MBA Course : Operations Management
1
Quality Quality
&&
Total Quality ManagementTotal Quality Management
Operations Management
MBA Course : Operations Management
2
Touch
Noise
Weight
Shape
?Colour
CostProfitCost
Due datesameDue date
CustomerSupplier
Quantitative requirements between supplier and customer
Touch
Noise
Weight
Shape
Colour
MBA Course : Operations Management
3
Ταξινόμηση πελατών/καταναλωτών
Who is really your customer?
MBA Course : Operations Management
4
Company’sprocesses
Humanresources
Customer’sexpectations
Customer satisfaction
Customer Satisfaction: Integration
MBA Course : Operations Management
5Definition of Quality
QUALITY: Conformance to requirements
If a RR conforms to all requirements of a RR, then it is a quality car. If a SKODA car conforms to all requirements of a SKONDA, then it is a quality car.
MBA Course : Operations Management
6
CROSBY: “Don’t talk about poor quality or high quality. Talk about conformance and non-conformance.”
FEIGENBAUM :"The total composite product and service characteristics of marketing, engineering, manufacturing and maintenance through which the product or service in use will meet the expectations of the customer."
JURAN:"Quality is fitness for purpose or use.”
DEMINGSatisfying customer’s needs.
TAGUCHIThe loss which is imparted by the product or service to society from the time is created.
Be aware: requirements, purpose or use means those of the CUSTOMER
Definition of Quality
MBA Course : Operations Management
7
Managing Quality: GARVIN, D (1988)1. the transcendent approach – a quality watch is a Rolex
2. the manufacturing based approach [free of errors, confirming precisely to design specs] – a watch though not the “best” available is defined as a “quality” product provided it has been built or delivered precisely to its design specs
3. the user-based approach [fit for its purpose] - a
watch that is manufactured precisely to its design specs yet fails to pieces after 2 days is clearly not “fit for its purpose”
4. the product-based approach [precise and measurable set of characteristics] – a watch may be designed to run, without the need for servicing, for at least 5 years while keeping time correct to within 5 seconds
5. the value-based approach [cost & price] – compromise quality for price
MBA Course : Operations Management
8
•Important as they affect the company’s profitability
•Quality Costs range between 10 – 20 % of sales (1985 study)• Quality Costs range between 4– 20 % of sales (Montgomery, 1996) Crosby recommends that a proper managed quality <2.5% sales (1979)
FEIGENBAUM’S 'HIDDEN PLANT‘15-40% of resources producing scrap, re-work, detecting defects, replacing faulty products
Quality Costs
MBA Course : Operations Management
9Costs of Quality
External Failure Costs
Appraisal Costs
Prevention Costs
Internal FailureCosts
Costs ofQuality
MBA Course : Operations Management
10
A conventional Quality Organization will include two sections:1. Quality Assurance2. Quality Control
Quality Assurance: Quality Planning: - What features should be inspected
- Who should carry out the inspection- When the inspection should be made- What equipment should be used- 100 % or sampling inspection
Failure Analysis: - Investigation of the causes of failure (i.e. failure due to the design of the product/service or due to the process, which produces it) - What should be done in the event of non-
conformance (scrap or re-work?)
Vendor Appraisal:- Assessment of suppliers, materials & services
Conventional Quality Management (detection)
MBA Course : Operations Management
11
A conventional Quality Organization will include two sections:1. Quality Assurance2. Quality Control
Quality Control
Inspection: Inspection of - incoming materials/services - in process work, and - final product to establish whether or
not they conform to requirements
Recording : - Compilation of numbers (statistics) indicating non-
conformance rates and trends - Communication of the findings to key personnel
Conventional Quality Management (detection)
MBA Course : Operations Management
12
Features commonly found in TQM programmes - TOTAL means that the idea of continuous improvement applies to all
personnel (and not to QA or QC)- KAIZEN which refers to a concern for the quality of people’s lives and
focuses on improvements resulting from an EDLESS series of small changes, directed towards the elimination of waste in all its forms.
- CUSTOMER FOCUS- external customer focus approach in quality (i.e. what the external customer perceives as quality)- each individual is encouraged to identify his internal suppliers and customers
- TRAINING is a major feature in moving to a TQM culture (firstly change the “mind-set” approach and then introduce the relevant tools and techniques)
- LEADERSHIP “walk as you talk”
Total Quality Management (prevention)
MBA Course : Operations Management
13
•Error detection•Rectification (επανόρθωση)
•Statistical methods•Process performance•Quality standards
•Whole operation involved•Involves customers & suppliers •Staff empowerment •Quality strategy•Teamwork
•Quality systems•Quality costing•Quality planning
TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT
QUALITY ASSURANCE
QUALITY CONTROL
INSPECTION
Total Quality Management (prevention)
MBA Course : Operations Management
14
W. DEMING - management comes before technology- emphasizes the role of statistical and qualitative
methods
J. JURAN - stresses the role of internal and external customer- management involvement & commitment are
stressed
A. FEIGENBAUM - emphasis on the importance of management - promotes participation by all staff
P. CROSBY - clear methods which are easy to follow- worker participation is recognized as important
K. ISHIKAWA - strong emphasis on the importance of people- introduces the idea of quality circles management
G. TAGUCHI - strong on process control
Quality Guru
MBA Course : Operations Management
15
A strategy for creative problems solving comprises the following 6 steps:
1. Understand the “mess”2. Find the facts3. Identify specific problems4. Generate ideas5. Develop solutions6. Implementation
TQM Tools & Techniques
MBA Course : Operations Management
16
TOOLS:
1. Process flowcharts - Understand the “mess”2. Check sheets - Find the facts3. Histograms - Identify specific problems4. Pareto analysis - Identify specific problems
5. Ishikawa - Generate ideas6. Scatter diagram - Develop solutions7. Control charts - Implementation8. Poka Yoke – Failsafe measure9. Quality circles
TQM Tools & Techniques
MBA Course : Operations Management
17
Quality Circles & Quality Improvements
• Credited to Ishikawa in the early 1960s based on Japanese culture• Small group of (~8) workers from the same work area• Membership is voluntary• Group (and not management) is responsible for choosing the problem to be
worked on• Management fully supports Q circles.
BENEFITS1. It replaces the adversarial relationship between management and workers
with trust and co-operation2. Increases employee morale and commitment to the goals of organization3. Improves quality and productivity by fostering improvement and innovation4. Reinforces the message that workers themselves should be responsible for
the quality of their own work
TQM Tools & Techniques
MBA Course : Operations Management
18
Quality Circles & Quality Improvements
PROBLEMS1. Workers tend to believe that they are ideas not relevant to their way
of working2. Western management cannot accept that workers can take decisions
for the company-future (while in Japan all good ideas are welcomed wherever they come from)
3. Workers believe that quality circles are a management tool to make people work more for the benefit of the company and for theirs.
4. Western workers see quality circles as an addition work for which they must be paid (not only for the participation but for the contribution of their ideas)
TQM Tools & Techniques
MBA Course : Operations Management
19
ISO 90001. Based on UK’s BS 5750 series for quality systems2. Published by the International Organization for Standards in 19873. Adopted by the EU in 1992 for the eradication of trade barriers
among member countries4. More than 250,000 around the world have become accredited.
Initially comprised five individual standards ISO 9000 – ISO 90041. ISO 9000: It provides an overview of the purpose and content of the series +
guidance for the selection of rest2. ISO 9001: Quality assurance model for organizations engaged in production,
product design, development, testing, inspection, installation and service3. ISO 9002: Quality assurance model for organizations engaged in production,
testing, inspection, installation and service to customers’ specs4. ISO 9003: Quality assurance model for organizations engaged in testing and
inspection5. ISO 9004: It provides guidance for internal use on how to facilitate the specs
contained in ISO 9001-3
Quality Standards and Awards
MBA Course : Operations Management
20
ISO 9000
REVESION: December 2000ISO 9000:2000ISO 9001: revised - coreISO 9004: revisedISO 9002: abandonedISO 9003: abandoned.
• Revision changed from “procedure” focus to “business process” focus
• Many of the themes of TQM were incorporated• The “voice of the customer” is an integral part of the standard• The 20 elements of the original standard have now been replaced by
4 sections:- management responsibility- resource management, product- service realization- measurement, analysis, improvement
Quality Standards and Awards
MBA Course : Operations Management
21
THE DEMING PRIZE – JAPAN• Started in 1951 and opened to non-Japanese in 1984• It has 10 major criteria• Any employee can question a submission• Objective being to establish that the quality process is firmly
established that improvement will continue long after the award
• No restriction to the number of awards given but quite hard to get it
THE MALCOM BALDRIGE NATIONAL QUALITY AWARD – USA• Established in 1987 as a result of the country’s failing
productivity and quality performance• Based on Deming prize• Small number applies as the requests and criteria are very
tough• Some are using the guideline documentation as the basis to
evaluate their existing quality systems and for designing and implementing TQM programmes.
Quality Awards
MBA Course : Operations Management
22
THE EUROPEAN QUALITY AWARD – EUROPE• Established in 1991 by the European foundation
for Quality management• Award open to any company with at least 50 % of
its business operation in W. Europe and has been operating there for at least 5 years
• Awarded to the companies that best demonstrate:- how TQM has improved customer satisfaction,- employee well-being, and- service to other stakeholders.
• In Sept. 2000, it was awarded for the first time to a public sector organization (UK, Scotland)
Quality Awards
Top Related