Software


Flowcharter 4.0
by Micrografx
$495

ABC FlowCharter 4.0 by Micrografx is an easy-to-use flowcharting package supplied with 29 flow-mapping palettes. Choose from standard process, data flow and org chart palettes, to palettes for such obscure things as CATALYST and DIN 66001 information processing. A unique feature allows mathematical accumulation of data in symbol data fields (sum, average, mean, etc.). FlowCharter 4.0 supports OLE. Also included is ABC DataAnalyzer, an SPC charting package; ABC SnapGraphics, presentation graphics; and ABC Viewer, free distribution software to allow others to view FlowCharter graphs.

Minimum system requirements: 386-based, IBM-compatible PC; Windows 3.1 or higher; DOS 3.1 or higher; mouse; 4MB RAM; VGA or other Windows-supported video card.
Price: $495 (list)

Contact: Micrografx, Richardson, TX
(214) 234-1769 or fax (214) 994-6477


Review
You could buy a flowcharting package, an SPC software tool kit and a presentation graphics software package, or just purchase ABC FlowCharter 4.0. This three-in-one package from Micrografx contains everything a quality manager needs to map a process, analyze data and prepare presentations for the next team meeting.

Integrated number crunching

FlowCharter 4.0 utilizes the standard pick-and-click method for laying down flow-mapping symbols. Pick a symbol from a palette and click it onto the worksheet. Easy. To connect symbols, click in a source node, click in a destination node, and a line appears between the two. Move a symbol node by dragging it with your mouse; the connections follow.

Where this package really stood out was in its handling of symbol text, notes and data fields. Entering data for any node is a snap, but more than that, a feature unique to this product allows mathematical accumulation (sum, average, mean, etc.) of data in symbol fields. Map a process and enter cost and time data at each node (step). Once finished, FlowCharter 4.0 can sum cost fields and average time fields for all nodes without having to export the data to a spreadsheet. But if you want to export, all data, shape information and text, with the exception of notes, can be exported as a tab-delimited file.

FlowCharter does provide automated symbol alignment, although not as sophisticated as others we've seen. It has no line autorouter, so think ahead when laying out your drawing. Massive moves of symbols once the drawing is done will leave you with spaghetti.

Individual charts can be linked together, allowing you, for instance, to create a general process flowchart with elements linked to detailed flowcharts. Click on an element of the general chart, and the related detailed flowchart appears.

Printing went smoothly but had the same drawback as other programs we've tested. Notes print out in the order in which the symbols were placed, and there is no provision for changing the order or exporting notes for processing off-line.

Complaints: Palette symbols are not labeled except with pop-up definitions-a real drag when trying to select a symbol from a large palette. The user interface was not very intuitive; we constantly were running to the manual to find out how to perform mundane operations. Fortunately, the documentation was extremely complete.

Bundled with FlowCharter 4.0 is ABC DataAnalyzer. This automated statistical process charting package makes it easy to create SPC charts.

A "quick entry" button automatically formats an Excel-style spreadsheet for the type of chart the user plans to generate. Enter the data in the spreadsheet, select the type of chart you want to draw, and the software does the rest. Aside from the time required to input the data, a chart takes less than a minute to generate. Data can be imported from other applications such as Lotus or Excel. Chart attributes such as color, size, etc. are user-editable.

We were very pleased with the speed performance of this software on our, by now, archaic 386-based PC. FlowCharter 4.0 bucks the trend of programs written to perform well only on 88 MHz Pentiums.

This is a nice package. Yes, you might find individual flow-mapping, SPC or presentation software that will out-maneuver any one of the programs, but I doubt you're going to put them all together for $495.


BaSE
by International Quality Technologies
$345

BaSE '95 2.2 by International Quality Technologies is an easy-to-use, Baldrige-based self-evaluation program. The software allows users to compare their organization to specific Baldrige criteria. Army, Air Force and President's Quality award versions are also available. The software contains the complete Baldrige criteria on-line. User-defined scoring options and full edit and export capability provide for program applicability across a variety of organizations.

Minimum system requirements: Windows version: 386-based, IBM-compatible PC; Windows 3.0 or higher; any DOS version; mouse; 6 MB RAM, 4 MB hard disk space; VGA or other Windows-supported video card. Macintosh version: System 7.0 or higher and 6MB RAM.
Price: $345, with discounts for multiple site licenses

Contact: International Quality Technologies,
Colorado Springs, CO
(800) 245-9722 or fax (719) 531-5702

Review
If you're contemplating applying for the Baldrige Award or if you just want to see how your organization stacks up against the Baldrige criteria, BaSE is for you. This deceptively simple program allows users to quickly and easily do a Baldrige-based self-evaluation with virtually no hassle. Other versions of the software allow users to do self-evaluations for the Air Force, Army and President's Quality awards. Health-care and education versions are due out soon.

On-line Baldrige criteria

BaSE allows users to do a detailed self-evaluation of their organization using the 1995 Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award criteria, which is conveniently displayed on-line as needed.

Users start the self-assessment process by entering key business factors, which are the predetermined elements of the organization environment that affect performance and influence scoring. These factors might include products or services, business region, industry profile, customer demographics, competitors and supplier information. Entering the key business factors is a breeze.

Next, users move on to the real heart of BaSE, the evaluation form. This is where the user actually does the self-evaluation. The evaluation form is divided into categories, which mirror the Baldrige Award's seven primary categories. Users click on one of the 24 Baldrige criteria points (each of the Baldrige seven primary sections is divided into subsections), and the actual Baldrige scoring criteria appear on the screen, along with an area where users enter data about how their organization meets that criteria point.

Users also assign a percentage score to their organization for each criteria point. The scores range from 0% (anecdotal information, no system in place) to 90% (a sound systematic approach). The scoring system is based on three factors: approach, deployment and results. Users also have the option to modify the scoring process.

After completing the evaluation form, users have a variety of reports to choose from, including score summary, evaluation detail, key business factors, issues and graphical analysis.

We reviewed BaSE '95 version 2.2 on a 386 IBM-compatible PC running Windows 3.1. A Macintosh version is also available. The program ran quickly with no crashes or problems. Even though the Windows version of BaSE does not self-install, installation was straightforward, if a bit time-consuming.

BaSE isn't as elegant and sophisticated as your average Microsoft memory-hogging behemoth, but it does the job quite well. Especially nice touches include the built-in spell checker, customizable header and footer capability, data export capability and minimal memory requirements. Even nicer is the misnamed help section. While it doesn't provide on-line help, it does contain the entire Baldrige criteria with excellent explanatory notes.

One minor complaint: The manual that accompanies the software is not as user-friendly as it could be. While easy to read, it leaves the user guessing in a few instances. Specifically, the sample data file section. The manual should walk you through the sample data file; it doesn't. Users are left wondering what to do until they flip a few pages farther back in the book to Chapter Four, which does a good job of walking users through the self-evaluation process.

Despite the simplistic user manual, BaSE is a terrific program that makes a self-evaluation easy and meaningful. While the program shouldn't be used as a reference tool for the Baldrige process, it serves as an excellent tool in the continuous-improvement journey.