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No, division of labor in a factory involves breaking down the production process into smaller tasks and assigning them to different workers to increase efficiency and specialization. Each worker focuses on a specific task rather than performing every step of the process.
The assembly line method of production. Brought to the forefront by Henry Ford in his production of the Model T. Soon used for other consumer goods during the 1920s such as refrigerators and radios (wirelesses).
Assembly Line
Examples of line processes include assembly lines in manufacturing, where products move along a line and each worker performs a specific task, such as adding a component or fastening a part. Another example is a production line in a food processing plant, where food items are prepared, packaged, and labeled as they move along the line.
Each performs as designed.
your moms but
Impossible to answer ! It depends on too many variables - such as - how many items the post-worker has to deliver, which route they take, how fast they walk, if they take a break, what time they start etc. Each worker will have their own method of doing the round.
Depending on the country, there are differing sectors of apprenticeship. In Canada, the focus is on construction, industrial and manufacturing, motive power, and service, while Austria has retail, cook, car mechanic and clerk.
false. Division of labour refers to breaking up the production process into a series of repetitive tasks. Each done by a different worker.
A line of machines and workers in a factory that a product moves along while it is being built or produced. Each machine or worker performs a particular job that must be finished before the product moves to the next position in the line