False Prophets: The Gurus Who Created Modern
Management and Why Their Ideas are Bad for Business
James Hoopes (Persus Publishing, 2003)
Review by Ken Mitchell
The basic premise of this book is that the fundamental theories about the
use of organizational power, as conceived by the founding gurus of organizational
be-havior theory, have misguided manag-ers. Hoopes zeros in on eight well-known
gurus who include Frederick W. Taylor, Frank and Lillian Gilbreth, H. L.
Gantt, Mary Parker Follett, Elton Mayo, Chester Barnard, W. Edwards Deming,
and Peter Drucker. Hoopes, himself a scholar on American culture, intellectual
history, and business his-tory, examines these gurus from their professional
and personal lives. He then fathoms out insights about how they affected
their contemporaries and the subsequent theorists and practitio-ners that
followed them.
He perceives Taylor as quite mean spirited and somewhat myopic in his
perception about human’s behavior in the organization. Taylor though,
he argues did understand that organizational power is top-down. Hoopes
argues the fact that hierarchical power is the fundamental way power
must flow in organizations. It is that way from a moral and practical
perspective in his view.
Flawed Theory of Power
The remaining gurus, according to Hoopes, focused the establishment
of organizational power as a bottom-up phenomenon, and hence got it wrong.
He perceives the Gilbreths and Gantt as trying to soften the force of
their mentor Taylor and hence began to conceive of and leverage power
as be-ing properly flowing from the bottom up in the organization. Mary
Follett, he argues, was the best one as a scholar and practitioner. Her
views on the giving of orders still stand today as pioneer work. Nonetheless,
she con-tributed to the flawed theory of power, reinforcing the bottom-up
theory.
By the time the reader heads into the chapters on Mayo and Barnard,
it becomes clear as to why Hoopes is challenging the gurus’ conception
of power and why they tried to shift it. The careers of Mayo and Barnard
are where Hoopes sees the deepest set-back to organizational behavior
theory. Mayo and Barnard seemed to legiti-mize the theory that power
flows from the bottom up. He viewed Mayo as deeply deceptive, while Barnard
he found very conflicted, juggling among various philosophies over this
career. He sees Deming as well intended, but naive. However, he admires
the revo-lutionary changes that Deming preached. In Drucker he saw a
man trying to moralize and tame American management after witnessing
the abuse of power from Nazi Germany. He credits Drucker as a great devel-oper
of management ideas and techniques, but alas, Drucker too did not break
out of the already established trend set by his predecessors.
Hoopes does not disclose what methodology he uses to develop his critic
on the professional history and biographical analysis of the gurus he
challenges. This presents a hindrance to the reader to discern some efficacy
of his assessment. In my opinion he falls somewhat short of providing
enough evidence to affirm his thesis. Hoopes, nevertheless, definitely
chal-lenges the existing paradigm of man-agement thought in organizational
be-havior today. His contention is that the democratic values, as they
have evolved in America, have in many cases become juxtaposed into corpo-rate
organizational life. And intention-ally, democratic values, under the
guise of bottom-up management have shielded the reality of organizational
top-down power based on the ideas and recommendations of the gurus.
Hoopes is not presenting a new idea here. But what he does effectively
is to point out the weaknesses that still exist in American management
thought. Fundamentally, the use of power in or-ganizations is still in
need of valid theory. He opines that almost all writ-ers of management
books (especially those on leadership) over the last 20 years have only
superficially considered power in organizations, if at all. This is a
shortcoming as he sees it. One wonders whether public administration
can answer Hoopes’s challenge?
Ken Mitchell is director of organizational development
for the Analysis Corporation in Fairfax, Virginia and a frequent contributor
to The Public Manager.