252
EMPLOYMENT PSYCHOLOGY
tralization took place, it was the custom of each shop
foreman to hire his own men. The shop foreman was at
least fairly familiar with the jobs in his particular shop,
and could interview applicants with direct reference to the
work which he expected them to do. His intimate knowl
edge of jobs was of inestimable value in selecting the right
man for the right job. However, the growth of large
industries, with the consequent centralization of functions,
has brought with it the centralization of all employment
functions. Consequently, instead of ten or a hundred
different shop foremen, each hiring his own men in his own
way, we have one employment office in which a few men
do all the hiring for every shop and office in the organiza
tion and for nearly all of the dozens and often hundreds of
varieties of jobs which may be found there.
The advantages of the centralized employment office in
standardizing rates, records, clerical methods, and in
making the most economical use of the labor available are
unquestionable. There is no longer a doubt that a central
control of all the factors in the relation between an indus
trial organization and its employees is indispensable.
However, it is equally certain that in giving up the old
form of decentralized employment, industry lost also the
one most valuable feature of the old method. This was
the firsthand knowledge of the different jobs under his
control which the foreman of each shop had and which
he was able to apply in hiring new men. When the func
tions of hiring were centralized, the knowledge of these
jobs was to a large extent lost. This is only natural, since
it is manifestly impossible to maintain a force of inter
viewers who shall be experts in all of the jobs concerned.
And for the employment manager or his employment
clerks to have this knowledge is still further beyond the