Initially, the Taylor Society appears to have been unperturbed by the
Bedaux System and its
Bedaux Unit: in 1927 a discussion of the
Bedaux Point System appeared in the Society's
Bulletin without additional comment. However, its approach to Bedaux became more antagonistic. In 1929, the Society supported Southern textile workers in their
strike against the Bedaux System, which textile workers believed was 'even worse than the old "Taylor Stop-Watch System"'. Soon after the dissolution of the Taylor Society, its long-standing secretary
Harlow S. Person responded to the
Charles Bedaux &
Duke of Windsor November 1937 fiasco by stating that the
Taylor System, which required much management restructuring, and the Bedaux System, which could be applied 'as is', were 'poles apart'. In 1940,
C. Bertrand Thompson criticised Bedaux as a 'time study merchant', claiming that one of Bedaux's clients told him that 'if they had found my machines bolted upside down to the ceiling, they would have left them there and time studied them just the same'. == Society for Advancement of Management ==