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5.4 Quality Assurance

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5.4 Quality Assurance Chapter 33 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 5.4 Quality Assurance


1
5.4 Quality Assurance
  • Chapter 33

2
What is a quality product?
  • A good or service that meets customers
    expectations and is fit for purpose.
  • Quality is relative
  • Products dont have to be expensive to be of good
    quality. (shampoo)
  • Products may have to perform perfectly to be
    considered good quality (airplanes)
  • What other products can you think of?

3
Quality Standards
  • The expectations of customers expressed in terms
    of the minimum acceptable production or service
    standards.
  • What is YOUR quality standard for PIZZA?
  • What is YOUR quality standard for CLOTHING?
  • What is YOUR quality standard for PENCILS?

4
Advantages of producing a quality product
  • Easier to create customer loyalty
  • Saves on costs associated with customer
    complaints (replacement compensation)
  • Defective products and loss of customer goodwill
  • Longer life cycles
  • Less advertising as the quality image is
    reinforced by the performance of its products
  • A higher price premium price may be charged
    which can add to profits

5
Quality Control
  • Quality control is based upon inspecting the
    product or a sampling of products.
  • Traditional approach to achieving quality
  • Based upon inspection and checking
  • Production
  • MP3 player is inspected and checked at the end of
    the production line to see if the battery will
    charge.
  • Service
  • A on-line support person will have customer phone
    calls monitored or recorded.

6
Quality Control Techniques
  • 1. Prevention Most effectiveQuality should be
    designed into the product.
  • 2. Inspection Traditionally the most important
    phase
  • Costly and the need for inspection can be
    reduced by zero-defect manufacturing.
  • 3. Correction and Improvement Improves future
    quality effectiveNot just fixing faulty
    products, but fixing the what caused the problem
    in the first place. This will improve future
    quality.

7
Inspecting
  • Emphasis is placed on checking for quality at the
    end of the production line.
  • Products can be inspected periodically during
    production.
  • PROBLEMS
  • Expensive
  • Qualified people need to be used
  • Product may be destroyed
  • May need to sample instead which means all
    products arent checked for quality

8
Inspecting
  • Issues with inspecting
  • Quality-control inspectors check the work others
  • Looking for problems creates negative culture
    for workers
  • Inspectors are successful when they find
    problems which causes issues for workers
  • Inspecting is tedious work and inspectors may
    become demotivated
  • If checking is done at points in the production
    process, it can be hard to locate where the
    quality error occurred.
  • Workers will not see quality as their
    responsibility but that of the quality control
    inspectors

9
Quality Assurance- A departure from Quality
Inspecting
  • Puts emphasis on prevention of poor quality by
    design during manufacturing rather than
    inspecting after it is produced
  • Stress that workers Get it right the first time
    so errors are unlikely to happen
  • Establish the quality standard for each stage of
    the production process
  • Check components, materials, services when they
    are delivered NOT at the end of production or
    time of use

10
Quality Assurance
  • Quality Assurance is considered in all areas
  • Product design
  • Will product meet consumer expectations
  • Quality of inputs (suppliers and bought-in
    products)
  • Suppliers will have to accept strict quality
    standards
  • Production quality
  • Workers ensure quality production occurs
  • Customer service
  • Continued customer satisfaction during and after
    sales

11
Advantages of Quality Assurance
  • EVERYONE is responsible for quality (a type of
    job enrichment)
  • Self-checking increases motivation
  • Quality problems can be traced to origin
  • Reduces expensive final inspections, corrections,
    and faulty products

12
ISO 9000
  • International Standards Organization
  • ISO actually means equal in Greek
  • ISO is an internationally recognized certificate
    that acknowledges the existence of a quality
    procedure that meets certain conditions.

13
ISO 9000
  • In order to be accredited, you must
  • Staff training on quality and appraisal methods
  • Methods in place to check suppliers quality
  • Quality standards in ALL areas of your business
  • Procedures for dealing with defective products
    and quality failures
  • After-sales service
  • ISO companies are internally audited AND
    externally audited.
  • Can be expensive
  • Doesnt guarantee a quality product

14
QS 9000
  • US counter-part to ISO 9000
  • Established by US automobile manufacturers in
    1994 and adopted for use by the heavy truck
    manufacturing industry.
  • It was replaced with ISO/TS 16949 because of the
    international nature of car manufacturers and
    suppliers.

15
Total Quality Management (TQM)
  • An approach to quality that involves all
    employees in the quality process.
  • It aims to reduce waste and cost of rejected
    low-quality products.
  • LEAN PRODUCTION Producing goods and services
    with the minimum of wasted resources while
    maintaining high quality.

16
TQM is a PHILOSPHY
  • All employees are responsible for quality from
    the assembly worker to the delivery driver.
  • All employees are empowered to check and verify
    quality.
  • Provides high level of job enrichment.
  • Encourages staff to get it right the first time
  • Achievement of zero defects is a goal
  • If quality is improved, than costs fall and
    demand for products rise
  • REQUIRES commitment from management to give
    employees flexibility to make quality decisions

17
TQM
  • Internal customers people within the
    organization who depend upon quality work
    completed by others.
  • Zero Defects The aim of achieving perfect
    products EVERY time.

18
Kaizen
  • Japanese term meaning continuous improvement
  • Employees may know more about factory
    improvements than managers.
  • A series of small improvements can be more
    beneficial that one-off improvements.

HL
19
Implementing Kaizen
  • Management must recognize experience of workers
  • Team working from the workers team meetings to
    identify problems and discuss improvement
    strategies
  • Employee empowerment to make changes
  • All staff is involved

HL
20
Limitations of Kaizen
  • Some changes are not small and cannot be
    introduced gradually
  • Resistance from senior management
  • Staff training and lost output due to meetings
  • Improvements tend to be made early later changes
    tend to be less significant

HL
21
Benchmarking
  • Comparing the performance including quality
    of a business with performance standards
    throughout the industry
  • How do I compare with others?

HL
22
Stages of Benchmarking
  • 1. Identify what areas are to be benchmarked
    (ask and survey customers)
  • 2. Measure these areas (quality records,
    delivery records, customer complaints)
  • 3. Identify firms in the industry that are the
    best
  • 4. Use comparative data to find your weaknesses
  • 5. Set standards for improvement
  • 6. Change your processes to achieve your
    standards
  • 7. Re-measurement Check to see if you are
    reaching your new higher standards.

HL
23
Quality Summary
  • Quality is not an OPTION
  • Quality is an issue for ALL firms
  • Satisfying customers with quality
    products/services has clear marketing advantages
  • Involving staff can motivate the workforce

HL
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