Quality Digest      
  HomeSearchSubscribeGuestbookAdvertise April 25, 2024
This Month
Home
Articles
ISO 9000 Database
Columnists
Departments
Software
Contact Us
Web Links
Web Links
Web Links
Web Links
Web Links
Need Help?
Web Links
Web Links
Web Links
Web Links
ISO 9000 Database
ISO 9000 Database


Columnist: H. James Harrington

Photo: Scott Paton, publisher

  
   

The Quality Conundrum

The more things change, the more they stay the same.

 

 

 

When you've been involved in quality for as long as I have, you begin to wonder just where we're going. I hear ever-younger consultants telling us about what's new and different, but it all sounds like the same quality methodology I was introduced to 72 years ago, when my father began to keep control charts on my first-grade tests. (At that time Dad was the chief inspector at IBM.)

In an effort to define what's truly new and different, I borrowed a copy of Armand V. Feigenbaum's Quality Control: Principles, Practice, and Administration (McGraw-Hill & Co., 1951). This was the benchmark book that defined total quality control (TQC). In it, Feigenbaum summarizes the methodology as an effective system for integrating the quality development, maintenance, and improvement efforts of an organization's various groups to enable production and service at the most economical levels that will allow full customer satisfaction. TQC includes:

Design of experiments

Quality cost

Design review

Statistical process control

Process certification

Involvement by top management

Supplier controls

Trained, certified quality engineers

Reliability engineers

Employee training

 

The next change in quality methodology, which occurred during the 1980s, was total quality management (TQM), which includes:

All of TQC

ISO 9001

Benchmarking

Team problem solving

5S

Toyota Production System

Strategic quality plans

Lean

Process focus

 

TQM's measure of quality is: Do it right the first and every time. No level of defects is acceptable.

The next major change to the quality approach was business process improvement (BPI), which arrived on the scene in 1984. BPI attacks the heart of the current white-collar problem in the United States by focusing on eliminating waste and bureaucracy. It helps organizations simplify and streamline operations, while ensuring that both internal and external customers receive quality output.

The main objective of BPI is to ensure that the organization has business processes that:

Eliminate waste

Eliminate errors

Minimize delays

Maximize use of assets

Promote understanding

Are easy to use

Adapt to customers' needs

Provide a competitive advantage

Reduce excess head count

 

In 1987 Six Sigma appeared. This management strategy uses statistical tools and project work to achieve breakthrough profitability and quantum gains in quality.

Motorola defines Six Sigma as a business improvement that focuses an organization on:

Understanding and managing customer requirements

Aligning key business processes to achieve those requirements

Utilizing rigorous data analysis to minimize variation in those processes

Driving rapid and sustainable improvement to business processes

 

At the heart of the methodology is the define, measure, analyze, improve, and control (DMAIC) model for process improvement.

Six Sigma includes:

Selected TQM tools

Selected BPI tools

Full-time problem solvers called Black Belts

Expanded statistical training for a selected group of problem solvers

 

Since 1987, we've also seen design for Six Sigma, lean Six Sigma, total improvement management, and now total Six Sigma.

What do all these approaches have in common? They all use:

Top management leadership

Process focus

Similar problem-solving approaches

Measurements of dollars saved

Customer focus

 

I believe that these quality models are more alike than they are different. Business process improvement differs slightly because of its focus on information technology, but overall, it seems that they're all good if used correctly, although none of them are good if they're implemented poorly. What do you think?

About the author
H. James Harrington is CEO of the Harrington Institute Inc. and chairman of the board of e-TQM College Advisory Board. Harrington is a past president of ASQ and IAQ. He has more than 55 years of experience as a quality professional and is the author of 28 books. Visit his Web site at www.harrington-institute.com.