Title: Operations
1Operations Quality (BMG774M1)
2Components of a Total Quality System
- A Vision of Where the Company Wants to Go
- An Assessment of Where the Company Is at Present
- A Plan of How to Get to the Vision
3Strategy of Implementation
- Identify Opportunities for Quality Improvement
- Focus on the Right Problems to Solve
- Analyse Those Problems
- Develop Realistic and Worthwhile Solutions
- Evaluate How Well New Procedures and Systems Are
Working
4Five Implementation Issues
- Customer Focus
- Total Involvement
- Measurement
- Systematic Support, Leadership and Commitment
- Continuous Improvement
5Customer Value Strategy
Topics Old paradigm New (emerging)
paradigm Quality Meeting specifications, One
component of customer inspected into
product, value, managed into process, make
tradeoffs among seek synergies among quality,
cost, schedule quality, cost, schedule Measurem
ent Internal measures of All measures linked to
efficiency, productivity, customer
value costs and profitability, not
necessarily linked to customers Positioning C
ompetition Customer segments Key
stakeholder Stockholder, boss (other Customer
(other stakeholders are pawns) stakeholders
are beneficiaries)
6Organisation Systems
Topics Old paradigm New (emerging)
paradigm Cross-functional Negotiation
across Cross-functional systems approach functio
nal interfaces to defined, owned and
optimised obtain co-operation Employee Focuse
d on hygiene Focused on strategic
factors involvement factors Human
resource Regarded as staff Regarded as a
critical management responsibility, resource,
managed as system administration of
input personnel hiring, firing, and
handling complaints
7Organisation Systems
Topics Old paradigm New (emerging)
paradigm Role definition Task and job
descriptions Vision inspires flexibility set
limits Culture Social and emotional Connect
with individual issues are suppressed, sense
of purpose, emotions politics and power and
social meaning dominate Structure Specialisat
ion, tall Integration, flat hierarchy hierarch
y with functional with team emphasis emphasis
8Continuous Improvement Strategy
Topics Old paradigm New (emerging)
paradigm Occasion Focused new product Focused
on broader systems, development,
episodic, unending, proactive to reactive to
problems, opportunities, big big breakthroughs
only breakthroughs and small steps Response to
error Punish, fear, cover-up, Learning, openness,
seek seek people fix, process/system fix,
employees are management is
responsible responsible Decision-making Indivi
dual political Strategic, long-term, perspective
expediency, short- purposeful for
organisation term
9Continuous Improvement Strategy
Topics Old paradigm New (emerging)
paradigm Managerial roles Administer and
maintain Challenge status quo, prompt status
quo, control others strategic improvement Focus
Business results through Business results
through quotas and targets capable systems,
means tied to results Control Scoring,
reporting, Statistical study of variation
to evaluating understand causes Means Deleg
ated by managers Owned by managers who lead to
staff and subordinates staff and subordinates
10Key Principles
- The importance of determining what customers
value as opposed to what management think they
need - A customer versus an organisational focus
- A focus on optimising organisational performance
rather than maximising functional end results - A focus on the processes and systems that cause
results and not the results themselves - The importance of experimentation for knowledge
and openness to new information
11Key Principles
- Mistakes That Lead to Organisational Learning Are
Acceptable - The Importance of Continuous Improvement Versus
Working to Specification or Adherence to the
Status Quo - Performance Improvement Comes From Process/
System Improvement and Not Just Improving People - To Improve Processes/systems, Managers Must Seek
Out Root Causes of Problems - Continuous Improvement Is Demanded at Every Level
of the Organisation
12SUMMARY
- Developing a Quality System Increases
Profitability for the Company and Job
Satisfaction for the Employees - Quality Is Not Simply Desirable but Essential for
Survival. - A Quality System Will Ensure That Goods or
Services Are Supplied by Not Only Doing the
Right Things but Doing Things Right - For a Quality System to Succeed It Must Involve
Everyone in the Company and Be Led From the Top - It Is Vital to Listen to Customers, Both Internal
and External, in Order to Understand, Meet and
Surpass Their Needs and Expectations
13SUMMARY
- When implementing a quality system develop the
following - A vision of where the company wants to be
- An assessment of where the company is at present
- A plan of how to get to the vision via continuous
improvement, through - Focussing on the right problems to solve
- Developing realistic and worthwhile solutions
- Monitoring and evaluating the new procedures and
systems.
14Additional Aspects of Quality
- Reliability
- Non-Functional Aspects of Quality
- Reputation
15GAP ANALYSIS
What the customer expects
GAP ?
What the customer gets
Promoted image of the product/service
GAP ?
GAP ?
GAP ?
Specification of the product/service
GAP ?
Intended product/service
16Demings 14 Points
- Create Constancy of Purpose Towards Improvement
of Product and Service, With the Aim to Become
Competitive, Stay in Business, and to Provide
Jobs. - Adopt the New Philosophy - We Are in a New
Economic Age. We Can No Longer Live With
Commonly Accepted Levels of Delays, Mistakes,
Defective Material, Defective Work. - Cease Dependence on Mass Inspection to Achieve
Quality. Require, Instead, Statistical Evidence
That Quality Is Built Into the Product in the
First Place.
17Demings 14 Points
- End the Practice of Awarding Business on the
Basis of Price. Instead, Minimise Total Cost.
Move Towards a Single Supplier for Any One Item
on a Long-term Relationship of Loyalty and Trust. - Improve Constantly and Forever the System of
Production and Service, to Improve Quality and
Productivity, and Thus Constantly Decrease Costs. - Institute Training on the Job.
- Adopt and Institute Modern Methods of Supervision
and Leadership. Supervision of Management, As
Well As Supervision of Production Workers, Is in
Need of Overhaul.
18Demings 14 Points
- Drive Out Fear, So That Everyone May Work
Effectively for the Company. - Break Down Barriers Between Departments and
Individuals. Everyone Must Work As a Team, to
Forsee and Solve Problems. - Eliminate Slogans, Exhortations and Targets for
the Workforce That Ask for Zero Defects and New
Levels of Productivity, Without Providing
Methods. Such Exhortations Only Create
Adversarial Relationships, As the Bulk of the
Causes of Low Quality and Low Productivity Belong
to the System and Thus Lie Beyond the Power of
the Workforce.
19Demings 14 Points
- Eliminate Work Standards (Quotas), Management by
Objectives, by Numbers and by Numerical Goals,
Substitute Leadership Instead. - Remove Barriers That Rob Employees of Their Right
to Pride of Workmanship. - Institute a Vigorous Programme of Education and
Self-improvement. - Put Everyone in the Company to Work to Accomplish
the Transformation. The Transformation Is
Everyones Job.
20Demings 14 Points
- Create Constancy of Purpose Towards Improvement
of Product and Service, With the Aim to Become
Competitive, Stay in Business, and to Provide
Jobs. - Adopt the New Philosophy - We Are in a New
Economic Age. We Can No Longer Live With
Commonly Accepted Levels of Delays, Mistakes,
Defective Material, Defective Work. - Cease Dependence on Mass Inspection to Achieve
Quality. Require, Instead, Statistical Evidence
That Quality Is Built Into the Product in the
First Place. - End the Practice of Awarding Business on the
Basis of Price. Instead, Minimise Total Cost.
Move Towards a Single Supplier for Any One Item
on a Long-term Relationship of Loyalty and Trust. - Improve Constantly and Forever the System of
Production and Service, to Improve Quality and
Productivity, and Thus Constantly Decrease Costs. - Institute Training on the Job.
- Adopt and Institute Modern Methods of Supervision
and Leadership. Supervision of Management, As
Well As Supervision of Production Workers, Is in
Need of Overhaul. - Drive Out Fear, So That Everyone May Work
Effectively for the Company. - Break Down Barriers Between Departments and
Individuals. Everyone Must Work As a Team, to
Forsee and Solve Problems. - Eliminate Slogans, Exhortations and Targets for
the Workforce That Ask for Zero Defects and New
Levels of Productivity, Without Providing
Methods. Such Exhortations Only Create
Adversarial Relationships, As the Bulk of the
Causes of Low Quality and Low Productivity Belong
to the System and Thus Lie Beyond the Power of
the Workforce. - Eliminate Work Standards (Quotas), Management by
Objectives, by Numbers and by Numerical Goals,
Substitute Leadership Instead. - Remove Barriers That Rob Employees of Their Right
to Pride of Workmanship. - Institute a Vigorous Programme of Education and
Self-improvement. - Put Everyone in the Company to Work to Accomplish
the Transformation. The Transformation Is
Everyones Job.
21Demings Seven Deadly Diseases
- Lack of constancy of purpose
- Emphasis on short-term profits
- Evaluation of performance, merit rating or annual
review - Mobility of management
- Running a company on visible figures alone
- Excessive medical costs
- Excessive costs of liability
22Jurans Quality Trilogy
- Quality Planning
- Identify Customers (External and Internal) and
Their Needs - Translate Their Needs Into a Language Everyone
Can Understand - Optimise the Process to Satisfy These Needs
- Verify and Implement the Improved Process
23Jurans Quality Trilogy
- Quality Control
- This Is the Process of Detecting and Correcting
Adverse Change, to Maintain the Status Quo - Only a Process in Control Is Predictable, and
Hence Capable of Being Improved - The Majority of Quality Problems Are the Fault of
Management, Rather Than Poor Workmanship on the
Shop Floor
24Jurans Quality Trilogy
- Quality Improvement
- Quality breakthroughs are required to achieve
significant improvement - Priorities for projects have to be decided, and
clear responsibilities defined - The system can only be improved by management
25Jurans 10 Point Plan
- Build Awareness of the Need and Opportunity for
Improvement - Set Goals for Improvement
- Organise to Reach the Goals
- Provide Training
- Carry Out Projects to Solve Problems
26Jurans 10 Point Plan
- Report Progress
- Give Recognition
- Communicate Results
- Keep the Score
- Maintain Momentum by Making Annual Improvement
Part of the Regular System and Processes of the
Company.
27Crosbys 14 Steps
- Make It Clear That Management Is Committed to
Quality - Form Quality Improvement Teams With
Representatives From Each Department - Determine Where Current and Potential Quality
Problems Lie - Evaluate the Cost of Quality and Explain Its Use
As a Management Tool - Raise the Quality Awareness and Personal Concern
of All Employees
28Crosbys 14 Steps
- Take action to correct problems identified
through previous steps - Establish an ad hoc committee for the zero
defects programme - Train supervisors to actively participate in the
quality improvement programme - Hold a zero defects day to let all employees
realise that there has been a change - Encourage individuals to establish improvement
goals for themselves and their groups
29Crosbys 14 Steps
- Encourage employees to communicate to management
the obstacles they face in attaining their
improvement goals - Recognise and appreciate those who participate
- Establish quality councils to communicate on a
regular basis - Do it all over again, to emphasize that the
quality improvement programme never ends
30ALIGNMENT THEORY
Competitive Environment
- Rules of the Game
- How the Company Plans to Play the Game
- The Capability to Play the Game
- Building a Team Vision to Play the Game
Strategy
Culture
Leadership Style
31ALIGNMENT LOGICS
32Competitive Position(Rules of the Game)
33Business Strategy(How We Plan To Play The Game)
34Organisation Culture(Capability to Play the Game)
35Leadership Style(Building A Team Vision)
36MARKETPLACE LOGICS
Market Uncertainty
Need for Creativity Change (D)
Need for Integration Cohesion (I)
Low Competitive Intensity
High Competitive Intensity
(A) Need for Control Order
(P) Need for Action Results
Market Certainty
37MARKETPLACE LOGICS
Market Uncertainty
SURPRISE ME (D)
UNDERSTAND ME (I)
Low Competitive Intensity
High Competitive Intensity
(A) BE CONSISTENT
(P) RESPOND
Market Certainty