Title: Quality%20Function%20Deployment
1Quality Function Deployment
- Chatchada Akarasriworn
- Tammy Davis
- Kelsey Poland
- Jing Shao
2Introduction
- Quality function deployment (QFD) is a planning
tool used to fulfill customer expectations. It
is a disciplined approach to product design,
engineering, and production and provides in-depth
evaluation of a product. - QFD focuses on customer expectations or
requirements, often referred to as the voice of
the customer. - It is employed to translate customer
expectations, in terms of engineering or
technical characteristics, that can deployed
through - Product planning
- Part development
- Process planning
- Production planning
- Service industries
3The QFD Team
- When an organization decides to implement QFD,
the project manager and team members need to be
able to commit a significant amount of time to
it, especially in the early stages. - There are two types of teams
- Designing a new product
- Improving an existing product
- Time and inter-team communication are two very
important things that each team must use to their
fullest potential.
4The QFD Team cont.
- Team meetings are very important in the QFD
process. - The team leader needs to ensure that the meetings
are run in the most efficient manner and that the
members are kept informed. - Duration of the meeting will rely on where the
teams members are coming from and what needs to
be accomplished.
5Benefits of QFD
- Improves Customer Satisfaction
- Creates focus on customer requirements
- Uses competitive information effectively
- Prioritizes resources
- Identifies items that can be acted upon
- Structures resident experience/information
- Reduces Implementation Time
- Decreases midstream design changes
- Limits post introduction problems
- Avoids future application opportunities
- Surfaces missing assumptions
6Benefits of QFD
- Promotes Teamwork
- Based on consensus
- Creates communication at interfaces
- Identifies actions at interfaces
- Creates global view out of details
- Provides Documentation
- Documents rationale for design
- Is easy to assimilate
- Adds structure to the information
- Adapts to changes (a living document)
- Provides framework for sensitivity analysis
7The Customer Voice
8Organization of Information
- Now that the customer expectations and needs have
been identified and researched, the QFD team
needs to process the information. - Methods include
- Affinity diagrams
- Interrelationship diagrams
- Tree diagrams
- Cause-and-effect diagrams
9Organization of Information cont.
- An Affinity Diagram should be used when
- Thoughts are too widely dispersed or numerous to
organize. - New solutions are needed to circumvent the more
traditional ways of problems solving. - Support for a solution is essential for
successful implementation. - Constructing an affinity diagram requires four
simple steps - Phrase the objective.
- Record all responses
- Group the responses
- Organize groups in an affinity diagram
10House of Quality
- Left wall Voice of customer, what customer
expects
- Right wall Prioritized customer requirement
- Ceiling - Technical descriptors
- Interior walls Relationship between
requirements and descriptors
- Roof - Interrelationship between descriptors
- Foundation Prioritized technical descriptors
11Building House of Quality
12Building House of Quality
- Step 1 List customer requirements (WHATs)
- Customers needs or expectations
- Primary
- Secondary
13Building House of Quality
- Step 2 List technical descriptors (HOWs)
- Counterpart characteristics
- Primary
- Secondary
- Tertiary
14Building House of Quality
- Step 3 Develop a relationship matrix between
WHATs and Hows - Structuring an L-Shaped Diagram
- Easy
- Not require experience
15Building House of Quality
- Step 3 Contd.
- Relationship matrix
- Degree of influence between each technical
descriptor and each customer requirement - ? Strong relationship9
- ? Medium relationship3
- ? Weak relationship1
- Blank No relationship
16Building a House of Quality
Step 4
- Develop an Interrelationship Matrix
- Between HOWs
Used to identify any interrelationship between
each of the technical descriptors (support or
conflict?)
Strong positive
9
3 Positive
-3 X Negative
Technical descriptors (HOWs)
Powder metallurgy
-9 Strong Negative
Aluminum
Sand casting
Forging
Material Selection
Manufacturing Process
Titanium
Die Casting
Welding
Steel
17Building a House of Quality
Step 5
- Customer assessment
- Corresponding to each customer requirement
- Rating from 1 (worst) to 5 (best)
- Used to
- a) determine if the customers requirements
have been met. - b) identify areas to concentrate on in the
next design - c) Where an organization stands relative to
its major competitors - Technical assessment
- Corresponding to each technical descriptor
- Rating from 1 (worst) to 5 (best)
- Used to uncover gaps in engineering judgment.
18Building a House of Quality
Step 6
- Develop Prioritized Customer Requirements
-
- Importance to the customer rating from 1 (least
important) to - 10 (very important)
- Target value rating from 1 (worst) to 5 (best)
- Scale-up factor ratio of the target value to the
product rating given in the customer competitive
assessment - Sales point 1.0 (lowest) - 2.0 (highest)
- Absolute weight 1 X 3X 4
- A percent and rank for each customer requirement
can be determined.
19Building a House of Quality
Step 7
- Develop Prioritized Technical Descriptors
- Degree of difficulty rating from 1 (least
difficult) to 10 ( very difficult). - Target value rating from 1 (worst) to 5 (best),
same way as determining target value of customer
requirement. - Absolute weight aj ?Rijci
- Relative weight bj ?Rijdi
- http//www.qfdi.org
205
3
2
2
Customer competitive assessment
Importance to the customer
Absolute weight
21QFD Process
- QFD Matrix (House of Quality)
- Basis for all future matrices
- Must refine technical descriptors further
- More than one matrix often needed
22Accomplishing QFD Process
- HOWs of previous chart become WHATs of new chart
- Technical descriptors HOWs WHATs customer
requirements - Continue until each objective is refined to
actionable level - HOW MUCH carried to next chart to aid
communication - Prioritized technical descriptors
- Ensures target values arent lost
23Refinement of QFD Chart
24Complete QFD Process
- Can be shown using Flow Diagram
- 1st ChartProduct Planning
- 2nd ChartPart Development
- 3rd ChartProcess Planning
- 4th ChartProduction Planning
25Other House of Quality Planning Charts
- Depends on type of product and scope of project
- Demanded quality chart
- Quality control process chart
- Reliability deployment chart
- Technology deployment chart
26Examples
- Universities
- Design course content curriculum
- Support services
- Business and Defense Organizations
- Budgeting
- Designing training modules
27Conclusion
- QFD
- Effective management tool
- Customer expectations are used to drive design
process or to drive improvement in service
industries
28Advantages Benefits
- Orderly way of obtaining information presenting
it - Shorter product development cycle
- Considerably reduced start-up costs
- Fewer engineering changes
- Reduced chance of oversights during design
process - Environment of teamwork
- Consensus decisions
- Everything is preserved in writing
29Everyone Benefits
- Entire organization constantly aware of customer
requirements - Marketingspecific sales points have been
identified and can be stressed - Results in satisfied customers!
30Questions
?
What are some advantages of QFD?
?
What methods could be used to determine the voice
of the customer? What are the keys to success
when building a House of Quality? Who is
responsible for building the House of Quality?
?
?
?
?
31Questions
- If you are Pizza Hut and you are building a House
of Quality, what customer requirements should you
consider? - What are some of the primary technical
descriptors that should be considered?