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Six Sigma Methodologies: Overview and Application to Supply Management

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Title: Six Sigma Methodologies: Overview and Application to Supply Management


1
Six Sigma MethodologiesOverview and Application
to Supply Management
  • Kimball Bullington, Ph.D.
  • Professor
  • Middle Tennessee State University

2
Where are we going?
  • A Brief History of Quality
  • Six Sigma
  • Six Sigma Revival
  • Applying Six Sigma to Supply

3
America Re-discovers Deming
4
and Juran
5
Rediscovering the Gurus
  • Deming
  • Emphasis on Statistical Control
  • 14 Points for Management
  • Juran
  • Quality Planning and Analysis
  • Managerial Breakthrough
  • Quality Control Handbook

6
Standards and Awards
  • ISO 9000
  • Minimum standards
  • Does your system conform to the standard?
  • Does your practice conform to your system?
  • Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award
  • Provides some guidance
  • Examples for others to follow
  • Motorola an early winner

7
The Process
  • Over time, the output of any process shows a
    certain amount of natural or inherent variability
  • This is also referred to as random variability
  • It is due to countless minor factors and is
    assumed to be out of managements control in the
    short run, i.e., you have to live with it

8
The Process
  • The distribution of a process output has a mean,
    ?, and a standard deviation, ? it can have a
    wide variety of shapes

Processdistribution
9
Process Capability
  • When selecting a process to perform an operation,
    the inherent variability of process output should
    be compared to the range or tolerances allowed by
    the designers specifications

10
Process Capability
process distribution
In other words, is the process capable of
producing the item within specifications?
11
Statistics
12
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21
Where are we going?
  • A Brief History of Quality
  • Six Sigma
  • Six Sigma Revival
  • Applying Six Sigma to Supply

22
Statistics LiteCentered 3s Process
LSL
USL
23
Statistics Lite Centered 3s Process
LSL
USL
s
24
Statistics Lite Centered 3s Process
Non-conforming Product 1,300 DPMO
LSL
USL
s
25
Statistics Lite Centered 3s Process
Non-conforming Product 2,600 DPMO
LSL
USL
s
26
Statistics Lite Shifted 3s Process
LSL
USL
s
1.5 s mean shift
27
Statistics Lite Shifted 3s Process
Non-conforming Product 66,800 DPMO
LSL
USL
s
1.5 s mean shift
28
Statistics Lite Shifted 3s Process
  • Cost to your company 15-30 of sales

Non-conforming Product 66,800 DPMO
LSL
USL
s
1.5 s mean shift
29
Cost of Poor Quality
5-8 of Sales
Inspection
Overtime
Downtime
Rework
Rejects
15-22 of Sales
Lost sales
Long cycle times
Cost of Capital
Late delivery
(less obvious)
Redundant Operations
Lost Opportunity
Inaccurate Reports
Expediting costs
Excessive Planning
Lost Customer Loyalty
30
Statistics Lite Centered 6s Process
31
Statistics Lite Shifted 6s Process
LSL
USL
s
1.5 s mean shift
32
Statistics Lite Shifted 6s Process
Non-conforming Product 3.4 DPMO
LSL
USL
s
1.5 s mean shift
33
Where are we going?
  • A Brief History of Quality
  • Six Sigma
  • Six Sigma Revival
  • Applying Six Sigma to Supply

34
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35
Six Sigma Breakthrough Strategy
  • Define
  • Measure
  • Analyze
  • Improve
  • Control

36
Define - Selecting Projects
  • The project must relate to customer satisfaction
  • The projects results must reduce defects by some
    threshold amount
  • The project should achieve some threshold of cost
    savings.

37
Criteria for Project Selection
  • Does it involve recurring events?
  • Is the scope narrow?
  • Do measures exist?
  • Do you have control of the process?

38
Define Phase, Continued
  • If these criteria are met then
  • 1) Identify the customers involved, both
    internal and external to the function.
  • 2) Find out what the customers CTs are
    (Critical to Quality, Critical to Delivery,
    Critical to Cost, etc).
  • 3) Define the project scope and goals.
  • 4) Map the process to be improved.

39
Define Phase - Tools
  • Project Charter
  • Stakeholder Analysis
  • Affinity Diagram
  • SIPOC
  • Voice of the Customer
  • CT Tree
  • Kano Model
  • SWOT Analysis
  • Cause-and-Effect Diagrams
  • Supplier Segmentation
  • Project Management

40
Charter
  • Problem statement
  • Business case
  • Goals, milestones, success criteria,
    deliverables
  • Project scope / boundaries
  • Roles responsibilities
  • Stakeholder support / approval needed

41
Business Case
Potential Improvement Potential Impact
Improve quality Reduce cost, inventory
Improve OTD Shortages ?, inventory ?
Select better suppliers Q, , LT, reduce inventory
Implement rating system Improve supply efficiency, better suppliers
Reduce price Reduce cost
42
Define Phase - Tools
  • Project Charter
  • Stakeholder Analysis
  • Affinity Diagram
  • SIPOC
  • Voice of the Customer
  • CT Tree
  • Kano Model
  • SWOT Analysis
  • Cause-and-Effect Diagrams
  • Supplier Segmentation
  • Project Management

43
Define Outputs
  • Once completed, the Define Phase should answer
    the following questions
  • 1) Who is the customer?
  • 2) What matters?
  • 3) What is the scope?
  • 4) What defect am I trying to reduce?
  • 5) What are the improvement targets?

44
The Measure Phase
  • Purpose
  • To collect current performance of the process
    identified in the Define phase
  • This data is used to determine sources of
    variation and serve as a benchmark to validate
    improvements

45
Measurements
  • Benefits of having good data need to outweigh the
    costs of getting it
  • What does this measure do for the Project?

46
The Measure Phase
  • Upon completion of the measure phase, Project
    Teams will have
  • A plan for collecting data that specifies the
    type of data needed and techniques for collecting
    the data
  • A validated measurement system that ensures the
    accuracy and consistency of the data collected
  • A sufficient data set for problem analysis

47
Measure - Key Concepts
  • Measurement
  • Variation
  • Exists naturally in any process and is the reason
    Six Sigma projects are undertaken
  • Data
  • Data Collection Plan
  • Measurement System Analysis
  • Ensures measurement techniques are reproducible
    and repeatable

48
Recording Measurements
  • 3 stages
  • The output stage
  • These tell how well customer needs are being met
  • Parts of the process
  • These are taken at critical points in the process
  • The input stage
  • These evaluate contributions to the process that
    are turned into value for the customer

49
Recording Measurements
  • Output Stage
  • Shortages
  • Line shutdowns
  • Quality discrepant material
  • Material price variances
  • Internal customer survey

50
Recording Measurements
  • Parts of the process
  • Project milestones
  • Supplier ship on time performance
  • Supplier OTD
  • Supplier internal throughput yield
  • Supplier suggested cost reductions

51
Recording Measurements
  • The input stage
  • Supplier base size
  • Buyers with degrees
  • of spend covered by LTCs
  • of spend from reverse auction
  • Supplier FMEAs

52
Determining Data Type
  • What do we want to know?
  • Review materials developed during design phase
  • What characteristics do we need to learn more
    about?

53
Data Collection Plan
  • What data will be collected?
  • Why is it needed?
  • Who is responsible?
  • How will it be collected?
  • When will it be collected?
  • Where will it be collected?

54
Measurement System Analysis
  • After Data Collection Plan is complete, it needs
    to be verified before actual data is collected
  • MSA is performed on a regular basis
  • MSA ends when a high level of confidence is
    reached that the data collected accurately
    depicts the variation in the process

55
Analyze Phase
  • The analyze phase allows the Project Team to
    target improvement opportunities by taking a
    closer look at the data.

56
Analyze Phase
  • Capability Analysis - establishing current
    performance level
  • Graphical Analysis - a visual indication of
    performance using graphs
  • Root Cause Analysis developing a hypothesis
    about the causes of variation
  • Root Cause Verification verifying that the
    planned action will generate the desired
    improvement

57
Elements of Improve Phase
  • Generate Improvement Alternatives
  • Create a Should Be Process Map
  • Conduct FMEA
  • Perform Cost/Benefit Analysis
  • Pilot
  • Validate Improvement

58
FMEA(Failure Mode Effects Analysis)
  • Recognizes potential failure and the effects of
    that failure
  • Identifies actions that would reduce chance of
    failure
  • Documents the process

59
Generating Improvement Alternatives
  • Define Improvement Criteria
  • Generate Possible Improvements
  • Evaluate Improvements and Make Best Choice

60
Pilot
  • Benefits of Pilot
  • Determine best way to implement the improvement
  • Lowers risk of failure
  • Increases opportunity for feedback
  • Obtain buy-in from affected personnel
  • Provides opportunity to revise the improvement
    before full implementation

61
Review of Implementation Phase
  • Generate Improvement Alternatives
  • Create a Should Be Process Map
  • Conduct FMEA
  • Perform Cost/Benefit Analysis
  • Pilot
  • Validate Improvement

62
Control PhaseWhy is it important?
  • The Control Phase begins as the project team
    tries to eliminate errors by Mistake Proofing
    their improvement alternative.
  • Mistake Proofing attempts to eliminate the
    opportunities for error.

63
Control PhaseWhy is it important?
  • Mistake Proofing tries to make it impossible for
    an operation to be performed incorrectly, and/or
    correct errors before they are passed to the next
    worker, where they might become a defect.

64
Control Phase 2
  • During the Control Phase the Project team will
  • 1) Develop a plan to make sure the measurement
    system will remain relevant over the long term.
  • 2) Establish Control Charts the process owner
    will use to manage the process.
  • 3) Create a Reaction Plan to address situations
    that might cause the process to move out of
    control.

65
Control Phase 3
  • The Control Phase ends when
  • 1) Standard Operating Procedures have been
    updated.
  • 2) Process Operators, the people who do the
    job, have been trained for the new process.
  • Once completed, the Control Phase should sustain
    the gains the project made while implementing
    ongoing process controls.

66
Control Phase 4
  • When is a project complete?
  • 1) When other Black Belts can see the ongoing
    controls work
  • 2) When the customer sees the results
  • 3) When the business sees the money.

67
Six Sigma Six Sigma People
  • Executives
  • Champions (deployment, project)
  • Master Black Belts
  • Black Belts
  • Green Belts

68
Where are we going?
  • A Brief History of Quality
  • Six Sigma
  • Six Sigma Revival
  • Applying Six Sigma to Supply

69
Six Sigma Supply Chain
  • DMAIC
  • Using Six Sigma momentum
  • Cost The Business Case for Supply
  • Black Belts for Supply

70
Stakeholder Analysis
People or Groups People or Groups People or Groups
Level of Commitment Buy Mfg Eng
Enthusiastic Support
Help it work
Compliant
Hesitant X
Indifferent
Uncooperative X
Opposed
Hostile X
71
SIPOC Example
Suppliers Inputs Processes Outputs Customers
Ops Mgt Supplier Perf. Supplier Evaluation Survey Ops Mgt
Buyers Complaints Supplier Evaluation Rating system Buyers
Engrg. Tech Reqts Supplier Evaluation Improved Supplier Perform. Engineering
Mfg. Rating system Supplier Evaluation Commit. to suppliers Mfg.
Suppliers Supplier Complaints Supplier Evaluation Commit. to suppliers Suppliers
72
SWOT Analysis
Positive Negative
Internal Strengths Weaknesses
External Opportunities Threats
73
Supply Base Characterization
High
Critical 2 Special Situations
Critical 1 Long-term Relationship
Risk
Non-Critical 2 Transactional
Non-Critical 1 Contractual
Low
High
Annual Spend
74
Six Sigma Supply Chain
  • Training
  • DMAIC Supply Strategy
  • Commitment

75
References
  • Books
  • Six Sigma Pocket Guide (Rath Strongs)
  • The Black Belt Memory Jogger (GOAL / QPC)
  • Six Sigma (Harry and Schroeder)
  • Implementing Six Sigma (Breyfogle)
  • The Six Sigma Way Team Fieldbook (Pande, et al)
  • The Vision of Six Sigma A roadmap for
    breakthrough (Harry)
  • Web sites
  • www.isixsigma.com
  • www.ge.com/sixsigma
  • www.asq.org
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