Douglas McGregor (1906 – 1964)
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Douglas McGregor (1906 – 1964)
Douglas McGregor was born in 1906 in the bustling border metropolis of Detroit, Michigan. McGregor worked as night clerk at the McGregor Institute and also played piano at its regular services. The Institute was very much a family affair which provides temporary accommodation for around 100 transient workers at a time. At 17, McGregor briefly considered becoming a lay preacher, enroll for a psychology degree at the College of the City of Detroit (now Wayne State University). At 19, he decided to get married, drop out of College altogether and earn his living as a gas station attendant in Buffalo. By 1930, McGregor had risen to the rank of Regional Gas Station Manager.
Due to high unemployment caused by the depression, McGregor institute received a grant to increase its facility. This encouraged Douglas to resume his studies. He completed his first degree in 1932. He then went to Harvard where he completed his MA and PH.D in Psychology. For the next two years he stayed on at Harvard as a psychology lecturer. In 1937 he set up an Industrial Relations Section at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 1948, he became the President of Antioch College and was there for 6 years.
Douglas McGregor (1906 – 1964) is one of the forefathers of management theory and one of the top business thinkers of all time. He was a social psychologist who became the President of Antioch College. He later became a professor of management at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (he was succeeded by Warren Bennis). His book The Human Side of Enterprise (1960) had a profound influence on the management field, largely due to his Theory X and Theory Y.
McGregor developed a philosophical view of humankind with his Theory X and Theory Y in 1960. His work is based upon Maslows Hierarchy of Needs, in that he grouped the hierarchy into lower-order needs (Theory X) and higher-order needs (Theory Y). He suggested that management could use either set of needs to motivate employees, but better results would be gained by the use of Theory Y, rather than Theory X. These two opposing perceptions theorized how people view human behavior at work and organizational life:
Theory X
With Theory X assumptions, managements role is to coerce and control employees.
People have an inherent dislike for work and will avoid it whenever possible.
People must be coerced, controlled, directed, or threatened with punishment in order to get them to achieve the organizational objectives.
People prefer to be directed, do not want responsibility, and have little or no ambition.
People seek security above all else.
Theory Y
With Theory Y assumptions, managements role is to develop the potential in employees and help them to release that potential towards common goals.
Work is as natural as play and rest.
People will exercise self-direction if they are committed to the objectives (they are NOT lazy).
Commitment to objectives is a function of the rewards associated with their achievement.
People learn to accept and seek responsibility.
Creativity, ingenuity, and imagination are widely distributed among the population. People are capable of using these abilities to solve an organizational problem.
People have potential.
Intellectual creativity cannot be programmed and directed the way we program and direct an assembly line or an accounting department. This kind of intellectual contribution to the enterprise cannot be obtained by giving orders, by traditional supervisory practices, or