Title: Logistics Decision Analysis Methods
1Logistics Decision Analysis Methods
- Quality Function Deployment Part IV
- Presented by Tsan-hwan Lin
- E-mail percy_at_ccms.nkfust.edu.tw
2Construction of the HOQ
- The first section of the HOQ to be constructed
will almost always be the Customer Needs/Benefits
section. - Sections are also referred to as rooms.
- The Planning Matrix (also, Preplanning Matrix) is
often the second section to e constructed. - The third section of the HOQ to complete is the
Technical Response (also, Corporate Expectations)
section. - The fourth step is to complete the Relationship
section of the HOQ. - The fifth and sixth steps in completing the HOQ
are Competitive Benchmarking and Target Setting. - The seventh and usually final step in completing
the HOQ is to fill in the Technical Correlations
Matrix. - This part is also referred to as roof.
3Q A
4Technical Correlation - Introduction
- QFD is a key to concurrent engineering because it
facilitates team members communicating with each
other. - The Technical Correlations section will show us
for which technical areas close communication and
collaboration are important, and for which it is
not. - It will also show us where design bottlenecks may
occur, and therefore where design breakthroughs
are necessary. - The section is probably the most underexploited
part of the House of Quality. Few QFD
applications use it, yet its potential benefits
are great.
5Technical Correlation Meaning (1)
- The Technical Correlations section maps
interrelationships and interdependencies between
Substitute Quality Characteristics. - The section consists of that half of a matrix
that lies above the matrixs diagonal. - Very often, especially after a technical concept
has been decided upon and is somewhat understood,
the developers will be able to see that as SQCx
is moved in the direction of goodness, SQCy will
be influenced, either in its direction of
goodness or in the opposite direction. - The degree and direction of influence can have a
serious impact on the development effort. - Example For an automobile, increased BTU rating
of an automobile air conditioner (SQCx, more is
better) may have a negative impact on automobile
weight (SQCy, less is better). - Notice how the SQCs are somewhat solution
dependent (higher BTU rating gt heavier
equipment). - Had this incompatibility not been discovered
during the product planning phase, dollars will
be wasted in preliminary development work.
6Technical Correlation Meaning (2)
- In QFD we usually identify five degrees of
technical impact. - These symbols carry no directional connotation.
- It is more constructive to indicate a direction
of impact, since a developer can often make a
strong argument for impact of SQCx upon SQCy, but
not impact of SQCy upon SQCx.
?? Strong positive impact
? Moderate positive impact
ltblankgt No impact
X Moderate negative impact
XX Strong negative impact
?? Strong positive impact, left to right
? Moderate positive impact, right to left
ltblankgt No impact
X Moderate negative impact, right to left
XX Strong negative impact, left to right
7Roof of the House of Quality
- Example Moving SQC 1 in the direction of
goodness has a moderate negative impact on SQC
5s direction of goodness.
- Direction of goodness
- ? More is better
- ? Less is better
- ? Target is best
8Responsibility and Communication
- One of the most important benefits of the
Technical Correlations is to indicate which teams
or individuals must communicate with each other
during the development process. - One method for making this information more
explicit is to construct a Responsibility Matrix
(in addition to using roof directly) . - This matrix would display the SQCs along the
left, and the possible responsible teams along
the top. A cell in the matrix would indicate the
relationship of the team to the SQC. - A good management practice is to assign
responsibility for an objective to a single
individual or a single organization. Therefore,
the responsibility matrix would have a single ?
in each row.
? Primary responsibility
? Supporting role
? Should be informed
9Correlations Network
- An alternative but equivalent representation of
the correlations in the roof is the Relationship
Network Diagram (or, Relationship Digraph). - In this diagram, the SQCs are represented by the
circles, and the SQC affected is shown by the
arrows connecting the circles. - The degree and direction of influence is shown by
the and indications written alongside the arrows. - SQC with arrows emanating from it only is called
the driver on the sense that it influences other
SQCs but is not in turn influenced by any SQCs. - SQC with incoming arrows only is called
indicator. It is usually not worthwhile to
invest resources in it.
10Technical Benchmarks Introduction - 1
- No organization would invest in the development
of a product or service without knowing enough
about the competition to be sure that their
design is competitive. - Only the most important SQCs (i.e., with highest
priorities) will be benchmarked and target-set. - A critical question is how should the targets be
set? How aggressive do they need to be? - To a great extent, development teams can be
guided by the competitions performance as well
as their own performance (on the most important
SQCs) (to make crucial strategic decisions to
match, exceed, or concede).
11Introduction - 2
- In general, competitive benchmarking is the
process of examining the competitions product or
service according to specified standards, and
comparing it to ones own product or service,
with the objective of deciding how to improve
ones own product or service. - The QFD process provides the basis for strategic
competitive benchmarking (i.e., examining only
those highest-ranking SQCs). - In the process, the language of Substitute
Quality Characteristics and the definition of
direction of goodness become important
determiners of the work. - Only two types of SQCs, performance measures and
product functions, will be examined in the
benchmarking process here.
12Target Setting - 1
- Setting targets is of course a matter of greatest
interest to product and service developers. - Obviously, setting SQC targets will drive all
subsequent development activity. - Development teams set targets for themselves
whether or not they use QFD to plan their
project. - It (i.e., setting targets) takes up the QFD
process after the development team has determined
the most important SQCs and has benchmarked the
competition.
13Target Setting - 2
- Some of the linkages in the Relationships section
might not be linear, because the associated SQCs
may be Dissatisfiers or Delighters. - The target-setting stage is a good time to deal
with these Kano classifications. - For those SQCs classified as potential
Delighters, the team must decide how aggressively
it can afford to be in target setting. - There is relatively little downside risk in
setting a conservative goal customers will not
notice the absence of a Delighter. However, the
potential gaining of setting a goal that beats
the competition is high. - For those SQCs classified as Dissatisfiers, the
team cannot afford not to be aggressive. - For those SQCs classified as Satisfiers, the team
can expect that the better they perform on the
SQCs, the greater the customer satisfaction
performance will be for the linked customer
needs. (Focus of the following discussion)
14Target Setting - 3
- We will look (1) at setting numeric targets for
SQCs that have been expressed as performance
measures, and (2) at setting function or feature
(nonnumeric) targets for SQCs that have been
expressed as features. - Numeric Targets
- Comparison with Competitions
- Mathematical Modeling
- Nonnumeric Targets
15Q A
16Matrix above the Diagonal
- The SQCs are arrayed along the top and side.
- The matrix is then rotated 45 degrees, and since
the SQCs are already available along the top (of
the HOQ), they double as the labels for both the
rows and the columns (of the roof), making the
row and column labels unnecessary.
17Responsibility Matrix
Organization A Organization B Organization C Organization D Organization E Organization F Organization G
SQC 1 ? ? ?
SQC 2 ? ?
SQC 3 ? ? ? ?
SQC 4 ? ?
SQC 5 ? ?
- Because changes in SQC 1 strongly affect SQC 4,
the organizations responsible for SQC 4
(Organization E) must be informed of progress on
SQC 1 (by Organization A).
18Relationship Network Diagram
X
? ?
XX
?
? ?
19Benchmarking Performance Measures
- If the SQCs were defined as performance measures,
the benchmarking process becomes one of measuring
the competitions performance and ones own
performance in terms of these measures. - To the extent that the performance measures were
defined independently of the design of the
product or service, the benchmarking process
provides ideal apple-to-apple comparative data
between the two. - The results of measuring the two products or
services can be laid down side by side (one above
the other in the HOQ) and evaluated at a glance.
20Benchmarking Functionality
- If the SQCs were defined in a more
solution-specific manner, with product or service
functions explicitly defined, the comparisons
must be much more subjective. - One way to deal with differences in functionality
(designed in each product/service) is to
decompose the high-ranking SQCs into sub-SQCs
(i.e., lower levels of the Function Tree or the
Affinity Diagram) and compare these sub-SQCs to
the competitions. - The number or percentage of subfunctions that
correspond (to the competitions subfunctions)
provides valuable numerical information (such as,
where the competition provides more
functionality, or how the competitions design
solves the same problem differently from the
development teams design).
21Comparison with Competitive Benchmarks
22QFD and Target Setting
- With QFD, the targets have a context(????)
- They (i.e., targets) are related to customer
needs, to the competitions performance, and to
the organizations current performance. (section
A and B) - The rank ordering of the targets is based on the
systematic analysis done in the Relationships
section (and all the prior QFD analysis).
(section C and D) - The rank ordering process is traceable, because
all the decisions affecting the rank ordering are
recorded in the QFD matrix. - The QFD process itself provides no cookbook
approach for setting targets for SQCs. - The most vital information not explicit visible
in the HOQ is the business know-how and technical
expertise of the development team. However, the
HOQ provides much of the strategic information
needed, laid out in a compact form.
23Comparison with Competition - 1
- One approach to setting targets is similar to the
process of setting customer satisfaction
performance goals in the Planning Matrix. - The primary inputs to target value setting of
SQCs are - Rank order of substitute Quality Characteristics
(Priorities) - Competitions technical performance (Competitive
Benchmarks) - The development teams products technical
performance (Own Performance) - The primary inputs to goal setting for customer
satisfaction performance in the Planning Matrix
are - Importance of customer attribute to customer
- Our current satisfaction performance rating
- Competitions satisfaction performance rating.
24Comparison with Competition - 2
- The line of reasoning for setting targets is also
similar (to that used in setting goals in the
Planning Matrix). - Starting with the highest ranking SQC, determine
the strength of the development teams position
relative to that of the competition. - Based on the teams knowledge of the difficulty
of performing well on the SQC, the team can
decide whether to aim to do better than the
competition, to match the competition, or to
concede technical leadership to the competition. - As a general rule, the goal should be set for
technical performance that exceeds the best in
the world for those SQCs that matter the most to
overall customer satisfaction.
25Mathematical Modeling - 1
- While QFD is certainly not a precise mathematical
model of the relationship between technical
performance and customer satisfaction
performance, a little bit of simple mathematics
could serve as a guide to the development team in
setting targets. - In the case of a SQC for which Less Is Better
- Equation
- A similar but slightly more complex relationship
can be modeled in the case of Target Best (TB) - Equation
26Mathematical Modeling - 2
- Mathematical model provides some insight for
setting the target for a SQC, but care must be
exercised in its use. - There is no guarantee that the relationship
between any SQC and the corresponding customer
attribute satisfaction performance is precisely
linear or precisely quadratic. - Customer satisfaction performance for any
attribute is usually not the function of a single
SQC, but of several SQCs. - Since there are no reliable multivariate models
for setting target values in QFD, a reasonable
approach could be the following - Treat each SQC as if it were the only SQC
contributing to customer satisfaction performance
of an attribute. - Use the simple models to create a first estimate
of an appropriate target value. - Repeat this analysis for all the customer
satisfaction attributes that this SQC is linked
to. This creates multiple target values for the
same SQC. - Choose the most aggressive of these target values.
27Satisfaction Vs. Technical Performances - LTB
- denotes customer satisfaction performance on a
customer need as a function of a SQC p of the
type Less The Better - denotes customer satisfaction performance with
the best product in the market (by market
research) - denotes customer satisfaction performance with
the development teams current product (by market
research) - denotes technical performance of a SQC
- denotes technical performance of a SQC with the
best product in the market (by competitive
benchmarking) - denotes technical performance of a SQC with the
development teams current product (based on
laboratory measurement)
sLTB(p) sworld-class s0 p pworld-class p0
28Satisfaction Vs. Technical Performances - TB
29Relationship Section
SQC U SQC V SQC W SQC X SQC Y SQC Z
Attribute A ? ? ?
Attribute B ? ?
Attribute C ? ? ?
Attribute D ?
Attribute E ? ? ? ?
30Nonnumerical Targets - 1
- Setting targets for SQCs defined as features or
processes is obviously more difficult than
dealing with numbers. - A number is one-dimensional, but features and
processes are multidimensional and multifaceted. - There are two helpful ways of thinking about
targets for nonnumerical SQCs the continuum
model and the subfeature model.
31Continuum Model
- In the continuum model, we may imagine the SQCs
to be on a continuum. - This continuum could have as its endpoints
stripped down and deluxe. - The development team could judge where on the
continuum their current offering lies, and where
the best in the world lies. - To clarify these judgments, they would do well to
make their subjective judgments as objective as
possible by documenting - The differences between Best in world and
Deluxe - The differences between Development teams and
Best in world - The differences between Development teams and
Target
32Continuum Model - Figure
Development teams
Best in world
Target
Deluxe
Stripped down
33Subfeature Model
- By using the subfeature model, the development
team can explode each feature to be targeted into
its component subfeatures. - Each subfeature could be evaluated according to
the continuum model, or could be exploded into
lower-level subfeatures. - Targets could be set by continuum, where Best in
world and Development teams subfeatures line
up, and by identifying subfeatures to be added,
where the features dont line up.
Development teams Best in world Target
Subfeature a 7 7 8
Subfeature b 5 4
Subfeature c 6 8 8
Subfeature d 3 3
Subfeature f 8
Subfeature g 6 6
Outperform
Sustain
Concede