Title: Quality Management Principles
1- Quality Management Principles
- become
- CEO Management Principles
- Brenda M. Fisk,
- ASQ Canada Director
- With thanks to Marsha Ludwig-Becker, Fall 2001
2Objectives
- Agree on the definition of a quality Management
System - Review history of some contributors
- Review the 8 quality management Principles
- Summarize finding
- Conclude
3Quality Management or System?
- Quality Management
- Quality Policy
- Objectives
- Responsibilities
- Implemented through
- Quality Planning
- Control
- Assurance
- Improvement
- Quality System
- Organization Structure
- Procedures
- Processes
- Resources needed to implement
- Quality Management
4Management Questions
- Page 261, Certified Quality Handbook
- What business are we in?
- What resources do we need to succeed?
- How should the resources be organized?
- What skills are required?
- What do employees need to do the job?
- How will we know they are successful?
- What do we do if things go wrong?
- What do we do to improve?
5ISO 9000-2000, paragraph 4.3
- To lead and operate an organization successfully
- Manage it systematically
- Visibly
- Principles developed
- for management to use
- Lead towards improved performance
- Are integrated in the standard
6Quality Management Principles
- Customer focus
- Leadership
- People involvement
- Process approach
- Systematic approach to management
- Continual improvement
- Factual approach to decision making
- Mutual beneficial supplier relationships
7A Quality System is a Management System
8Quality Management Principles Definition
- A comprehensive and fundamental set of rules or
beliefs for leading and operating an organization
aimed at continually improving performance over
the long term by focusing on customers while
addressing the needs of all stakeholders.
9Theories of Major Contributors
- Dr. Edwards Deming
- Quality is the primary driver for business and
societal successChain Reaction - 14 Points for Transforming the Western
Management - Seven Deadly diseases
- Understanding the System of Profound Knowledge
10What is the System of Profound Knowledge?
- Appreciation for the system
- Common purpose
- Knowledge about variation
- Understanding why the variation exits
- Theory of knowledge
- Operational definitions allow usefulness
- Psychology
- People have different needs appreciation
11Philip B Crosby
- Conformance to requirements
- Conformance not elegance
- No such thing as a quality problem
- Economics of quality?
- Do it right the first time
- Cost of Quality performance measurement
- Zero defects performance standard
12Armad V Feigenbauam
- Quality is a corporate life
- Quality leadership continuous leadership
through planned specific terms - Quality technology evaluate new techniques and
implement as appropriate - Quality Commitment continuous motivation,
training for task at hand
134 Management Fundamentals
- Continuous improvement is necessary to stay
competitive - Personally leading the effort by mobilizing
- Successful innovation required high quality to
support it - Cost and quality are complementary rather than
conflicting objectives.
14Kaoru Ishikawa
- Quality Control is responsibility of all
- Total Quality Control is
- a group activity
- will not fail if all cooperate
- is not a miracle drug
- Middle management will be targeted
- be prepared!
- QC Circles are part of TQC
- Do not confuse --objective with means
15Quality needs a revolution
- Quality first, not short term profit
- Consumer orientation
- Next process is your customer
- Use facts and data
- Respect humanity as a philosophy
- Cross functional management
16Joseph M Juran
- Quality Handbook
- Two different and related concepts
- Quality is income oriented higher quality costs
more - Quality is cost oriented higher quality costs
less - Quality Trilogy
- Planning
- Control
- Improvement
17Walter A Shewhart
- Father of statistical quality control
- Disciplines of statistics, engineering and
economics - From Bell Laboratories
- Mentored Juran and Deming
- Two types of variation
- Chance causes
- Assignable causes
18Genichi Taguchi
- Effective use of design of experiments
- Goal is the most robust combination of product
and process - Project that meet customer requirements by being
most consistently produced by the process - Taguchi Loss function
19- The Eight Principles
- Lets look at each one
201 Customer Focus
- Organizations depend on
- customers and
- must understand
- strive to meet and
- exceed customer expectations.
21Long term customers
- Plus for business because
- Profits come from upgrades,
- Services,
- New products that people believe in
- Customer Satisfaction is only the first step in
building long term loyal customers the need is
to focus on retention and loyalty
22Satisfaction
Quality is perceived according to Kano Think
about what delights you as a customer !
232 Leadership
- Leaders must be people that
- Have the ability to think in time spans of years
instead of months - Visualize life in 5 years
- what do you want it to be
- Stress corporate big picture
24Leaders
- Develop a participative climate
- Partnerships
- Make others responsible
- Employee participation
- Walk what you talk
- Say what you mean, mean what you say
25Vision Led Value Driven Leadership
26Cultivate Leadership Skills
- No fear of failure, sponsor change
- 3M scientists spend 15 of time on new ideas
- Provide corporate funding
- Create a secure environment
- Compromise between Japanese concept of lifetime
employment and the North American tendency to
fire at will - Creates greater work efficiency
273 People Involvement
- Worker empowerment comes from the ability of
employees to make a difference in the process
they manage - Workers need tools to analyze, organize,
understand and use large amounts of data to make
important decisions that impact the bottom line
28The Way of the Beaver People
- Work best when they control their own jobs
- Must have clear understanding of companys
overall purpose as well as their place in it
(clear goals, values) - People must know that their thoughts, feelings,
needs and dreams are respected listened to and
acted on. - They are in the information loop
Blanchard, Ken, One Minute Manager Quality
Digest, Nov. 1997, p. 19
29The Way of the Beaver People
- Then people take control of their work
- Must set realistic goals for employees
Individuals take pride in in holding themselves
accountable for productivity, innovations, cost
control, customer service and other business needs
30The Way of the Beaver People
- Need boundaries--helps encourage self control and
accountability - Empowerment cultures become team cultures
- Then must be taught to work in teams
31Responsibility is delegated, not
authority--empowerment
- Three facets
- Wisdom to know what to do when to do it
- The will to do what needs to be done
- The where withal to do it
Figure 3.1a The Empowerment Cube
Guest Editorial, by John Troyer, Quality Digest,
Oct. 1996, p. 64
324 Process Approach
- Everything done is involved in a process
- Meet needs and requirements of internal and
external customers - Must have clear responsibility for each process
- Measure process, measure inputs, and outputs
33A Process might look like this
Note Figure 3.3 from ISO 9000-1 1994, p. 4
34The Cornerstone of Process--TQM
35Processes should satisfy Customer Needs
- If they dont they are NOT good processes
- Process improvement focuses on implementing the
best methods for translating valid operational
requirements into finished products and services - Processes are defined by flow charts
36An illustrated flow chart
How to Manage Key Business Processes, by Rico
Yingling, Quality Progress, April 1997, p.
107-110. Used at Border Chem. in Kent, WA.
37Identify the key processesand goals
- Define key cross functional business processes
- Identify key processes and related goals
- Form teams and develop charters
- Develop measurements
- Manage the Process
- Discuss process maintenance, improvement, team
improvement
385 Systematic Approach to Management
- Management is
- A series of interrelated processes
- A system is defined by identifying all
interrelated processes and their interdependences - A system is managed as system of interrelated
processes - Integrated Master Plan (IMP)
- Integrated Master Schedule (IMS)
- A system is improved by continuous measuring and
evaluating - An effective system provides confidence in an
organizations capability to meet customer
requirements
39The Business Process
406 Continual/ Continuous Improvement
- Performance improvement 3 flavors
- Strategic planning
- customer needs
- Operational planning
- translates strategy into operational and
financial requirements - Process improvement
- focuses on best methods for operational
requirements into finished product/services
41Demings PDCA Cycle
42Phases of continuous process improvement
- Awareness
- Resistance
- Expansion
- Integration
- Regeneration, or Continuous Improvement
Doherty, Steve D., A Blueprint for Excellence,
Quality Progress, April 1991, p. 84-85
43Blueprint for Excellence at the Air Force
Logistics Command (AFLC)
44Strategies for Implementation
- 1. Commitment
- 2. Training
- 3. Targeting and Deployment
- 4. Resources
- 5. Measurements
- 6. Management Structure
- 7. Systems Alignment
- 8. Communication and Information
457 Factual Approach to Decision-Making
- Cant manage what you cant measure
- In God we trust, all others bring data
- Programs that produce employee involvement
- Statistical Process Control (SPC)--more than for
manufacturing - Now used in all soft processes
- Software, in Europe, only think of SPC
- Motorolas Six Sigma program is an SPC program
that produces a goal for all employees to aim at
and rally around
46Caveat
- Must measure all processes, especially business
processes - This is where the money can be saved and customer
satisfaction heightened - Measurement must be automatic built into the
process
47Factual Approach to Decision-Making
From As Easy as Two Plus Two, News for a
Change, Association for Quality and
Participation, Cincinnati, OH., Nov. 1997, p. 4
48Measuring Business Processes
From Kordupleski, R., Rust, R, and Zahorik, A,
Why Improving Quality Doesnt Improve Quality,
California Management Review, vol.38, no. 3,
Spring 1993, p. 91
498 Mutually Beneficial Supplier Relationships
- A Win Win Philosophy!!!!
- Involve suppliers in product development
- On Site, strategic planning, input on product
plans - Electronic purchase orders and automated systems
50Supplier Partnership is the new buzzword
- Part of a new way of doing business
- TQM is making the difference
- Fewer suppliers/longer term suppliers,
specialization, cost - Cross functional teams including suppliers
- Best Value Customer satisfaction
- Involved in Service sector as well
51Supplier Chain Management
- Measures cycle time
- Cuts transportation costs 5-12
- Inventory costs 10-40
- Schedule changes 15-65
- Cuts out stovepipes allows more benchmarking
52Response Process
From The Hearth of the Matter, by Roberto
Michel, Manufacturing Systems (A Cahners
publication) April 1997 or see
http//www.manufacturingsystems.com. Figure 1.7
from Ludwig-Becker, M., Electronics Quality
Management Handbook, McGraw-Hill, 1997, p.388
53Summary
- Implementation is not easy
- Takes a good leader
- Takes vision/perseverance
- Requires infrastructure
- Requires communication
- Much planning
- start immediately!
- Goes along well with ISO 9000 implementation
54Conclusion
- We
- agreed on the definition of a quality Management
System - Reviewed history of some contributors
- Review the 8 quality management Principles
- Summarize finding
- and so
55- Thank you very much
- I hope you enjoyed the presentation!
- Brenda Fisk,
- ASQ Canada Director
56Sources
- California Management Review, S549 Haas School of
Business 1900, Berkeley, CA 94720,
cmr_at_haas.berkeley.edu - ANSI/ISO/ASQ Q9004-2000, Quality Management
Systems--Guidelines for performance improvements,
American Society for Quality (ASQ), P.O. Box
3005 Milwaukee, WI 53201, 2000
http//standardsgroup.asq.org - The Informed Outlook, International Forum for
Management Systems, Inc., 15913 Edgewood
Dr.Montclair, Virginia 22026, www.informintl.com - ANSI/ASQC Q9001- 1994, Quality Management and
Quality Assurance Standards--Guidelines for
Selection and Use, ASQ, Milwaukee, WI, 1994 - Ludwig-Becker, M., Electronics Quality Management
Handbook, McGraw-Hill, 1998, becker2_at_worldnet.att.
net
57Sources
- Manufacturing Systems (A Cahners publication)
April 1997 or see http.www.manufacturingsystems.co
m - Quality Digest, 1350 Vista Way., P.O. Box 882,Red
Bluff, CA 96080, qualitydig_at_qof.com - Quality Management Principles Internet site
httpwww.wineasy.se/qmp/about.html and ISO 9004
July 1998, p.415-416 ISO/CDI ISO 9000-1998, p.
2 - Quality Progress, American Society of Quality,
611 E. Wisconsin Ave., P.O. Box 3005, Milwaukee,
WI 53201 - For Quality Function Deployment (QFD)Lou Cohens
book, How to Make QFD Work for You,
(Addison-Wesley, 1995) as well as the QFD
internet pagehttp.www//akao.larc.nasa.gov/dfc/qfd
.html