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Logistics Decision Analysis Methods Quality Function Deployment Part III Presented by Tsan-hwan Lin E-mail: percy_at_ccms.nkfust.edu.tw – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Logistics%20Decision%20Analysis%20Methods


1
Logistics Decision Analysis Methods
  • Quality Function Deployment Part III
  • Presented by Tsan-hwan Lin
  • E-mail percy_at_ccms.nkfust.edu.tw

2
Construction 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.

3
Q A
4
Technical Response - 1
  • Just as the Voice of the Customer had a
    qualitative and quantitative component (entered
    into the Customer Needs/Benefits section and the
    Planning Matrix section), so does the translation
    of the VOC into the Voice of the Developer.
  • The translation (SQCs) will be placed in
    qualitative form on the top and in quantitative
    form at the bottom.
  • In QFD parlance, we use the term Quality
    Characteristics to denote the customers needs
    (the VOC).
  • The translation into technical term is called
    Substitute Quality Characteristics because it
    represents a translation from the customers
    language into the organizations technical
    language.
  • Most commonly, developers call this language the
    Product Requirements (????) or the Design
    Requirements(????).

5
Technical Response - 2
  • The nature of Product Requirements varies widely.
  • Many organizations describe products and services
    in more than one language, or more than one set
    of terms (such as, Customer Requirements, Market
    Requirements, Top-Level Specifications, Detailed
    Specifications, or Technical Specifications, to
    name but a few).
  • There is often much confusion about the
    boundaries between various product description
    languages, and there is little or no
    standardization of the vocabulary of each
    language.
  • The ideal relationship between various product or
    service description languages is one in which the
    languages are defined and ordered according to
    how abstract, or solution-independent, each
    language is.
  • If one product description allows for many
    possible implementation, it is more abstract than
    another which clearly describes or implies one
    and only one implementation.

6
Technical Response - 3
  • One way that QFD practitioners describe various
    levels of abstraction is with Whats/Hows
    metaphor.
  • The language that appears on the left side of a
    QFD matrix represents What is desired. The
    language at the top of the matrix describes How
    the developers will respond to the What.
  • To get the most out of QFD, the language of the
    Whats should be distinctly more abstract than
    the language of the Hows.
  • Given a term that describes some aspect of a
    product, it is not always easy to decide what
    language it belongs to.
  • Examples VOC tinted glass in an automobile gt
    Needs privacy
  • (tinted glass gt What? How?)
  • A practical method for dealing with the problem
    of placing product requirements in the right
    place in QFD is to use the Voice of the Customer
    Table (VOCT).

7
Technical Response - 4
How
How
How
deploying
(more detailed)
What
What
What
  • Some generic formulation of SQC exist, notably
    one by Stuart Pugh.
  • Such formulations can be used as starter kits
    to get a set of SQCs established rapidly, and to
    aid teams in arriving at a complete set.
  • The generic formulations must of course be
    modified to meet the needs of the teams specific
    project.

8
Technical Response - 5
  • Main categories of VOCT Part 2 (Review)
  • Customer Needs (??????)
  • Substitute Quality Characteristics (???????????)
  • Functions (??)
  • Reliability Requirements (?????)
  • Target Values(???)
  • Languages for Substitute Quality Characteristics
  • (Top-Level) Performance Measurement(??????)
  • Product Function (????)
  • Product Subsystem (?????)
  • Process Steps (????)

9
Relationships
  • The Relationships section provides a mapping
    between Substitute Quality Characteristics on the
    one hand, and Customer Wants and Needs on the
    other.
  • Each Relationship cell represents a judgment,
    made by the development team, of the strength of
    the linkage between one SQC and one Customer
    Need.
  • The strength of linkage is called the impact of
    the SQC on the Customer Need.
  • There are four types of impacts.
  • Judging impact of performance measures
  • Judging impact of other SQCs
  • Meaning and choice of impact values

10
Determination of Priorities of SQCs
  • Once the development team has determined all the
    impacts or linkages, some simple arithmetic
    provides one the key results of QFD the relative
    contributions of the SQCs to overall customer
    satisfaction (the priorities of the SQCs).
  • Relationship of technical response X to customer
    satisfaction performance on need A Impact
    (value) of technical response X to need A
    Normalized raw weight for need A
  • Contribution of the SQC to overall customer
    satisfaction Sum of Relationships over all
    needs
  • The larger the contribution, the more influence
    the SQC has on customer satisfaction performance,
    and therefore the more important it is for the
    product or service to do well in the
    implementation of that SQC.
  • If the SQCs and their contributions are to be
    transferred to the left side of another matrix,
    it is useful to convert the contributions to
    normalized contributions.

11
Negative Impacts - 1
  • It happens occasionally that a SQC is found to
    have a negative impact on customer satisfaction
    performance for a certain attribute.
  • Such negative relationships can happen when an
    SQC has been selected for its positive impact on
    one or more attributes, but the attribute with
    which it is negatively linked has not yet been
    considered.
  • Example SQC (wider range of services) vs. Needs
    (transactions processed from a single source
    ltpositivegt simple of use ltnegativegt)
  • Negative impacts complicate QFD computations.
  • One way to solve this is to take negative value
    in computation.
  • Compute two sums algebraic (signed) sum of
    relationships and sum of the absolute values of
    the relationships
  • If the difference between the two is small,
    disregard the negative impact. If the difference
    is large, the team is being challenged to define
    one or more Technical Responses that provide
    positive impacts only to replace the one that
    contains negative impacts.

12
Negative Impacts - 2
  • An alternative way is,
  • Express all impacts on customer satisfaction
    performance as positive.
  • Study the negative impacts as they are reflected
    in the Technical Relationships (the roof) section
    of the HOQ.

13
Q A
14
Performance Measurements
  • Probably the most valuable language for SQC is
    the language of Performance Measurements.
  • These are measurements that the development team
    derives directly from customer needs.
  • They should be general enough to be applied to a
    product or service regardless of the specific
    implementation.
  • They may provide ideal measurements (1) for
    benchmarking competitive products or services and
    (2) for providing a solution-independent starting
    point for developing new concepts.
  • The standard method for developing Performance
    Measurements is to begin with the customer
    attributes (i.e., customer needs). For each
    customer attribute,
  • Define measures
  • Define measurements

15
Define Measures - 1
  • Defining measures is the process by which the
    development team establishes the relevance and
    the relationship between its measurements and
    customers perception.
  • In a nutshell, the team translates (or deploys)
    each customer need into a technical performance
    measure.
  • For each customer attribute, define one or a few
    technical performance measurements. Write these
    along the top of the HOQ. For each measurement,
    be sure that,
  • It can be measured while the product or service
    is being developed, and before it is shipped or
    deployed (i.e. it can be used as a predictor
    rather than a lagging indicator of customer
    satisfaction performance).
  • It can be controlled by the development team
    (i.e. the team should be able to make decisions
    that would effectively adjust the measurement up
    or down to meet expected customer satisfaction).

16
Define Measures - 2
  • To be properly defined, each performance
    measurement should be characterized in a few
    ways.
  • First, the units of the measurement(????)should
    be defined.
  • Examples voltage (in volts) time (in minutes)
    process complexity (number of steps) accuracy
    (defects per thousands of transactions)
  • Second, the direction of goodness(??????)should
    be defined.

17
Define Measures - 3
Desired Quality (Customer Need) Performance Measurement Direction of Goodness
Capacity Cubic feet of storage Larger the better
Price Dollars Smaller the better
Reliability Mean time between failure Larger the better
Speed Transactions per second Larger the better
BACK
18
Direction of Goodness - 1
  • The More the Better
  • The implied target is infinity.
  • Examples reliability (mean time between failure
    MTBF) fuel efficiency (miles traveled per
    gallon) bonding strength (pounds supported per
    square inch of adhesive area)
  • Development teams need both the aggressive
    objective (infinity) and an acceptable value for
    the measure.
  • If we view targets as infinity (instead of an
    acceptable value or tolerance(??)for the metric),
    we may see possibilities for increasing
    performance that we have not seen before.
  • Examples secondary storage capacity (1.4Mb
    floppy gt 125Mb USB gt 40Gb USB HD)
  • On the other hand, arbitrarily high numerical
    objectives are usually impossible or very
    impractical to achieve.

19
Direction of Goodness - 2
  • The Less the Better
  • The implied target is nominally zero.
  • Examples service quality (number of defects per
    thousands of transactions) process simplicity
    (number of steps) startup speed (time to launch
    a software application)
  • Sometimes in a case where the target is minus
    infinity, the measurement can be shifted so that
    zero become the lowest possible value.
  • Example refrigeration (absolute zero Celsius
    273o)

20
Direction of Goodness - 3
  • Target Is Best
  • The target is as close as possible to a nominal
    value with no variation around that value.
  • Examples exactness of fit (diameter of a steel
    rod) constancy of ideal temperature of a food
    freezer container is 4oF (-16oC).
  • The majority of top-level performance
    measurements in service applications will be one
    of the More the Better and Less the Better
    types.

21
Define Measurements
  • In this step, describe how each measurement will
    be performed.
  • Also, document all assumptions and comments about
    each measurement.
  • The omission of this step leads to much time lost
    during planning and later on during development.
  • This step operationalizes the definition of the
    measurement.
  • Measures without measurement cause confusion,
    because one person will inevitably have in mind a
    different measurement process than another.
  • Examples how to measure the startup time of a
    software (existing application, operating system,
    and RAM configuration assumptions may be
    different)
  • The detailed description of the measurement may
    guide developers about what to optimize. It also
    makes all discussion involving the measurement
    clearer and more efficient.

BACK
22
Product Functions - 1
  • It can be appropriate to use (product or process)
    functions (instead of performance measures) under
    the following circumstances
  • The product or service concept has already been
    established.
  • Especially, breakthrough ideas, at least at the
    strategic level, are not needed or are already
    incorporated into the concept.
  • In such a case there may be a list of possible
    extensions already expressed as features(??)
    that need to be prioritized.

23
Product Functions - 2
  • The development team lacks either the time or the
    interest to develop and prioritize performance
    measures.
  • Since prioritization of performance measures does
    not define a products or services features, the
    QFD process must be used at least once more to
    translate prioritized performance measures into
    prioritized features. This extra step is
    time-consuming and may not always be worth the
    effort.
  • Some development teams, especially software
    development teams, are unaccustomed to using
    performance measures in their product definition
    process.
  • While translating customer needs directly into
    functions lowers the chances for breakthrough
    ideas, teams that dont normally use performance
    measures may be better doing just such a
    translation.

24
Product Functions - 3
  • Many products and services have large numbers of
    capabilities or functions.
  • Depending on the level of detail the developers
    use to describe the functions, the OQ could be
    correspondingly small or large.
  • The developers can use the Affinity Diagram
    process to decide what level of functional
    details they want to work at.
  • The affinity diagram hierarchy of product or
    process function will have several levels.
  • Analyzing at the higher levels will present the
    advantage of quicker analysis and disadvantage of
    less depth in the analysis.
  • The HOQ at the strategic analysis level (i.e.,
    higher level) will indicate which few critical
    functional areas require more detailed planning.
    These areas can then be singled out, and the
    development team can analyze only those areas in
    a subsequent HOQ.

25
Product Functions Function Tree
  • As is true of all Affinity Diagrams, functions
    are organized from the bottom up.
  • Another approach, the Function Tree method (by
    Don Clausing), uses the Tree Diagram method and
    organizes the functions from the top down.
  • In this approach, the primary functions of the
    product or service are identified first. Each
    primary function is then broken down into
    subfunctions. Each subfunction is elaborated
    into finer detail until the development team has
    reached the level of detail it needs.
  • This top-down approach creates a function tree
    that helps the development team to focus on the
    most important functions of their product or
    service.
  • A Function Tree may be indistinguishable from an
    Affinity Diagram of functions, once it has been
    completed. However, the method creating it and
    the associated points of view are different.
  • To get the best of both methods, the team may
    consider first brainstorming functions and
    affinitizing them, then completing the structure
    with the Tree Diagram method by working from the
    top down.

26
Product Subsystems
  • Most commonly the QFD process translates from
  • the Voice of the Customer, to
  • Performance Measures, to
  • Functions, to
  • Product design.
  • Each successive pairs of topics (1 to 2, 2 to 3,
    3 to 4) represents the left and top,
    respectively, of a new matrix.
  • While the design elements of a product are not
    normally chosen to be the Substitute Quality
    Characteristics, there are occasions where the
    choice is appropriate.
  • Development team have also created Voice of the
    Customer to Product Design Matrices (1 to 4).
  • Such a matrix shows the development team how
    various components of the product design
    influence various customer satisfaction
    attributes.

27
Product Subsystems Tree Diagram
  • The most common method for representing the
    design is by use of the Tree Diagram.
  • First, identify the primary subsystems of the
    product.
  • Each of these subsystems and components can then
    be described at several levels of additional
    details, thus providing the development team with
    the multiple-level Tree Diagram it needs for QFD
    analysis.
  • Examples camera gt imaging, film management,
    viewfinding, and exposure time management
    subsystems gt lens, film plane, and lightproof
    compartment between lens and film (components)
    (for imaging subsystem)

28
Process Steps - 1
  • For teams developing new processes or services,
    the following choices for SQC are as applicable
    as for products performance measures and process
    steps.
  • Performance measures for services are much the
    same as for physical product.
  • Their values are generally under the control of
    the team that designs or lays out the processes
    underlying the service.
  • Each process will have one or more clearly
    defined inputs and outputs. Development teams
    can define performance measures of these
    processes, based on time, cost, or quality of
    result (i.e., inputs or outputs).
  • In QFD, the service development team can evaluate
    different process performance measures to
    determine which ones drive customer satisfaction
    performance most strongly.

29
Process Steps - 2
  • Services are delivered by processes. These
    processes may be conceived of at various levels
    of abstraction (just like a product).
  • While product subsystem analysis may not apply to
    services, a closely related method of analyzing
    services and processes (i.e., process steps) does
    apply.
  • Example telephone customer support
  • Anyone who has analyzed the telephone customer
    support will know that beneath the simple
    (high-level view) process lies an enormously
    complex structure for handling customer requests.
  • This structure includes many decision points and
    subprocesses at each of the three main steps. It
    also includes tools and technology to support
    these decision points and steps.

30
Process Steps vs. Performance Measures
Performance measures Process steps
Advantages Advantages
Generally solution-free, providing stronger likelihood of creative solutions. Measurements can be used to manage the processes. Concrete, easily envisioned. Can be used in the HOQ at the level of detail appropriate to the teams needs.
Disadvantages Disadvantages
Difficult to understand or to create in organizations where measurement is not the norm. (i.e., service) Expensive to implement (cost-benefit issues aside). Incomplete definitions of process steps can lead to confusion during QFD. Focus on concrete process steps too early reduces the chances for breakthrough solutions.
31
Telephone Customer Support - 1
High-level view of the Process
Route incoming calls to Customer Service Associate
Classify customer request
Respond to customer request
32
Telephone Customer Support - 2
33
Relationships
34
Types of Impacts - 1
  • For most QFD activities, the linkage is
    considered to be positive, that is, if the SQC is
    moved in the direction of goodness, customer
    satisfaction is assumed to increased.
  • Customer satisfaction performance with respect to
    the need is not linked to the SQC.
  • For changes of any sort (, large or small, in the
    amount or degree) of the SQC, no noticeable
    change in the customer satisfaction performance
    of that need is predicted (by the development
    team).
  • Customer satisfaction performance with respect to
    the need is possibly linked to the SQC.
  • For relatively large changes in the amount of the
    SQC, little or no change in customer satisfaction
    performance of that need is predicted.

35
Types of Impacts - 2
  • Customer satisfaction performance with respect to
    the need is moderately linked to the SQC.
  • For relatively large changes in the amount of the
    SQC, noticeable but not major changes in customer
    satisfaction performance of that need are
    predicted.
  • Customer satisfaction performance with respect to
    the need is strongly linked to the SQC.
  • For relatively small changes in the amount of the
    SQC, significant changes in customer satisfaction
    performance of that need are predicted.

36
Types of Impacts - 3
Symbol Meaning Most common numerical value Other values
(or, ?, b) Not linked 0
? Possibly linked 1
? Moderately linked 3
? Strongly linked 9 10, 7, 5
37
Judging Impact of Performance Measures
  • The Performance Measure is the ideal SQC for
    making impact judgment.
  • The impact can be represented as the mathematical
    relationship between the two variables
  • Customer Satisfaction A f (Performance Measure
    X)
  • The Performance Measure can be thought of as a
    independent continuous variable, whereas customer
    satisfaction performance of any need is a
    dependent continuous variable.
  • This assumes a monotonic relationship between the
    two variables.
  • It often, also assumes that the relationship is
    linear.
  • The disproportionate, nonlinear behavior (SQC)
    type cannot be easily modeled in QFD. The way to
    handle it is to treat such SQCs as if they were
    linear (until setting Target Values in section F).

38
Monotonic and Linear Relationship
  • Monotonic As the performance Measure moves in
    the direction of goodness, customer satisfaction
    performance continues to improve.
  • Its a good idea to try to define Performance
    Measures that do provide a monotonic relationship
    with customer satisfaction performance.
  • Linear As the Performance Measure moves in the
    direction of goodness, customer satisfaction
    performance continues to improve as the same
    rate.
  • With Kano model, the relationships for Delighters
    and Dissatisfiers are not linear.

39
Judging Impact of Other SQCs
  • It is generally more difficult for development
    teams to judge impacts when the SQCs are not
    measurable.
  • Typically development teams think of
    nonmeasurable SQCs as either present or
    absent.
  • That is, try to judge whether customer
    satisfaction performance will be high if the SCQ
    is present, and low if the SQC is absent.
  • In fact, it is generally unrealistic and
    counterproductive to think of product features or
    service elements in this binary fashion.
  • Example SQC (File OPEN command) vs. Need (Can
    mix material from many documents) gt refined SQCs
    (stripped down OPEN command deluxe OPEN command)

40
Impact Values
  • Over time, QFD facilitators felt the need to
    create a stronger contrast between strong and
    the other impacts, so that strong impacts would
    have more influence on the final prioritizations.
  • Some early QFD applications in the U.S. used 5,
    3, 1, 0 for the impacts from strong to none.
  • The greater the ratio between the values assigned
    to strong and moderate, the less likely it is
    that an SQC with only moderates assigned to it
    will have a technical importance greater than an
    SQC with at least one high. (i.e., 9, 3, 1, 0)
  • There is no specific basis for any of the
    choices.
  • The impact values simply provide a way for the
    development team to express its judgment on the
    relative impacts of SQCs on customer needs.
  • The SQCs can then be differentiated in terms of
    their overall contribution to customer
    satisfaction performance.

41
Priorities (Contributions)
42
Contribution Calculation
Technical Response X Technical Response Y Raw Weight Normalized Raw Weight
Need A 15 .43
Need B 20 .57

Contributions 5.6 0.4 35
Normalized Contributions .93 .07 6.0
?
3.9
0.4
?
?
?
1.7
0
?
?
Raw Weight Total
Contributions Total
?
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