Title: Production and Operations Management: Manufacturing and Services
1CHASE AQUILANO JACOBS
Operations Management
For Competitive Advantage
Chapter 7
Quality Management
ninth edition
2Chapter 7Quality Management
- Total Quality Management Defined
- Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award
- Quality Specifications
- Costs of Quality
- Continuous Improvement
- SPC Tools
- Benchmarking
- Fail-safing
- ISO 9000
3Total Quality Management (TQM)Defined
- Total quality management is defined as managing
the entire organization so that it excels on all
dimensions of products and services that are
important to the customer.
41999 Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award
- 1.0 Leadership (125 points)
- 2.0 Strategic Planning (85 points)
- 3.0 Customer and Market Focus (85 points)
- 4.0 Information and Analysis (85 points)
- 5.0 Human Resource Focus (85 Points)
- 6.0 Process Management (85 points)
- 7.0 Business Results (450 points)
5Categories for the Baldrige Award
- Manufacturing companies or subsidiaries that
- produce and sell manufactured products or
manufacturing processes or - produce agricultural, mining, or construction
products. - Service companies or subsidiaries that sell
service - Small businesses
- Health care organizations
- Educational institutions
6Characteristics of a Baldrige Award Winner
- The companies formulated a vision of what they
thought quality was and how they would achieve
it. - Senior management was actively involved.
- Companies carefully planned and organized their
quality effort to be sure it would be effectively
initiated. - They vigorously controlled the overall process.
7Quality Specifications
- Design quality Inherent value of the product in
the marketplace - Dimensions include Performance, Features,
Reliability, Durability, Serviceability,
Response, Aesthetics, and Reputation. - Conformance quality Degree to which the product
or service design specifications are met
8Costs of Quality
9Continuous Improvement (CI)
- Management's view of performance standards of the
organization - performance level of the firm as something to be
"continuously challenged and incrementally
upgraded." - The way management views the contribution and
role of its workforce - believe employee involvement and team efforts are
the key to improvement
10CI Methodology PDCA Cycle (Deming Wheel)
11Example Process Flow Chart
Material Received from Supplier
No, Continue
Inspect Material for Defects
Defects found?
Yes
Can be used to find quality problems.
Return to Supplier for Credit
12Example Pareto Analysis
Can be used to find when 80 of the problems may
be attributed to 20 of the causes.
80
Frequency
Assy. Instruct.
Design
Purch.
Training
Other
13Example Run Chart
Can be used to identify when equipment or
processes are not behaving according to
specifications.
0.58
0.56
Diameter
0.54
0.52
0.5
0.48
0.46
0.44
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
Time (Hours)
14Example Histogram
Can be used to identify the frequency of quality
defect occurrence and display quality performance.
Number of Lots
0
1
2
3
4
Defectsin lot
Data Ranges
15Example Scatter Diagram
Can be used to illustrate the relationships
between quality behavior and training.
12
10
8
Defects
6
4
2
0
0
10
20
30
Hours of Training
16Example Checksheet
Can be used to keep track of defects or used to
make sure people collect data in a correct manner.
Monday
Billing Errors Wrong Account Wrong Amount A/R
Errors Wrong Account Wrong Amount
17Example Cause Effect Diagram
The results or effect.
Possible causes
Can be used to systematically track backwards to
find a possible cause of a quality problem (or
effect).
18Example Control Charts
Can be used to monitor ongoing production process
quality and quality conformance to stated
standards of quality.
1020
1010
1000
990
980
970
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
19Benchmarking
- 1. Identify those processes needing improvement.
- 2. Identify a firm that is the world leader in
performing the process. - 3. Contact the managers of that company and make
a personal visit to interview managers and
workers. - 4. Analyze data.
20The Shingo System Fail-Safe Design
- Shingos argument
- SQC methods do not prevent defects
- Defects arise when people make errors
- Defects can be prevented by providing workers
with feedback on errors - Poka-Yoke includes
- Checklists
- Special tooling that prevents workers from making
errors
21ISO 9000
- Series of standards agreed upon by the
International Organization for Standardization
(ISO) - Adopted in 1987
- More than 100 countries
- A prerequisite for global competition?
- ISO 9000 directs you to "document what you do and
then do as you documented."
22Three Forms of ISO Certification
- First party A firm audits itself against ISO
9000 standards. - Second party A customer audits its supplier.
- Third party A "qualified" national or
international standards or certifying agency
serves as auditor.
23ISO 9000 versus the Baldrige Award
- Which should we pursue first?
- What are the differences between the two?
- Do you have to be ISO 9000 certified before going
for the Baldrige Award?