Henry Gantt

Henry Gantt

Infobox_Scientist
name = Henry Laurence Gantt


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birth_date = 1861
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death_date = November 23, 1919
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citizenship = United States
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field = Scientific management
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known_for = Gantt chart
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Henry Laurence Gantt, A.B., M.E. (1861 - 23 November 1919) was a mechanical engineer and management consultant who is most famous for developing the Gantt chart in the 1910s. These Gantt charts were employed on major infrastructure projects including the Hoover Dam and Interstate highway system and continue to be an important tool in project management. [ [http://www.ganttchart.com/History.html Gantt chart history] Accessed 7 April 2007.]

Biography

Gantt was born in Calvert County, Maryland. He graduated from McDonogh School in 1878 and then went on to Johns Hopkins University. He then worked as a teacher and draughtsman before becoming a mechanical engineer. In 1887, he joined Frederick W. Taylor in applying scientific management principles to their work at Midvale Steel and Bethlehem Steel—working there with Taylor until 1893. In his later career as a management consultant—following the invention of the Gantt chart—he also designed the 'task and bonus' system of wage payment and additional measurement methods worker efficiency and productivity. Henry Gantt is listed under Stevens Institute of Technology alumni and roommate to Frederick Winslow Taylor (M.E., 1883).

Gantt charts

The following discussion of Gantt charts originally appeared in Herrmann (2005): [Herrmann, Jeffrey W., "History of Decision-Making Tools for Production Scheduling," Proceedings of the 2005 Multidisciplinary Conference on Scheduling: Theory and Applications, New York, July 18-21, 2005.]

It is important to note that Gantt created many different types of charts. Moreover, Gantt designed his charts so that foremen or other supervisors could quickly know whether production was on schedule, ahead of schedule, or behind schedule. Modern project management software includes this critical function even now.

Gantt (1903) [Gantt, Henry L., A graphical daily balance in manufacture, Transactions of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Volume XXIV, pages 1322-1336, 1903.] describes two types of "balances": the “man’s record,” which shows what each worker should do and did do, and the daily balance of work, which shows the amount of work to be done and the amount that is done. Gantt gives an example with orders that will require many days to complete. The daily balance has rows for each day and columns for each part or each operation. At the top of each column is the amount needed. The amount entered in the appropriate cell is the number of parts done each day and the cumulative total for that part. Heavy horizontal lines indicate the starting date and the date that the order should be done. According to Gantt, the graphical daily balance is “a method of scheduling and recording work.” In this article, Gantt also describes the use of production cards for assigning work to each operator and recording how much was done each day.

In "Work, Wages, and Profits" (originally published in 1916), [Gantt, Henry L., "Work, Wages, and Profits," second edition, Engineering Magazine Co., New York, 1916. Reprinted by Hive Publishing Company, Easton, Maryland, 1973.] Gantt explicitly discusses scheduling, especially in the job shop environment. He proposes giving to the foreman each day an “order of work” that is an ordered list of jobs to be done that day. Moreover, he discusses the need to coordinate activities to avoid “interferences.” However, he also warns that the most elegant schedules created by planning offices are useless if they are ignored, a situation that he observed.

In "Organizing for Work" (originally published in 1919), [Gantt, Henry L., "Organizing for Work," Harcourt, Brace, and Howe, New York, 1919. Reprinted by Hive Publishing Company, Easton, Maryland, 1973.] Gantt gives two principles for his charts: one, measure activities by the amount of time needed to complete them; two, the space on the chart can be used the represent the amount of the activity that should have been done in that time. Gantt shows a progress chart that indicates for each month of the year, using a thin horizontal line, the number of items produced during that month. In addition, a thick horizontal line indicates the number of items produced during the year. Each row in the chart corresponds to an order for parts from a specific contractor, and each row indicates the starting month and ending month of the deliveries. It is the closest thing to the Gantt charts typically used today in scheduling systems, though it is at a higher level than machine scheduling.

Gantt’s machine record chart and man record chart are quite similar, though they show both the actual working time for each day and the cumulative working time for a week. Each row of the chart corresponds to an individual machine or operator. These charts do not indicate which tasks were to be done, however.

A novel method of displaying interdependencies of processes to increase visibility of production schedules was invented (and aplicated) in 1896 by Karol Adamiecki However, Adamiecki did not publish his works in a language popular in the West; hence Gantt was able to popularize a similar method, which he developed around the years 1910-1915, and the solution became attributed to Gantt. With minor modifications, what originated as the Adamiecki's chart is now more commonly referred to as the Gantt Chart. [Gerard Blokdijk, "Project Management 100 Success Secrets", Lulu.com, 2007, ISBN 0980459907, [http://books.google.com/books?id=dgB-QWHlnrUC&pg=PA76&dq=Adamiecki+Gantt&as_brr=3&sig=Jp-mgVODNRJpxqBRM1PYJbs7mOU Google Print, p.76] ] [Peter W. G. Morris, "The Management of Projects", Thomas Telford, 1994, ISBN 0727725939, [http://books.google.com/books?id=5ekyoWaeZ1UC&pg=PA18-IA7&dq=Adamiecki+Gantt&as_brr=3&sig=xe_RAipoqlvhnu0xLkIsxx-8OAQ Google Print, p.18] ]

Contributions

Henry Gantt's legacy to production management is the following:
*The Gantt chart: Still accepted as an important management tool today, it provides a graphic schedule for the planning and controlling of work, and recording progress towards stages of a project. The chart has a modern variation, Program Evaluation and Review Technique (PERT).
*Industrial Efficiency: Industrial efficiency can only be produced by the application of scientific analysis to all aspects of the work in progress. The industrial management role is to improve the system by eliminating chance and accidents.
*The Task And Bonus System: He linked the bonus paid to managers to how well they taught their employees to improve performance.
*The social responsibility of business: He believed that businesses have obligations to the welfare of society that they operate in.

The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) awards an annual medal in honor of Henry Laurence Gantt. [ [http://www.asme.org/Governance/Honors/SocietyAwards/Henry_Laurence_Gantt_Medal.cfm ASME Henry Laurence Gantt Medal] Accessed 7 April 2007.]

References

ee also

* Henry Laurence Gantt Medal
* Scheduling
* Human factors
* Karol Adamiecki

Persondata
NAME= Gantt, Henry Laurence
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION= American engineer
DATE OF BIRTH= 1861
PLACE OF BIRTH=
DATE OF DEATH= November 23, 1919
PLACE OF DEATH=


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  • Henry Gantt — Henry Laurence Gantt (* 1861 in Calvert County, Maryland; † 23. November 1919) war ein US amerikanischer Maschinenbauingenieur und Unternehmensberater. Er absolvierte die McDonogh School und das Johns Hopkins College und arbeitete zunächst als… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Henry Gantt — Henry Laurence Gantt Henry Laurence Gantt (Condado de Calvert, Maryland, Estados Unidos, 1861 Pine Island, Nueva York, Estados Unidos, 23 de noviembre de 1919) fue un ingeniero industrial mecánico estadounidense. Fue discípulo de Fr …   Wikipedia Español

  • Henry Gantt — Henry Laurence Gantt Pour les articles homonymes, voir Gantt. Henry Laurence Gantt, (1861 1919), était ingénieur en mécanique et consultant en management. Il est surtout connu pour avoir mis au point en 1910 son célèbre diagramme très utilisé en… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Gantt chart — A Gantt chart is a type of bar chart that illustrates a project schedule. Gantt charts illustrate the start and finish dates of the terminal elements and summary elements of a project. Terminal elements and summary elements comprise the work… …   Wikipedia

  • Henry Laurence Gantt — (* 20. Mai 1861 in Calvert County, Maryland; † 23. November 1919 in Pine Island, New York) war ein US amerikanischer Maschinenbauingenieur und Unternehmensberater. Er absolvierte die McDonogh School und das Johns Hopkins College und arbeitete… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Gantt (disambiguation) — A Gantt chart is a popular type of bar chart that illustrates a project schedule.Gantt may also refer to:* Gantt, Alabama, United States * Gantt, South Carolina, United StatesPeople with the surname Gantt:* David Gantt (21st century), member of… …   Wikipedia

  • Gantt chart — /gant chärt/ noun A form of bar chart used to show progress in a production system, showing predicted production figures over a fixed period of time, and updated with actual figures for comparison ORIGIN: Henry L Gantt (1861–1919), US management… …   Useful english dictionary

  • Henry L. Gantt — Henry Laurence Gantt Pour les articles homonymes, voir Gantt. Henry Laurence Gantt, (1861 1919), était ingénieur en mécanique et consultant en management. Il est surtout connu pour avoir mis au point en 1910 son célèbre diagramme très utilisé en… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Gantt — ist der Name von: Henry L. Gantt, US amerikanischer Maschinenbauingenieur Orte in den USA: Gantt (Alabama) Gantt (South Carolina) Sonstiges: Gantt Diagramm GanttProject, eine in Java geschriebene Open Source Anwendung für Projektplanungen …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Gantt-Diagramm —   [engl. gantt chart; nach dem US amerik. Ingenieur und Sozialwissenschaftler Henry L. Gantt (1861 1919)], ein Schaubild, das den zeitlichen Ablauf eines Projektes in allen seinen Teilschritten visualisiert. Die einzelnen teils parallel, teils… …   Universal-Lexikon

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