Title: Evolution of Total Quality Principles and Other Quality Gurus
1Evolution of Total Quality Principles and
Other Quality Gurus
2Dr. W. Edwards Deming
- Dr. W. Edwards Deming is known as the father of
the Japanese post-war industrial revival and was
regarded by many as the leading quality guru in
the United States.
3- Trained as a statistician, his expertise was used
during World War II to assist the United States
in its effort to improve the quality of war
materials.
"We have learned to live in a world of mistakes
and defective products as if they were necessary
to life. It is time to adopt a new philosophy in
America. (Deming)
4Demings System of Profound Knowledge
- The prevailing style of management must undergo
transformation. A system cannot understand
itself. The transformation requires a view from
outside.
5- The first step is transformation of the
individual. This transformation is discontinuous.
It comes from understanding of the system of
profound knowledge. The individual, transformed,
will perceive new meaning to his life, to events,
to numbers, to interactions between people.
6- Once the individual understands the system of
profound knowledge, he will apply its principles
in every kind of relationship with other people.
He will have a basis for judgment of his own
decisions and for transformation of the
organizations that he belongs to.
7- The individual, once transformed, will
- Set an example
- Be a good listener, but will not compromise
- Continually teach other people and
- Help people to pull away from their current
practices and beliefs and move into the new
philosophy without a feeling of guilt about the
past
8- Deming advocated that all managers need to have
what he called a System of Profound Knowledge,
consisting of four parts - Appreciation of a system understanding the
overall processes involving suppliers, producers,
and customers (or recipients) of goods and
services.
9- Knowledge of variation the range and causes of
variation in quality, and use of statistical
sampling in measurements - Theory of knowledge the concepts explaining
knowledge and the limits of what can be known - Knowledge of psychology concepts of human
nature.
10Demings 14 Points
- Constancy of purposeCreate constancy of purpose
for continual improvement of products and service
to society, allocating resources to provide for
long range needs rather than only short term
profitability, with a plan to become competitive,
to stay in business, and to provide jobs.
11- The new philosophyAdopt the new philosophy. We
are in a new economic age, created in Japan. We
can no longer live with commonly accepted levels
of delays, mistakes, defective materials, and
defective workmanship. Transformation of Western
management style is necessary to halt the
continued decline of business and industry.
12- Cease dependence on mass inspectionEliminate
the need for mass inspection as the way of life
to achieve quality by building quality into the
product in the first place. Require statistical
evidence of built in quality in both
manufacturing and purchasing functions.
13- End lowest tender contractsEnd the practice of
awarding business solely on the basis of price
tag. Instead require meaningful measures of
quality along with price. Reduce the number of
suppliers for the same item by eliminating those
that do not qualify with statistical - and other evidence of quality. The aim is to
minimize total cost, not merely initial cost, by
minimizing variation. This may - be achieved by moving toward a single
supplier for any one item, on a long term
relationship of loyalty and trust. Purchasing
managers have a new job, and must learn it.
14- Improve every processImprove constantly and
forever every process for planning, production,
and service. Search continually for problems in
order to improve every activity in the company,
to improve quality and productivity, and thus to
constantly decrease costs. Institute innovation
and constant improvement of product, service, and
process. It is management's job to work
continually on the system (design, incoming
materials, maintenance, improvement of machines,
supervision, training, retraining).
15- Institute training on the jobInstitute modern
methods of training on the job for all, including
management, to make better use of every employee.
New skills are required to keep up with changes
in materials, methods, product and service
design, machinery, techniques, and service.
16- Institute leadershipAdopt and institute
leadership aimed at helping people do a better
job. The responsibility of managers and
supervisors must be changed from sheer numbers to
quality. Improvement of quality will
automatically improve productivity. Management
must ensure that immediate action is taken on
reports of inherited defects, maintenance
requirements, poor tools, fuzzy operational
definitions, and all conditions detrimental to
quality.
17- Drive out fearEncourage effective two way
communication and other means to drive out fear
throughout the organization so that everybody may
work effectively and more productively for the
company.
18- Break down barriersBreak down barriers between
departments and staff areas. People in different
areas, such as Leasing, Maintenance,
Administration, must work in teams to tackle
problems that may be encountered with products or
service.
19- Eliminate exhortationsEliminate the use of
slogans, posters and exhortations for the work
force, demanding Zero Defects and new levels of
productivity, without providing methods. Such
exhortations only create adversarial
relationships the bulk of the causes of low
quality and low productivity belong to the
system, and thus lie beyond the power of the work
force.
20- Eliminate arbitrary numerical targetsEliminate
work standards that prescribe quotas for the work
force and numerical goals for people in
management. Substitute aids and helpful
leadership in order to achieve continual
improvement of quality and productivity.
21- Permit pride of workmanshipRemove the barriers
that rob hourly workers, and people in
management, of their right to pride of
workmanship. This implies, among other things,
abolition of the annual merit rating (appraisal
of performance) and of Management by Objective.
Again, the responsibility of managers,
supervisors, foremen must be changed from sheer
numbers to quality.
22- Encourage educationInstitute a vigorous program
of education, and encourage self improvement for
everyone. What an organization needs is not just
good people it needs people that are improving
with education. Advances in competitive position
will have their roots in knowledge.
23- Top management commitment and actionClearly
define top management's permanent commitment to
ever improving quality and productivity, and
their obligation to implement all of these
principles. Indeed, it is not enough that top
management commit themselves for life to quality
and productivity.
24Joseph M. Juran
- His major contribution to society was in the
field of quality management and he is often
called the "father" of quality. Perhaps most
importantly, he is recognized as the person who
added the managerial dimension to
qualitybroadening it from its statistical
origins.
25- In 1937, Dr. Juran created the "Pareto
principle," which millions of managers rely on to
help separate the "vital few" from the "useful
many" in their activities. This is commonly
referred to as the 80-20 principle. Its universal
application makes it one of the most useful
concepts and tools of modern-day management. This
is now referred to as Juran's Pareto Principle.
26- Joseph M. Juran developed the "Juran's trilogy,"
an approach to cross-functional management that
is composed of three managerial processes
quality planning, quality control and quality
improvement. - This Trilogy shows how an organization can
improve every aspect by better understanding of
the relationship between processes that plan,
control and improve quality as well as business
results.
27- Quality Planning --- To determine customer needs
and develop processes and products required to
meet and exceed those of the customer needs. The
processes are called Design for Six Sigma or
Concurrent Engineering. This can be particularly
challenging for a planning team, because
customers are not always consistent with what
they say they want. The challenge for quality
planning is to identify the most important needs
from all the needs expressed by the customer.
28- Identify who are the customers.
- Determine the needs of those customers.
- Translate those needs into our language.
- Develop a product that can respond to those
needs. - Optimize the product features so as to meet our
needs and customer needs.
29- Quality Control --- The purposes of quality
control is to ensure the process is running in
optimal effectiveness, or to ensure that any
level of chronic waste inherent in the process
does not get worst. Chronic waste, which is a
cost of poor quality that can exist in any
process, may exist due to various factors
including deficiencies in the original planning.
It could cost a lot of money to the company, from
rework time to scrap product to overdue
receivables.
30- If the waste does get worst (sporadic spike), a
corrective action team is brought in to determine
the cause or causes of this abnormal variation.
Once the cause or causes had been determined and
corrected, the process again falls into the zone
defined by the quality control limits. - Prove that the process can produce the product
under operating conditions with minimal
inspection. - Transfer the process to operations.
31- Quality Improvement --- Eliminate waste, defects
and rework that improves processes and reduces
the cost of poor quality. The processes have to
be constantly challenged and continuously
improved. Such an improvement does not happen of
its own accord. It results from purposeful
Quality Improvement or Breakthrough. - Develop a process which is able to produce the
product. - Optimize the process.
32Jurans Ten Steps to Quality Improvement
- Build awareness of the need and opportunity for
improvement - Set goals for improvement
- Organize to reach the goals
- Provide training
- Carry out projects to solve problems
- Report progress
- Give recognition
- Communicate results
- Keep score
- Maintain momentum by making annual improvement
part of the regular systems and processes of the
company
33Strengths of Jurans Trilogy
- The methodology searches a continuous improvement
of quality in every aspects of the organization,
because if the implementation of the methodology
does not give the desire results it is possible
to start all over again.
34Strengths of Jurans Trilogy
- The methodology allows the use different quality
tools to cover the steps of Jurans Trilogy. It
allows a better understanding of the
relationships of every stage of the company. - The methodology is well structured and allows the
companies that implement it, an easy
understanding and application.
35Weaknesses of Jurans Trilogy
- To have quality control it is necessary to have a
trained person with knowledge in statistical
processes or train a special person to be in
charge of quality. The program is focus in the
company process and not in labor force.
36Weaknesses of Jurans Trilogy
- Analyzing the requirements of the program we
found that the companies who apply the program
have a complex level of organization. This kind
of methodologies show results in a long term
this represents a risk for the company because
the implementation of the quality program can be
a waste of time, money and resources.
37Philip Crosby
- Dr. Deming and Dr. Juran were the great brains of
the quality revolution. Where Phil Crosby
excelled was in finding a terminology for quality
that mere mortals could understand. His books,
"Quality Without Tears" and "Quality is Free"
were easy to read, so people read them. He
popularized the idea of the "cost of poor
quality", that is, figuring out how much it
really costs to do things badly.
38- Like Frederick Taylor, Philip Crosby's ideas came
from his experience on an assembly line. He
focused on zero defects, not unlike the focus of
the modern Six Sigma Quality movement. Mr. Crosby
was quick to point out, however, that zero
defects is not something that originates on the
assembly line.
39- To create a manufacturing process that has zero
defects management must set the tone and
atmosphere for employees to follow. If management
does not create a system by which zero defects
are clearly the objective then employees are not
to blame when things go astray and defects occur.
The benefit for companies of such a system is a
dramatic decrease in wasted resources and time
spent producing goods that consumer's do not want.
40- Mr. Crosby defined quality as a conformity to
certain specifications set forth by management
and not some vague concept of "goodness." These
specifications are not arbitrary either they
must be set according to customer needs and wants.
41ASSIGNMENT
- DR. H. JAMES HARRINGTON
- DR. KAORU ISHIKAWA
- DR. WALTER A. SHEWHART
- SHIGEO SHINGO
- FREDERICK TAYLOR
- DR. GENICHI TAGUCHI
42Crosby's 14 Steps to Quality Improvement
- Management is committed to quality and this is
clear to all - Create quality improvement teams with (senior)
representatives from all departments. - Measure processes to determine current and
potential quality issues. - Calculate the cost of (poor) quality
43Crosby's 14 Steps to Quality Improvement
- Raise quality awareness of all employees
- Take action to correct quality issues
- Monitor progress of quality improvement
establish a zero defects committee. - Train supervisors in quality improvement
44Crosby's 14 Steps to Quality Improvement
- Hold zero defects days
- Encourage employees to create their own quality
improvement goals - Encourage employee communication with management
about obstacles to quality - Recognize participants effort
- Create quality councils
- Do it all over again quality improvement does
not end
45Five characteristics of an Eternally Successful
Organization
- People routinely do things right first time
- Change is anticipated and used to advantage
- Growth is consistent and profitable
- New products and services appear when needed
- Everyone is happy to work there
46- The foundation of Crosby's approach is
prevention. His approach to quality is best
described by the following concepts (1) Do It
Right the First Time (2) Zero Defects and Zero
Defects Day (3) the Four Absolutes of Quality
(4) the Prevention Process (5) the Quality
Vaccine and (6) the Six C's.
47Four Absolutes of Quality Management
- Quality is defined as conformance to
requirements, not as 'goodness' or 'elegance'. - The system for causing quality is prevention, not
appraisal. - The performance standard must be Zero Defects,
not "that's close enough". - The measurement of quality is the Price of
Nonconformance, not indices.
48Four Absolutes
- Quality is conformance to the requirements All
the actions necessary to run an organization,
produce a product and or service, and deal with
customers must be met and agreed. If management
wants people to do it right the first time, they
must clearly communicate what it is and help them
achieve it through leadership, training, and
fostering a climate of cooperation.
49- The system of quality is prevention The system
that produces quality is prevention (i.e.,
eliminating errors before they occur). To Crosby,
training, discipline, example, and leadership
produce prevention. Management must consciously
commit themselves to a prevention-oriented work
environment.
50- The performance standard is Zero Defects ( Do it
right the first time ) The attitude of close
enough is not tolerated in Crosby s approach.
Errors are too costly to ignore. Leaders must
help others in their pursuit of conforming to
requirements by allocating resources for
training, providing time, tools, etc., to all
employees.
51- The measurement of quality is the price of
nonconformance Nonconformance is a management
tool for diagnosing an organization's
effectiveness and efficiency.
52Six Cs
- Comprehension
- Commitment
- Competence
- Communication
- Correction
- Continuance