathers with the telephone,                     and their fathers with electric book-keeping and billing machines.<\/p>\n<p>The rapidly advancing computer technology demands not only                     specialized knowledge but the application of system in its                     use. Textbooks on business administration and salesmanship                     have sections devoted to the need for systematic work.<\/p>\n<p>The need of system being acknowledged, the next thing is                     to get it operating. In this complex area it is well to seek                     special knowledge and advice. To meet this need there has                     been called forth a new management science: Systems Engineering.                     Well known among the increasing literature is <em>Systemation                     Letter<\/em>, copyrighted by Leslie H. Matthies and published                     by Systemation Inc., Colorado Springs.<\/p>\n<p>Discussing the development of system in an office or shop,                     one of these <em>Letters <\/em>says concisely: &#8220;A system is a                     plan for getting work done, under control, by using data.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Making a system<\/h3>\n<p>One does not just sit down with a big sheet of paper and                     lay out a system. One must know what the system is for and                     what the problems are. One needs background knowledge.<\/p>\n<p>Take a look at the existing mode of working. Write down                     in a reasonably detailed way what you observe of every part                     of it. The mere act of recording the why, what, where, when,                     who and how of an operation will provide a foundation upon                     which to build ideas of how the work can be done in an improved                     manner.<\/p>\n<p>Knowledge is needed of the standard being aimed at. It is                     an elementary fact, often disregarded, that nothing is good                     or bad except by reference to a standard held in one&#8217;s mind.                     The more comparisons we are able to make between various ways                     of doing things, the better qualified we are to judge the                     worth of a proposed system.<\/p>\n<p>The organization of a system is not an occasion for a soir\u00e9e                     of yes-men. Making a system requires thought, analysis and                     deliberation. The elements in a system cannot be paraded before                     one like the procession of targets in a shooting gallery where                     one has only a second to load and aim and fire. A sense of                     discrimination is needed. One does not take just any draft                     of a system, but chooses from many the one that fits the situation.<\/p>\n<p>This, of course, requires conceptual skill. A man has to                     be able to see the state of affairs as a whole and to recognize                     its requirements. He must be sure that the problem being tackled                     is the real problem: an improper assessment at this point                     may throw the whole effort off the track.<\/p>\n<p>A good system is as simple as possible, commensurate with                     accomplishing what it is supposed to do; it should be related                     to the resources you have; and it must not leave out any vital                     feature. When an international airplane meet was held in the                     early days of flying, the United States hosts set up a faultless                     system by which to time the flights to the hundredth part                     of a second, but they had no airplane ready to enter the competition.<\/p>\n<p>Some difficulty is likely to be met with in changing an                     existing way of doing things. An established system has a                     tendency to go on running by its own momentum, yet the longer                     a system has been operating the more need there is to look                     at it critically. The pattern imposed upon life in the days                     before electricity and central heating &#8211; go to bed at                     sundown and stay there until dawn &#8211; took many years to                     change.<\/p>\n<p>A reasonable question to start with is &#8220;What is wrong with                     the way we do things now?&#8221; Look for the trouble spot: it may                     not be necessary to reconstruct the whole system, but just                     to cure the sick part.<\/p>\n<p>Comparison is one way of judging. Compare your system with                     the best you know, not only for its productive qualities but                     for its harmony of operation, just as you judge a piece of                     writing by what it says and the way in which it says it.<\/p>\n<p>Installing a system is not a matter only of paperwork, statistics                     and technical skill. It requires conviction about the need,                     faith in the efficacy of the change, imagination to foresee                     all the results, and realistic thinking about the cost and                     profit.<\/p>\n<p>Conviction, faith, foresight and sound judgment depend for                     their attainment upon having the answers to many questions.                     One of the first things to do in devising a system is to ask                     questions of yourself and others and give consideration to                     the answers. Executives and planners are no more obliged than                     anyone else to accept advice they dislike, but they are digging                     their own graves if they refuse to listen to it.<\/p>\n<p>Norman F. Washburne gives some suggestions in an article                     in <em>The Nation&#8217;s Business<\/em>, published by the Chamber                     of Commerce of the United States: Listening is important for                     three reasons: no one knows the problems of the job and the                     implications of change as well as the man who has been doing                     the work; only by listening can the supervisor detect a possible                     trouble spot before it develops; the workers like to feel                     that the supervisor takes an interest in their viewpoints.<\/p>\n<p>One should try to make the change to the new system smooth                     and frictionless. Consider the implications of the change                     with respect to the customs, dignity and status of those who                     will be affected by it.<\/p>\n<h3>Planning<\/h3>\n<p>Some people shy away from planning because they fear that                     having a plan would make them slaves to it. On the contrary,                     a plan gives one a firm base from which to push out in freedom                     from worry. Planning means organizing resources of material,                     time and manpower: system is putting these into action in                     the best way to effect your purpose.<\/p>\n<p>When you have an idea to develop, here is a good way to                     go about it. Get the basic data down in writing. Listen to                     what other people say about the situation and the proposed                     change. Seize upon suggestions.<\/p>\n<p>Combine ideas that are similar. Dispose of divergent ideas                     by modifying them to improve your proposed changes or by washing                     them out as being unfit for use. Clarify everything that might                     be misunderstood or misleading. Remove all irrelevant points                     and language. Sum up step by step. Set priorities for implementation                     of the change. Ask: is this the logical, effective and economic                     way to do this operation under the circumstances?<\/p>\n<p>When you really know what you are trying to accomplish it                     is relatively easy to lay plans, but the best laid plans will                     falter and fail if there is not system and order in carrying                     them out.<\/p>\n<p>The Work Simplification Conferences at Lake Placid, N.Y.,                     whose Founder and Director is Allan H. Mogensen, offer some                     helps toward planning. They present a work simplification                     pattern: 1. Select a job to improve; 2. Get the facts &#8211;                     make a process chart; 3. Challenge every detail &#8211; list                     the possibilities; 4. Develop the preferred method; 5. Install                     the improvements; check results.<\/p>\n<p>The installation of a new system should be accompanied by                     written instructions. These acquaint everyone who is affected                     with the general picture and also tell everyone what he is                     expected to do.<\/p>\n<p>A system must not leave out of account the important element                     of worker acceptance. By putting the system on paper, spelling                     it out, you give those who are involved in the system all                     that they should know so as to become enthusiastic about making                     it work.<\/p>\n<p>Writing out a system may be compared to writing a play.                     Certain things are to be done by certain actors. In addition                     to supplying words, the material with which the actors work,                     one has to give stage directions. These, when addressed to                     factory or office workers, are contained in action words:                     prepare, send, show, obtain, record, provide, check, receive                     and forward. Unless the system is made plain the worker is                     like the bridge player who told his partner petulantly: &#8220;I                     can&#8217;t stick to Culbertson when I don&#8217;t know what astronomical                     system, if any, you are using.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Systems and orderliness should not be allowed to organize                     themselves into a tyranny. The temptation which obsesses some                     organizers is to over-organize, and that leads to the strangulation                     of enterprise. Harrington Emerson drew a parallel from Darwin.                     He said in a book called <em>The Twelve Principles of Efficiency<\/em>,                     published sixty years ago but still relevant in many of its                     propositions, that just as the maternal instinct makes a mother                     exaggerate the importance of her offspring, thus adding to                     its chances of survival, so the man giving birth to a new                     system believes that there has never been anything quite so                     good, and he fights for its life.<\/p>\n<h3>At the point of action<\/h3>\n<p>A system needs competent people to run it. The supervisor,                     manager, foreman, or whatever his title may be, is the key                     figure in making a system work.<\/p>\n<p>To succeed, he may have to be born again, free from old                     habits of custom and action, adopting what is of value in                     this new life and making himself at home with new lines of                     thought.<\/p>\n<p>Labour-saving management is as important as labour-saving                     machinery. The backbone of saving is system in the use of                     manpower, materials, money and time.<\/p>\n<p>One cannot get the maximum performance out of workers unless                     they are organized. Having system and order enables a manager                     to separate the producers from the drones. He allocates jobs                     according to the competency of workers. He makes use of the                     best available and most economical, not using a man with a                     divining rod if a trained geologist is available, or a skilled                     craftsman to do a trivial job.<\/p>\n<p>Systems should have boundaries. Everyone knows that system                     is designed to avoid chaos. Now the question is: how much                     system is needed to achieve this, and how much chaos will                     be acceptable in order to avoid an objectionable regimentation?                     The introduction of system does not mean becoming inhuman.                     We want order, but order with tolerances, order without minute                     precision, order within which there is scope.<\/p>\n<p>People must be reckoned with. Every firm is made up of free                     men and women, and they are more difficult to plan for than                     are slaves. They want to put the stamp of their own spirit                     upon their work. They are entitled to freedom within the system,                     to move within an orbit as wide as possible, but no wider                     than what is compatible with the preservation of the overall                     order and system.<\/p>\n<p>It is true that rules must be made and enforced. You cannot                     play chess unless you are prepared to admit the rigidity of                     the squares on the board and the rules for moving from one                     square to another. The systems manual of one firm said: &#8220;The                     object of these rules is not to abridge the rights of anyone,                     but to point out the plan which we believe to be the wise                     one to follow.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>System demands for its success that the proper tools be                     provided. As an illustration, consider the battle of Isandula,                     fought in 1879. Two British regiments were totally destroyed,                     partly because there were no screwdrivers at hand to open                     the ammunition boxes.<\/p>\n<h3>Orderliness<\/h3>\n<p>Systems are not designed just to provide impressive wall                     charts with arrows leading the eye from one neat rectangle                     to another. Systems are for organizing activities and carrying                     them out in an orderly way.<\/p>\n<p>The principle of order is the basis of good business. Untidiness                     is inefficient, whether it be in workshop, office, or one&#8217;s                     mind.<\/p>\n<p>A person gets a great deal more pleasure and satisfaction                     from working in a place where order exists. That is a statement                     it is easy to brush off, and many people do so to their later                     sorrow, but it is a statement that should be put to the test                     by everyone. Once one gets the habit of orderliness it is                     much easier to be orderly than disorderly.<\/p>\n<p>Orderliness in a working place makes it easier to resolve                     problems and perform operations, whereas disorder in his surroundings                     hampers a worker as to speed and accuracy. The habit of putting                     tools back in their places is part of orderliness. The carpenter                     and the machinist can reach for a tool without stopping work.                     So can the orderly manager take up his pen or rubber stamp                     or a paper clip. So can the orderly housewife at her baking                     counter pick up without waste energy a roller, a measuring                     spoon or the salt shaker.<\/p>\n<p>Classification is part of orderliness. It is a logical process                     which consists in keeping together those things which belong                     together. It avoids confusion, frees the mind from the frustration                     of not finding tools when they are needed, and eliminates                     the cause of many irritations. Making oneself into an orderly                     person is interesting, because it demands ingenuity, a quality                     all of us like to display.<\/p>\n<h3>Personal system<\/h3>\n<p>Having a system helps to keep one&#8217;s thinking straight and                     free from entanglements. It separates the essential from the                     trivial. It was followed by Napoleon, who said he arranged                     things in his head &#8220;as in a wardrobe.&#8221; He wrote: &#8220;When I wish                     to put any matter out of my mind, I close its drawer and open                     the drawer belonging to another. The contents of the drawers                     never get mixed, and they never worry me or weary me.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>An intelligent ordering of life will improve the quality                     of a man&#8217;s experience and reduce the number of his failures                     and disappointments. System contributes to, but does not cause                     or control, the imaginative thoughts that give rise to creative                     work. The advantages of opportunity and &#8220;getting the breaks&#8221;                     go to the man who has organized himself so as to be ready                     to seize them. He is, thereby, participating fully in the                     process of living. He obtains a feeling of personal significance,                     he feels qualified to do great things, he has learned a lesson                     which will enable him to control the efforts of other men.<\/p>\n<p>Time is a part of system that should not be squandered.                     Some fall into the habit of puttering around a little job,                     perhaps as an excuse for not tackling a job that worries them                     but does not appeal to them.<\/p>\n<p>Procrastination, that bane of human life, does not become                     an affliction to the person of system. His jobs are broken                     down into small, easily-handled units, so that they are not                     so burdensome as to invite him to put them off.<\/p>\n<p>Mr. Crombie, the hero of Edward Streeter&#8217;s novel <em>Chairman                     of the Bored <\/em>thought upon his retirement that he had all                     eternity in which to get done the things he wanted to do,                     but after a short time he admitted: &#8220;That won&#8217;t be long enough                     if we don&#8217;t get some order into our lives.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Having a systematic life means leaving few blank spaces                     in the day, but the schedules we make must fit our own personal                     cases. Emerson contrasts tame geese in rural Germany waddling                     along the road to market and wild geese flying from Alaska                     to the tropics. It would be ridiculous to set the same time-distance                     schedule because they are both flocks of geese.<\/p>\n<h3>Use foresight; keep track<\/h3>\n<p>There are two further factors to be worked into systematization:                     foresight and keeping track.<\/p>\n<p>It is sometimes necessary to deny our natural drive to get                     on with the job so that we may look ahead. A hint may be taken                     from the navy. The officers of the ships seeking the <em>Bismarck                     <\/em>after her breakout to the Atlantic Ocean drew pencil arcs                     on their charts showing the &#8220;farthest on&#8221; possible position                     of the ship they sought, taking account of what courses she                     might steer and her speed. System and order put us in much                     better position to predict probable events than if we proceed                     in a happy-go-lucky way.<\/p>\n<p>Foresight enables us to tackle jobs in a businesslike manner                     without delay. A reporter, returning to his office after covering                     a story, is already planning his &#8220;lead&#8221; &#8211; the summary                     of what he has seen and heard. In the same way, Field Marshal                     Montgomery tells us, &#8220;During the journey I pondered over the                     problems which lay ahead and reached some idea, at least in                     outline, of how I would set about the business.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>How well does it work&nbsp;?<\/h3>\n<p>One must measure and reassess a system continuously. Is                     it doing what it was set up to do? Is it meshing with other                     systems in the business? Is its cost commensurate with its                     benefits?<\/p>\n<p>The attractive look of a new system is its most superficial                     quality. The point of judgment is: how well does it work?<\/p>\n<p>On the other hand, the beginning of a system may appear                     ragged and unkempt, but so is the larva which develops into                     the bright-coloured Monarch butterfly.<\/p>\n<p>Give the system a fair but critical chance. It should not                     be judged until it has been tried out. If it is a good one                     it will free you to face problems of both tactics and strategy                     in other areas. The former is the handling of the present                     situation: the latter is anticipating and planning for future                     developments.<\/p>\n<p>Expect the system to work. This is faith based upon intelligent                     forethought and accurate planning. It does not go so far as                     to believe that a system is a patent medicine guaranteed to                     work miracles, although the end result may appear to be miraculous.<\/p>\n<p>Even the best devised systems will get bogged down sometimes,                     but if it were not for system we should be in the mud all                     the time. When plans go a-gley and what we hoped for does                     not happen, the thing to do is to make new plans and revise                     the system.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[51],"class_list":["post-3987","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-51"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>May 1971 - VOL. 52, NO. 5 - System and Order - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/may-1971-vol-52-no-5-system-and-order\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"May 1971 - VOL. 52, NO. 5 - System and Order - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"System, planning and orderliness are not different words for the same thing, but they fit very well together as a guide to more efficient business and personal life. 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A plan may consist of static blue-prints&nbsp;; a system deals with living human beings and inevitable change. Order is arrangement; system is movement. 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