{domain:"www.qualitydigest.com",server:"169.47.211.87"} Skip to main content

User account menu
Main navigation
  • Topics
    • Customer Care
    • FDA Compliance
    • Healthcare
    • Innovation
    • Lean
    • Management
    • Metrology
    • Operations
    • Risk Management
    • Six Sigma
    • Standards
    • Statistics
    • Supply Chain
    • Sustainability
    • Training
  • Videos/Webinars
    • All videos
    • Product Demos
    • Webinars
  • Advertise
    • Advertise
    • Submit B2B Press Release
    • Write for us
  • Metrology Hub
  • Training
  • Subscribe
  • Log in
Mobile Menu
  • Home
  • Topics
    • 3D Metrology-CMSC
    • Customer Care
    • FDA Compliance
    • Healthcare
    • Innovation
    • Lean
    • Management
    • Metrology
    • Operations
    • Risk Management
    • Six Sigma
    • Standards
    • Statistics
    • Supply Chain
    • Sustainability
    • Training
  • Login / Subscribe
  • More...
    • All Features
    • All News
    • All Videos
    • Contact
    • Training

All Features

Data-Mining Lessons for Obama
Tom Kadala
Earlier this month an ex-CIA employee and whistleblower, Edward Snowden, exposed the federal government’s 6-year old, clandestine initiative, referred to internally as PRISM, a covert data-gathering program that began in 2007 as a corollary to the Patriot Act of 2001. This White House-directed,…
I Dare You to Read This
The Un-Comfort Zone With Robert Wilson
Recently, a reader wrote me to suggest that rather than trying to encourage someone, a better way to motivate them is to issue a challenge. So, I felt challenged to write about it. Whenever I think of laying down a challenge, I think of a classic story about Charles Schwab, the magnate of…
What’s in Your Garage?
Stacey Jarrett Wagner
The idea of the garage as an incubator for startup businesses is as American as hot dogs, baseball, and apple pie (although I like apple cobbler better). From Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Steve Wozniack, Dave Hewlett, and Bill Packard to your next-door neighbor who always seems to be out there…
Why Innovation Thrives in Cities
MIT News
Double a city’s population, and its economic productivity goes up 130 percent. MIT researchers think they know why. In 2010, in the journal Nature, a pair of physicists at the Santa Fe Institute showed that when the population of a city doubles, economic productivity goes up by an average of 130…
Balancing the Pay Scale: ‘Fair’ vs. ‘Unfair’
Knowledge at Wharton
Whether you are a shelf stocker at Walmart, a second-year associate at a consulting company, or an equity analyst at an investment bank, you may feel that you are not adequately compensated for the work you do; in other words, you are underpaid. But underpaid relative to what? How do employers…
What ‘Experts’ Get Wrong About U.S. Manufacturing
AJ Sweatt
Manufacturing in the United States isn’t healing as fast as we’d like or as quickly as we deserve. On that, most of us can agree. But it sure seems like we’re seeing a steady stream of misguided understanding among much of the economic and academic elite. They often seem to miss what a strong…
TRIZ Application in Packaging
Akhilesh Gulati
Editor’s note: This article continues the series exploring structured innovation using the TRIZ methodology, a problem-solving, analysis, and forecasting tool derived from studying patterns of invention found in global patent data. The monthly council meetings continued as different members shared…
Is Six Sigma Fading?
Alex Orlov
Six Sigma evolved during the time of an economic boom. It was the mid-1980s, and companies had begun to feel the effects of stiffer competition. The theory of constraints (TOC) was losing its luster, while the customer began to play a key role for a product or service. Organizations were trying to…
Progress Report: ISO 9001 and ISO 14001 Standards Revisions
LRQA Business Assurance
With ISO 9001 and ISO 14001 currently being revised by ISO technical committees, Mike James, the managing director of LRQA, and David Lawson, LRQA’s technical director, talked about the progress to date on both standards as well as what the revisions could mean for the market at large. David,…
Context Matters When Discussing Risk
Mark Jones
As an enthusiast of LinkedIn’s group discussions, I have seen and contributed to a fair number of discussions on risk within project management. One thing that strikes me is how the understanding of risk differs depending on the context within a project, and how often these differences lead to…
Pipeline Inspection Using 3D Scanners
Creaform Inc.
Recently, Creaform’s Metrology Services division was contacted by a French electric power-generation company to inspect a set of hydraulic penstocks, or water channels. The targeted installation was suspected to be deformed after its 50 years of operation. Pressure changes, corrosion, temperature…
Is Baldrige Worth the Investment?
Dawn Bailey
Arecent online story in TIME magazine, “A Better Return on Investment” profiled the U.S. Army’s Fort Stewart in Georgia, focusing on the base’s Baldrige journey. Baldrige staff and stakeholders that I’ve heard from have varying opinions of whether the article has a negative or neutral spin.…
To Understand Quality Control in China, You Must Be in China
CSGtech
Paul Sly, general manager of CSGtech, an Australasian supplier of seals and gaskets, stresses the importance of quality governance when sourcing from China. A manufacturing component specialist, Sly says that even minute quality-control problems can have extensive consequences for manufacturers…
Revisiting Taylorism at the Watertown Arsenal
Tripp Babbitt
There is much to be learned from history. Lately, I’ve been researching Frederick Winslow Taylor and scientific management. Better known as Taylorism, scientific management was popular from the early 1900s to the 1930s. The lessons and future impact of his efforts still drives how we design and…
From Thriving to Barely Surviving
AJ Sweatt
Steve Bennish writes about business and economics for the Dayton Daily News. He’s also the author of the 89-page, self-published book, Scrappers: Dayton Ohio and America Turn to Scrap. It’s not an easy book to look at. It’s a sobering, disgusting, gut-wrenching thing to see—the photographic…
Taking the Pulse on Global Quality
Laurel Nelson-Rowe
For far too many organizations, it’s never been harder to stay ahead, to achieve and sustain results, and to balance short- and long-term success. Organizational survival means doing more with less, standing out from competitors and unlocking value—all to win the global contest for customers,…
Prudence
Jack Dunigan
Editor’s note: This continues Jack Dunigan’s series about unsung heroes in the workplace, and the 16 traits they all share. With nothing to do but wait while we stood patiently in line at the local post office, we happened to see that there was but one “If It Fits It Ships” box in the rack. For…
Federal Regulators ‘Patent’ Another Bad Idea
Michael Causey
The shell game called the federal budget added another nut recently as media reports revealed that during the last 20 years, approximately $1 billion in fees paid by patent applicants has been diverted from its proper use at the United States Patent Office (USPTO). Critics argue that, as a self-…
Studying Old Dogs With New Statistical Tricks
Eston Martz
A while back my colleague Jim Frost wrote about applying statistics to decisions typically left to expert judgment; I was reminded of his post this week when I came across a new research study that takes a statistical technique commonly used in one discipline, and applies it in a new way. The…
Meet the Maker
MIT News
It’s a dream of many hobbyists: turning their leisure pursuits into a lucrative business. That’s what happened for MIT graduate Limor Fried, whose pastime—tinkering with electronics—not only gave rise to a profitable company, but also positioned her as a leader of a technology revolution. Since…
Still Standing Fast
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
The chemical secrets of a concrete Roman breakwater that has spent the last 2,000 years submerged in the Mediterranean Sea have been uncovered by an international team of researchers. The team has pinpointed why the best Roman concrete was superior to most modern concrete in durability, why its…
How Iron Man Can Help ‘Make It in America’
Mandy Mallott
You may not believe this, but economic development has something to learn from Iron Man. When Tony Stark and his “super suit” enter a combat zone, his technology scans the environment: inhabitants, structural deficiencies, assets, and potential pitfalls. This evaluation, although quick, provides…
Why We Keep Having 100-Year Floods
Donald J. Wheeler
All data are historical. All analyses of data are historical. Yet all of the interesting questions about our data have to do with using the past to predict the future. In this article I shall look at the way this is commonly done and examine the assumptions behind this approach. A few years ago a…
Diligence
Jack Dunigan
Editor’s note: This continues Jack Dunigan’s series about unsung heroes in the workplace, and the 16 traits they all share. I went through 26 employees. 26 employees hired and fired over the course of five years. In that time I was approached by the Job Corps people with candidates for work, by…
Toast Guy
Bruce Hamilton
I’ve been doing a lot of speaking at conferences this spring, and I’m always warmly greeted as the “Toast Guy”: the person who produced and starred in the Toast Kaizen video.  Earlier this year, I spoke to a large gathering from a metropolitan healthcare system. When I jokingly asked them, “Who…

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹ Previous
  • …
  • Page 252
  • Page 253
  • Page 254
  • Page 255
  • Current page 256
  • Page 257
  • Page 258
  • Page 259
  • Page 260
  • …
  • Next page Next ›
  • Last page Last »
      

© 2025 Quality Digest. Copyright on content held by Quality Digest or by individual authors. Contact Quality Digest for reprint information.
“Quality Digest" is a trademark owned by Quality Circle Institute Inc.

footer
  • Home
  • Print QD: 1995-2008
  • Print QD: 2008-2009
  • Videos
  • Privacy Policy
  • Write for us
footer second menu
  • Subscribe to Quality Digest
  • About Us
  • Contact Us