Title: Chapter 3 – Philosophies & Frameworks
1Chapter 3 Philosophies Frameworks
- Quality pioneers, awards, and standards
2Why Study History?
3Why Study History?
- Famous quote
- ______________________________
______________________________ ___________________
- - George Santayana
- American philosopher
- 1863 - 1952
4Why Study History?
- We are part of a time continuum
- _____________________________
- _____________________________
- Its important to recognize past inventions,
innovations, discoveries, and accomplishments
(and the persons responsible)
5Early Quality Pioneers - 1
- Frederick Taylor
- Father of scientific management
- Inspection
- Gauging
- Henry Ford
- Standardization (reduced variation)
- Mass use of interchangeable parts
6Early Quality Pioneers - 2
- Walter A. Shewhart (Bell Labs) (1891-1967)
- Father of SQC my term
- Developed Statistical control charts
- PDCA cycle (shared with Deming)
- Identified 2 causes of variation chance and
assignable -
7Early Quality Pioneers - 3
- George Edwards (Director of QA, Bell Labs) (????
1974) - Coined term Quality Control
- 1st president of ASQC
-
8Early Quality Pioneers - 4
- H.G. (Harry) Romig and Harold F. Dodge (Bell
Labs) - Acceptance sampling tables
- H.G. (Harry) Romig (????-????)
- Taught math and physics at SJSC (now SJSU)
- Harold F. Dodge (1893-1976)
-
9W. Edwards Deming - 1 (1900 1993)
- Most famous of Quality pioneers
- Mathematician and statistician by training (PhD)
- Worked at USDA and Bureau of the Census
- Studied with Shewhart for several years
- Invited Shewhart to lecture at USDA
- Helped U.S. occupation forces in Japan (1946)
- Taught SQC to Japanese QC people (1950)
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10W. Edwards Deming - 2
- Shares credit for PDCA PDSA cycle (shared with
Shewhart) - Honored by Deming Prize in his name by the Union
of Japanese Scientists and Engineers (JUSE) - Founded W.Edwards Deming Institute
- Emphasized systems thinking
11W. Edwards Deming - 3
- 14 points based on
- Constancy of purpose
- Continual improvement
- Profound knowledge
- Appreciation for a system
- A theory of variation
- A theory of knowledge
- Psychology
12Demings 14 Points
- Create a vision and show commitment
- Learn the new philosophy
- Understand inspection
- Stop decision making solely on cost
- Improve constantly
- Institute training
- Institute leadership
- Drive out fear
- Optimize team efforts
- Eliminate exhortations to workers
- Eliminate numerical quotas
- Remove barriers to workmanship pride
- Encourage self-improvement
- Take action
13Demings Seven Deadly Diseases
- Lack of constancy of purpose.
- Emphasis on short-term profits.
- Performance evaluation.
- Mobility of management.
- Running a company on visible numbers only.
- Excessive medical costs.
- Excessive costs of warranty, fueled by lawyers
that work on contingency fee.
14Demings Other Obstacles
- Neglect of long-range planning.
- Relying on technology to solve problems.
- Seeking examples to follow rather than developing
solutions. - Excuses such as "Our problems are different".
- Others.
15Joseph M. Juran 1(1904 - )
- Engineer by training
- Worked at Bell Labs with Walter Shewhart and
other pioneers - Lectured in Japan after WW II
- Authored/Edited Quality Control Handbook
- Conceived idea of Cost of Quality
16Joseph M. Juran 2
- Quality Trilogy concept (see next slide)
- Quality planning
- Quality improvement
- Quality control
- Founded the Juran Institute
- Emphasized working within the system, not
proposing a major cultural change
17Jurans Quality Trilogy - 1
- Quality planning
- Identify who are the customers.
- Determine the needs of those customers.
- Translate those needs into our language.
- Develop a product that can respond to those
needs. - Optimize the product features so as to meet our
needs and customer needs.
18Jurans Quality Trilogy - 2
- Quality Improvement
- Develop a process which is able to produce the
product. - Optimize the process.
- Quality Control
- Prove that the process can produce the product
under operating conditions with minimal
inspection. - Transfer the process to Operations
19Armand Feigenbaum 1(???? - )
- Was Director of Worldwide Manufacturing
Operations and Quality at General Electric - Now President and CEO of General Systems Company
- Cost of nonconformance
- Coined Total Quality Control term
- 1st to describe 4 categories of cost of quality
- Authored Total Quality Control
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20Armand Feigenbaum - 2
- 40 steps in quality principles
- TQC is system for integration
- Standards, appraisal, corrective action
- Technological and human factors
- 4 categories of quality costs
- Control quality at the source
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21Philip Crosby (1926 2001)
- Worked his way up from line inspector
- Managed quality at Martin Marietta, ITT
- Founded PCA, PCA II)
- Originated Zero Defects concept
- Authored Quality is Free, Quality Without Tears,
and other books (13 in all) - Started Quality College (multiple sites)
- Company teams trained
- Emphasized behavioral change
22Kaoru Ishikawa(1915 1989)
- Leader of the Japanese Quality Movement
- Started Quality Circles
- Developed Cause and effect fishbone or
Ishikawa diagram - Promoted statistical methods
- Recognized internal customer
- Conceived company wide quality control
23Other Japanese Pioneers
- Genichi Taguchi (1924- )
- Emphasized variation reduction
- Taguchi loss function
- Exec. Director, American Supplier Inst.
- Shigeo Shingo (1909-1990)
- Not focused on quality but had significant impact
- Poka-Yoke
- Setup standardization, SMED
- Source inspection systems
24Awards Prizes - 1
- Deming (Application) Prize
- Awarded by Japan (Union of Japanese Scientists
and Engineers) - First awarded in 1951
- Named after W. Edwards Deming (Quality pioneer)
- Most winners before 2001 were Japanese American
winners Florida Power Light , ATT Power
Systems - Most winners since 2001 Indian, Thai
25Awards Prizes - 2
- Baldrige Award
- Awarded by US Department of Commerce (National
Institute of Standards and Technology) - 1987 legislation
- Named after Malcolm Baldrige (American
industrialist and former Secretary of Commerce)
26Awards Prizes - 3
- Baldrige Award (contd)
- Original categories Manufacturing, Service,
Small Business - Education added in 2001
- Health care added in 2002
- Local winners
- Granite Rock (1992)
- Solectron Corp. (1991, 1997)
27Awards Prizes - 4
- Presidents Quality Award PQA (US)
- European Foundation for Quality Management
(Europe) - National Quality Institute (Canada)
- Business Excellence Award (Australia)
- Etc., etc., etc.
28Value of Awards Prizes
- Shows effort
- May largely be dependent on money spent
- Used in advertising (e.g., Cadillac 1990)
- Doesnt reflect customer view
29Old ISO 9000 Standards
- ISO 9000 (series)
- ISO 9001(design, develop, produce, install,
service) - ISO 9002 (no design and development)
- ISO 9003 (final inspection and testing)
- ISO 9004 (QMS application guidelines)
30ISO 90002000 Standards - 1
- ISO 9000 (QMS - Fundamentals and vocabulary)
- ISO 9001 (QMS - Requirements)
- ISO 9004 (QMS Guidance for performance
improvement) - ISO 19011 (Guidelines on Quality and/or
Environmental Management Systems Auditing)
31ISO 90002000 Standards - 2
- ISO 100051995 (Quality management Guidelines
for quality plans) - ISO 100061997 (Quality management Guidelines
to quality in project management) - ISO 100071995 (Quality management Guidelines
for configuration management) - ISO/DIS 10012 and 100121997 (Quality assurance
requirements for measuring equipment) - ISO 100141998 (Guidelines for managing the
economics of quality) - ISO 100151999 (Guidelines for training)
32Automotive Industry
- QS-9000
- Common supplier quality standard
- Used by Ford, GM, Daimler-Chrysler
- Based on ISO 90011994
- ISO/TS 169491999
- Quality systems Automotive suppliers
Particular requirements for the application of
ISO 90011994
33ISO Registration (Certification)
- Whats been good
- Focus on quality
- Demonstrates effort
- Whats been bad (mostly fixed in ISO 90002000
- Becomes mechanical
- Emphasizes conformance to documentation, not
meeting QUALITY - Doesnt include customer view
34Six Sigma Quality - 1
- Latest popular approach to Quality
- Overall objective is to find and eliminate causes
of defects in manufacturing ad service processes - 6 standard deviations (6?) from the process
mean 0.0003 defects - Represents a goal
35Six Sigma Quality - 2
- Concept developed at Motorola by Bill Smith
- Best in class General Electric
- Certification from ASQ on processes to
support Six Sigma - Many consulting and training firms on how to
implement Six Sigma -
36Six Sigma at GE
- The central idea behind Six Sigma is that if you
can measure how many defects you have in a
process, you can systematically figure out how to
eliminate them and get as close to zero defects
as possible. - Making Customers Feel Six Sigma Quality
37Quality Today
- Reflects a blend of concepts and contributions
from the pioneers (gurus) - Stresses organization-wide TQM
- Emphasizes the role of the front-line worker
(authority and responsibility) - Seeks to recognize achievement through prizes and
certification