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Departments: First Word

  
   

Quality Is Not a Four-Letter Word

Is Quality Passé?

 

 

Quality professionals are in a unique position: They are held responsible for the quality of their organization’s products and/or services, yet they often have little control over the design, development and implementation of those products and/or services. In other words, they get blamed when things go wrong and are ignored when things go right.

Mention quality in the executive suites of many U.S. organizations and the standard answer is, “We did quality in the ‘80s. It didn’t work.” These “enlightened” managers have “moved beyond” quality to more sensible initiatives such as Six Sigma, lean or other more fashionable models.

I’m not knocking Six Sigma or lean. They’re great, but what about quality? Why has quality become almost passé in the business world? To understand why, we need to define what quality is. I’m not talking about the definition of the term. (By the way, my favorite is Phil Crosby’s definition: “conformance to requirements.”) I’m referring to the definition of the quality function.

Webster’s New World College Dictionary, Fourth Edition defines quality control as “a system for maintaining desired standards in a product or process, especially by inspecting samples of the product.” This definition is too narrow to apply to the entire field of quality, but it does serve as the starting point, especially if merged with Crosby’s definition. If so, we get “a system for maintaining desired conformance to requirements in an organization’s products, services or processes.”

It’s the “maintaining desired conformance” portion of the definition that gets murky. How do we maintain desired conformance? Today’s organizations use a cornucopia of methods--some that get lumped into quality and some that don’t. Examples include quality management systems such as ISO 9001, Six Sigma, employee involvement teams, kaizen, Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award criteria, and metrology systems for inspection and testing. But what about design of products, services and processes? What about systems for measuring customer satisfaction? What about new product development? How about benchmarking and employee training and motivation? All of these are necessary to maintain desired conformance.

The word “total” in total quality management focused many executives on looking at how all the pieces of quality fit together. When TQM was dropped in favor of the next fad du jour, the quality pieces didn’t go away, but they often stopped working as a whole.

The notion that quality is passé is insulting to the entire quality profession. The short-sighted executives (and others) who think this way are doing a disservice to their customers and their organizations.

A few years ago I criticized the American Society for Quality for not doing enough to promote the quality profession. I’m happy to report that as part of its new membership model, the ASQ will begin to promote quality through ads in The Wall Street Journal, Fast Company, Chief Executive, Hospital and Health Networks, IndustryWeek, and School Administrator. Copy for the advertisements reads, “Quality is there for you 24/7. Acknowledge it. Champion it. Embrace it. Join the quality movement.”

Quality, far from being passé, is as essential as ever.