Title: Quality Systems in United States
1Quality Systems in United States
- Peter Ping Liu, Ph D, PE, CQE, OCP and CSIT
- Professor and Coordinator of Graduate Programs
- School of Technology
- Eastern Illinois University
- Charleston, IL 61920
2Evolution of Manufacturing
3Principles Remain UnchangedBuild and Sustain
Total Quality Systems/Organizations
4Customers are the focus of any organization
Customers Satisfaction
5Leadership provides organizational foundation for
success
Leadership
Customers
Customers Satisfaction
6Total Quality System Put it Altogether
Employee Motivation
Leadership
Customers
Customers Satisfaction
Partnership
Continuous Improvement
Performance Measure
7ISO 9000 StandardsQuality Management Systems
- ISO 90002000--fundamentals and vocabulary
- ISO 90012000--requirements
- ISO 9004 2000guidelines for performance
improvement
8ISO 14000Environmental Management System
- Organizational Evaluation Standards
- Product Evaluation Standards
9Sector-Specific StandardsAS 9100
- Developed by Society of Automotive Engineers
(SAE) for aerospace industry (1997). - Unified requirements of NASA, DOD and FAA.
- Endorsed by International Aerospace Quality Group
(2001)
10Sector-Specific StandardsTL 9000
- Developed by Quality Excellence for Suppliers of
Telecommunications Forum - Book 1 Common TL 9000 Requirements (QSR)
- Book 2 Common TL 9000 Measurements (QSM)
11Sector-Specific StandardsMedical Devices
- ISO 13485 13488 Quality systems for medical
device manufacturers under the medical device
directives. Used in conjunction with the ISO
9000. - FDA Regulatory and quality standards (GMP)
12Automotive IndustryFrom QS9000 to ISO/TS 16949
- QS-9000 has been extended by 3 years, and will
expire on December 14, 2006 - The ISO 90001994 standard embedded within
QS-9000 expired December 15, 2003.
13TS 16949 Eight Principles
- Customer focus
- Leadership
- Involvement of people
- Process approach
- System approach to management
- Continual improvement
- Factual approach to decision making
- Mutually beneficial supplier relationships
14Continual Improvement Cycle
Management Responsibility
R E Q U I R E M E N T S
S A T I S F A C T I O N
C U S T O M E R
C U S T O M E R
Resource Management
Measurement, Analysis Improvement
C.I.
Product Realization
Inputs
Outputs
Product
15Whats New (and Different)
- Based on ISO 90012000 not ISO 90011994
- Greater focus on the customer and customer
satisfaction - New focus on the Process approach vs. the
elemental approach - Clarification of requirements for continual
improvement
16New and Different (Cont.)
- Greater emphasis upon the role of top management
- Measurable quality objectives
- Reduced emphasis on documented procedures
17New and Diff. (Cont.)
- Modification in the purpose of internal audits
- Use the Deming Cycle of Plan, Do, Check, and
Act as a basic methodology - Process control and improvement is expanded from
product to include all activities of the
organization.
18The Process Approach
Purpose
Objectives
Risks
Inputs
Outputs
Process
- Stakeholder Wants Needs
- Specifications
- Schedule/Timing
- Market Data
- Industry Trends
- Economic Conditions
Results
19Contrast between QS-9000 TS-169492002
TS-169492002 (Process Based)
QS-9000 (Procedure Based)
- Processes Are
- Driven by desired output
- Managed
- May be completed by different departments
with the same objectives - Flow to conclusion
- Satisfy the stakeholders
- Transform inputs into outputs
- Dynamic
- Procedures Are
- Driven by task completion
- Issued
- May be completed by different departments
with different objectives - Are segmented
- Satisfy the standard
- Define the sequence of steps to perform a
task - Static