- Sat Feb 21, 2015 12:00 am
#33128
Complete Question Explanation
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (E)
The consultant describes an apparently inconsistent set of facts. On one side, during the Industrial Revolution, dramatic improvements in productivity were achieved in large part by standardization of processes and procedures combined with centralization of planning and decision making.
However, in recent years, many already productive companies have further improved their productivity by giving individual employees greater influence in decision making and in how they do their work. This is surprising, because the modern companies are achieving further productivity even though they are acting contrary to the techniques of standardization and centralization that successfully increased productivity during the Industrial Revolution.
However, this difference between productivity in modern companies and productivity during the Industrial Revolution is surprising only if you assume that what made an organization productive during the Industrial Revolution would continue to make modern organizations more productive. This assumption requires that the people, the technology, and the tasks of the Industrial Revolution organizations were similar to those of the modern organizations. The stimulus provides no reason to think this similarity exists.
The correct answer choice in this Resolve the Paradox question will identify some difference between the modern, productive companies and the Industrial Revolution-era organizations that produces the apparent discrepancy described above.
Answer choice (A): The stimulus focused on those modern companies that were already productive. This answer choice is incorrect because it refers to most companies. It is not clear that “most companies” are already productive, and so this group may be different from the companies discussed in the stimulus. Further, this answer choice provides information that avoids the apparent discrepancy, by saying most companies still apply the techniques of standardization and centralization that were used with success during the Industrial Revolution.
Answer choice (B): The fact that job satisfaction increases when individual employees are given greater control over their work does not resolve the issue of how modern companies can act in ways contrary to the techniques that achieved productivity during the Industrial Revolution, yet still achieve productivity.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice avoids the apparent discrepancy by shifting the focus away from the changes regarding standardization and centralization of decision making to the introduction of advanced technology as the reason for recent increases in productivity.
Answer choice (D): This information runs counter to what creates the surprising situation in the stimulus, that modern companies are giving individuals increasing influence in decision making and in how they do their work, yet still achieve additional increases in productivity.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Individual employees in the modern companies have innovative ideas that, when applied broadly by management, result in increased productivity, even in companies that are already highly productive. This answer choice resolves the apparent discrepancy by showing that greater influence by individual employees in decision making and in how they do their work does not necessarily equate to a lack of standardization or centralization. The improvements in productivity come from the broad application by management of these ideas. So, while there is still standardization and centralization, those standard policies and centralized decisions are made after considering innovations solicited from individual employees.
Resolve the Paradox. The correct answer choice is (E)
The consultant describes an apparently inconsistent set of facts. On one side, during the Industrial Revolution, dramatic improvements in productivity were achieved in large part by standardization of processes and procedures combined with centralization of planning and decision making.
However, in recent years, many already productive companies have further improved their productivity by giving individual employees greater influence in decision making and in how they do their work. This is surprising, because the modern companies are achieving further productivity even though they are acting contrary to the techniques of standardization and centralization that successfully increased productivity during the Industrial Revolution.
However, this difference between productivity in modern companies and productivity during the Industrial Revolution is surprising only if you assume that what made an organization productive during the Industrial Revolution would continue to make modern organizations more productive. This assumption requires that the people, the technology, and the tasks of the Industrial Revolution organizations were similar to those of the modern organizations. The stimulus provides no reason to think this similarity exists.
The correct answer choice in this Resolve the Paradox question will identify some difference between the modern, productive companies and the Industrial Revolution-era organizations that produces the apparent discrepancy described above.
Answer choice (A): The stimulus focused on those modern companies that were already productive. This answer choice is incorrect because it refers to most companies. It is not clear that “most companies” are already productive, and so this group may be different from the companies discussed in the stimulus. Further, this answer choice provides information that avoids the apparent discrepancy, by saying most companies still apply the techniques of standardization and centralization that were used with success during the Industrial Revolution.
Answer choice (B): The fact that job satisfaction increases when individual employees are given greater control over their work does not resolve the issue of how modern companies can act in ways contrary to the techniques that achieved productivity during the Industrial Revolution, yet still achieve productivity.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice avoids the apparent discrepancy by shifting the focus away from the changes regarding standardization and centralization of decision making to the introduction of advanced technology as the reason for recent increases in productivity.
Answer choice (D): This information runs counter to what creates the surprising situation in the stimulus, that modern companies are giving individuals increasing influence in decision making and in how they do their work, yet still achieve additional increases in productivity.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. Individual employees in the modern companies have innovative ideas that, when applied broadly by management, result in increased productivity, even in companies that are already highly productive. This answer choice resolves the apparent discrepancy by showing that greater influence by individual employees in decision making and in how they do their work does not necessarily equate to a lack of standardization or centralization. The improvements in productivity come from the broad application by management of these ideas. So, while there is still standardization and centralization, those standard policies and centralized decisions are made after considering innovations solicited from individual employees.