Chapter 1
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
Introduction
Since the mid-1980s, there has been increasing interest in the application
of the Six Sigma methodology in many industries [16]. Six Sigma is a
well-accepted tool for process improvement and quality control. It is a
structured, disciplined, data-driven methodology and process for
improving business performance, with an emphasis on voice of the
customer (VOC) and using statistical analysis tools. In the early 2000s,
Six Sigma was combined with the Lean principle to become Lean Six
Sigma to achieve business and operational excellence [7, 8]. In this
chapter, the history, rationale, and benefits of Lean Six Sigma will be
discussed.
1.1 History of Lean Six Sigma
The use of statistics in manufacturing started in the 1920s at Bell
Laboratories by Dr. Walter A. Shewhart, Dr. Harold Dodge, and Dr. Harry
Romig. The military adopted the use of statistics in the 1940s during World
War II. By the 1950s, Drs. Edwards Deming, Joseph M. Juran, and Armand
V. Feigenbaun had made significant contributions to the quality
engineering field by developing the Total Quality Management (TQM)
system. Dr. Deming first taught quality control to the Japanese, and they
were the first ones to embrace TQM. In the 1950s, Dr. Genechi Taguchi
popularized the concept of design of experiments in order to improve
product quality. The Japanese manufacturing industry made significant
improvements in quality due to the wide use of statistical methods such as
TQM. The Japanese were so successful in quality control that American
customers preferred to buy products made in Japan rather than those made
in the United States. As a result, Japanese manufacturers enjoyed large
market shares in the United States, especially in the markets for
automobiles and consumer electronics. To meet its customers needs,
Toyota created the Toyota Production System(TPS) [9] to deliver
products of the right quality, in the right quantity, and at the right
price. This marked the beginning of Leanproduction [1013]. The key
concept of Lean is to identify and eliminate the nonvalue-added steps in a
process. These steps waste resources and add the chance of defects;
eliminating them can accelerate the process and reduce the cost.
In 1980, NBC aired a documentary, If Japan CanWhy Cant We?, which
raised the awareness of the quality issues among the American industries.
During the 1980s, U.S. corporations made tremendous strides to catch up
with their Japanese counterparts. Six Sigma was developed partly due to
this endeavor [4, 5, 14].
In 1986, Six Sigma was first introduced by Motorola, where William Smith
and Mikel Harry created the quality improvement process. In 1989,
Motorola established the Six Sigma Research Institute, followed soon by
AlliedSignal and General Electric (GE). Black & Decker, DuPont, Dow
Chemical, Federal Express, Boeing, Johnson & Johnson, Ford Motor
Company, General Motors, and many other companies initiated Six Sigma
afterwards. Most of the early proponents of Six Sigma were from the
manufacturing and technology industries. As the methodology progressed,
however, it spread to pharmaceuticals, financial institutes, toy makers,
clothing retailers, military, and many other sectors. By the late 1990s, about
two-thirds of the Fortune 500 companies had embraced Six Sigma
initiatives aimed for reducing cost and improving quality. Today, many
companies require their employees to go through the Six Sigma training. It
is fair to say that Six Sigma has become an internationally accepted
management system, a process improvement methodology, a technical
problem-solving tool, and a global common language across different
sectors.
In general, Six Sigma focuses on reducing the variation and defects in the
performance of a product or process, as illustrated in Figure 1.1.
The performance of mass-produced products varies slightly from unit to
unit; when this variation exceeds the tolerance, the product is a defect.
Defects have to be tested, repaired, replaced, recycled, or trashed, adding
waste and cost to the manufacturer. After the product is deployed in the
field, a defect would cause customer dissatisfaction, repair charge, and
potential loss of market share. To both the manufacturer and the consumer,
a consistent product performance adds value, which is why Six Sigma is so
important. Six Sigma also allows more flexibility in choosing the nominal
values for design parameters.
result, it has become more and more popular as a tool for improving
business and operational excellence over the last decade.
Even though statistics is a major part of the methodology [15, 16], Lean Six
Sigma is more than just a statistical tool for reducing product variation. It is
also a process that can make a business more successful. Companies and
organizations employ Lean Six Sigma to raise the quality of their products,
to eliminate the waste in their processes, to maintain the competitiveness of
their products, and to improve the financial bottom line. To survive in
todays global market, companies must continuously improve; no company
is too big to fail!
1.2 Optimal Quality Cost
J.M. Juran introduced the concept of optimal quality control in his
book Quality Planning and Analysis [17]. The total cost related to product
quality was broken down into two categories: thecost of failure and
the cost of appraisal/prevention. These costs can be plotted as
functions of product quality, which ranks from 0 percent (all bad) to 100
percent (all good), as illustrated in Figure 1.2.
A typical total quality cost function is plotted in Figure 1.3. The objective is
to minimize the total quality costs by operating around the optimal point.
On the contrary, the actual inputs to software can deviate from the design
intent, causing variation in the result.
Myth 5: Lean Six Sigma is for incremental improvement, not for
new products.
In fact, Design for Six Sigma (DFSS) is specifically for new product
development.
Lean Six Sigma changes the way people think and work; it changes the
culture of corporations. It has become both a business model and a
business culture. Nowadays, many companies in manufacturing and
pharmaceutical industries mandate the use of Lean Six Sigma tools in their
everyday business operation. Engineers and engineering managers need to
have a more thorough knowledge of Lean Six Sigma as more businesses,
government agencies, and organizations adopt the methodology to improve
their products, processes, and services. Lean Six Sigma provides a
systematic approach for improving a process, identifying the root cause of a
problem, finding a robust design, performing statistical data analysis, and
assessing a measurement system, all of which are relevant to the tasks of
engineers.
What do you need to know about Lean Six Sigma as a
manager/leader?
Product development/improvement process, technology innovation
and planning, R&D: if you know Lean Six Sigma, you will be able to plan
more efficiently and make better decisions.
What do you need to know as a Lean Six Sigma practitioner?
The Lean Six Sigma process (DMAIC), systematic way of problem
solving, process mapping, process improvement, new product
development, robust design, among others.
What are the characteristics of Lean Six Sigma?
1. The strong emphasis on defining the project, especially on
understanding what customers need
[19] P. A. Keller and P. Keller, (2010). Six Sigma Demystified, 2nd ed.,
New York, NY: McGraw-Hill Professional.
Further readings
D. F. A. Joseph and W. Barnard, (2004). JURAN Institutes Six Sigma
Breakthrough and BeyondQuality Performance Breakthrough Methods,
New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.
M. J. Harry, P. S. Mann, O. C. De Hodgins, R. L. Hulbert, and C. J. Lacke,
(2010). Practitioners Guide to Statistics and Lean Six Sigma for Process
Improvements, New York, NY: Wiley.
T. Pyzdek and P. A. Keller, (2014). The Six Sigma Handbook, 4th ed., New
York, NY: McGraw-Hill.
G. Taylor, (2008). Lean Six Sigma Service Excellence: A Guide to Green
Belt Certification and Bottom Line Improvement, New York, NY: J. Ross
Publishing.
D. J. Wheeler, (2010). The Six Sigma Practitioners Guide to Data
Analysis, 2nd ed., Knoxville, TN: SPC Press.
J. P. Womack and D. T. Jones, (2003). Lean Thinking: Banish Waste and
Create Wealth in Your Corporation, New York, NY: Free Press.