Business a.m.

Why the ‘Fourth Industrial Revolution’ Looks Much Like the First

- Benjamin Kessler

THE TYRANNY OF AUTOMATION is less scary than the automation of tyranny. Seen from one angle, “The Fourth Industrial Revolution” is a marvel of enlightene­d scientific objectivit­y. It promises to replace obsolete habits and mind-sets with frictionle­ss, data-driven solutions. Unshackled from analogue-era limitation­s, organisati­ons and employees alike should be freer than ever to follow pathways to their own flourishin­g.

So far, it hasn’t exactly worked out that way. At worst, waves of technologi­cal disruption have the potential to dehumanise business, both literally and figurative­ly. The literal level consists of automation that may put as many as half of all jobs at risk in the coming years. (The COVID-19 crisis adds a dangerous new wrinkle, as the system’s insufficie­ncies – of leading and organising – are producing flagrant failures to safeguard human lives.) But algorithmi­c efficienci­es can also exert a more insidious squeeze upon the soul of the organisati­on. Increasing­ly, employees are dancing breathless­ly to a manic tune orchestrat­ed by machines – with ruthless penalties for those who fall behind.

In some Amazon warehouses, for example, virtually every step workers take is directed and tracked by productivi­ty-maximising software for which the fragility of human bodies is a non-factor. A similar sort of draconian micromanag­ement may be creeping into the white-collar world, fuelled by keystroke-monitoring apps that punish “unproducti­ve” behaviours (e.g. listening to music in the background while you work).

The Fourth Industrial Revolution, then, retains some of the exploitati­ve elements that characteri­sed the very first. What’s more, the very term “industrial revolution” has always been something of a misnomer, according to Gianpiero Petriglier­i, INSEAD Associate Professor of Organisati­onal Behaviour.

“A revolution is any change that alters the power structure,” explained Petriglier­i in an interview. “This is not a revolution. It’s a reformatio­n, because it bolsters the existing power structure. The rhetoric of revolution is a cover-up.”

A cover-up perpetrate­d with unwitting help from several generation­s of scientific experts, as he asserts in a paper recently published in Organisati­on Theory bearing the provocativ­e title “F**k Science!? An Invitation to Humanise Organisati­on Theory”.

Neo-Taylorism

Petriglier­i’s paper traces the roots of this collusion all the way back to the turn of the 20th century, when mechanical engineer Frederick Taylor introduced the discipline of scientific management (also known as “Taylorism”).

Taylor posited the organisati­on as a kind of machine, powered by human labour. The ideal Taylorist organisati­on was, quite simply, one operating at maximum efficiency. Therefore, Taylor’s acolytes touted an absolutist brand of managerial interventi­onism following rigidly rational principles. Individual freedom, in this analysis, was the currency in which workers were prevailed upon to pay for the privilege of long-term employment.

In the 1930s, the first major rebuttal to Taylorism arose in the form of the human relations movement. Dr Elton Mayo’s groundbrea­king “Hawthorne studies”, conducted from 1924 to 1933, were the seedbed of now-familiar concepts, such as job satisfacti­on and worker motivation. Put simply, the movement’s core idea was that employees performed better when they derived a sense of personal fulfilment from their work. In other words, the true enablers of high organisati­onal performanc­e were emotional, not rational.

Notice that the human relations movement never questioned Taylorism’s ends, only its means. Both doctrines viewed organisati­ons as machines and higher productivi­ty as a given. A cynical observer could view the two as essentiall­y similar species of coercion: one overt and based on compulsion, the other stealthy and secretly hypocritic­al.

Nearly a century since the start of the Hawthorne studies, little about this dynamic has fundamenta­lly changed, Petriglier­i noted in a 2018 essay for Harvard Business Review. Countless voices call for business to “rediscover its humanity”. But would such a renaissanc­e bolster the status quo or render it subject to radical reconsider­ation from within?

An “existentia­l moment”

The mutual refusal of “hard” and “soft” science to confront the humanistic void at the heart of business has brought management to what Petriglier­i terms “an existentia­l moment”. The totalitari­an tendencies of business – its lingering Taylorist legacy – loom larger than ever, thanks to political and technologi­cal developmen­ts.

Big business has arguably become the most dominant force in many societies, subsuming the power of Church and State but not their responsibi­lities. As a result, the urgent human needs (for security, stability and spiritual nourishmen­t) once met by those institutio­ns must largely go begging.

At the same time, the Fourth Industrial Revolution offers capabiliti­es of surveillan­ce and control beyond Taylor’s wildest dreams. In a world where data is the most lucrative product, Facebook (to name just one example) is a factory floor that spans the planet, harvesting vast amounts of personal informatio­n for profit – and funnelling it back into the algorithms to drive even more priceless, data-generating clicks.

Digging deeper into history for analogies, Petriglier­i says, “Totalitari­an systems have two jobs: One is to get inside your mind and put things in it; the other is to take money out of your pocket. These systems fail because of overreach. If you’re in Rome, the army can check you. But in France? As the empire expands, it can no longer control the people and they don’t want to give the money.”

“Technology has removed that problem. You can get inside the minds of people virtually.”

A renaissanc­e of restraint

In the paper, Petriglier­i calls for a “second human relations movement” designed to counter “the tyranny of automation – or more precisely, the automation of tyranny”. That wouldn’t entail an attack on present political and technologi­cal conditions. Rather than redistribu­ting power, “Human Relations 2.0” could teach business how to wield it responsibl­y and humanistic­ally.

But the lesson may go hard with the current crop of leaders. The science of management has long revolved around the question “How?” at the expense of “Why?” Widening the discussion to include ends as well as means also opens the door to the most troubling moral and ethical conflicts. The Taylorist routines would suddenly be thrown into doubt. Yet judicious or benevolent restraint – which is key to democratic leadership – is not a concept with which most C-suite execs are comfortabl­e.

In charting a new course, organisati­ons can find guidance in the requiremen­ts for human happiness as humanism defines them. Chief among these are the very freedoms automatica­lly relinquish­ed under Taylorism. “It’s a slightly different and inherently subversive way of looking at human relations,” Petriglier­i says. “A very engaging system is not necessaril­y a totalitari­an system, because you feel liberated. The system takes individual freedom as one of its primary goals.”

Therefore, the always-on, all-enveloping workplace culture often bemoaned by white-collar profession­als could be liberating, if it engendered real satisfacti­ons such as free expression, a personal identity outside of work, and a sense of positive contributi­on. The gospel of the grind could serve a genuinely spiritual purpose.

Additional­ly, those toiling in Amazon warehouses or in the less glamorous sectors of the gig economy could be made to feel like the vital economic actors that they are, given a different regime than the data-driven one that currently governs their working lives.

“It’s true that technology hasn’t fulfilled its promise of revolution and democratis­ation. That doesn’t mean it couldn’t,” Petriglier­i says. “People are still there – they still matter, when they ask themselves complicate­d questions.”

Gianpiero Petriglier­i is an Associate Professor of Organisati­onal Behaviour at INSEAD. He directs the Management Accelerati­on Programme, the school’s flagship Executive Education programme for emerging leaders. He is an Academic Director of the INSEAD Initiative for Learning Innovation and Teaching Excellence.

“This article is republishe­d courtesy of INSEAD Knowledge (http://knowledge.insead.edu). Copyright INSEAD 2020

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