Document Type

Dissertation

Publication Date

12-1999

Department

School of Business

Abstract

Several different types of programs have been introduced to translate organizational goals into performance measurement and feedback systems that can be transferred to the shop floor level for employees. An overreaching assumption has been made that there must be subsets of objectives in order to motivate shop floor employees. In the field of human resources, performance management systems have been designed as vehicles for goal translation from top management to lower levels. The total quality management literature introduces hoshin planning as another formula for disseminating goals between layers within the organization.

An aggregate perspective on this linkage of performance and employees through employee management systems is presented using an approach that includes both the human resources and total quality directives. Open book management is introduced as an example of an integration of both systems. An intervention using open book management is conducted and the effect on employees and plant performance is reviewed.

Publisher

Clemson University

Comments

Original Citation:

Cochran, Loretta, "Linking Corporate Goals and Shop Floor Performance" (1999). All Dissertations. 2654. https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/all_dissertations/2654

Included in

Business Commons

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