Six Sigma Meets ISO 9000
Six Sigma Meets ISO 9000
Six Sigma Meets ISO 9000
One day I was asked why I left the stable, money-producing ISO 9000 business
to join the riskier Six Sigma environment. My explanation went something like
this: "Well, I think it makes more sense to implement a real business improve-
ment and management system than to hang a nice certificate in the CEO’s of-
fice.”
Does this statement make sense?
ISO 9000 and Six Sigma can be highly complementarily. Unfortunately, the two
concepts are often enough not interrelated, driven by different project leaders,
competing for resources and therefore not delivering the best results.
This article shows the potential that lies in a system that uses the power of both
concepts to add value to a company.
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of years. How do they make sure that there is continuity in their Six Sigma initia-
tive and moreover, continuous improvement and customization of the principles
applied in different business areas as well as over time? Most of the so called Six
Sigma companies recognised what everyone expects: different phases of applica-
tion of Six Sigma starting from “Enthusiastic Support” going through “Implemen-
tation and Delivering Results” until a kind of a “Now it’s done. Let’s go back to
our normal business.” Especially at the later stage Six Sigma needs strong lead-
ership and tools to sustain the initiative. Therefore, some of these companies
developed their own framework to assess the Six Sigma system. In General Elec-
tric the Corporate Audit Staff (normally responsible for financial audits) have
been trained to conduct Six Sigma assessments. The contents of these gap as-
sessments used to include areas like
Leadership: Quality Culture, Six Sigma assessment and gap closure, com-
munication
Measurements & Projects: Customer satisfaction results, process indicators,
project initiation and progress, dashboards
Training: All staff training and involvement, Six Sigma training for different
areas and levels
Resources: Appointment of Belts (internal consultants to drive Six Sigma
projects), dedication of leaders to deploy and maintain Six Sigma
Results: Tangible and intangible results of process improvement
Reward & Recognition: Scorecards, various ways to recognise individuals
and teams for their improvement contribution and for delivering results.
After having implemented this assessment system, the whole organisation rec-
ognised a restart of Six Sigma and the full awareness that this is much more
than a “Flavour of the Month”.
Use The ISO 9000 Framework To Assess Your Six Sigma System
Looking at the new ISO 9000:2000 requirements and comparing these require-
ments with the self-developed Six Sigma gap-analysis of companies like General
Electric shows the chance of connecting both approaches and systems with each
other. Six Sigma does not come with the assessment tool per se. This tool needs
to be added after a certain timeframe in order to keep the ball rolling and in or-
der to help making Six Sigma part of the bloodstream. ISO 9000 is designed to
assess companies based on both, external requirements and internal require-
ments and is made to help closing the gaps on a mid-term and long-term basis.
By adding typical Six Sigma requirements as mentioned above to the ISO
9000:2000 internal audit questionnaires, you make Six Sigma part of your com-
panies Quality Management System and improve the effectiveness and efficiency
of the Six Sigma initiative significantly.
A side-effect is that both approaches get aligned and do not compete for re-
sources any longer since the goal is the same anyway: Increase in bottom-line
and top-line results on a long-term basis to increase customer satisfaction and
employee commitment.
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Use Six Sigma Tools To Meet ISO 9000 Requirements
One of the major differences between both systems is that ISO 9000 is a shell of
requirements without any tools, whereas Six Sigma is a methodology connecting
tools and procedures for applying these tools through a “red thread”.
Requirements of ISO 9000:2000 are for example:
Define quality management information needs
Collect quality management system data
Provide quality management information
Improve quality management system
Tools provided by Six Sigma to meet these requirements are for example:
Dashboards as a set of Key Performance Indicators to monitor all processes
at a reasonable degree for all relevant managerial levels.
Operational Definitions to describe exactly how, when, where, with which
tools, by whom, how often and how many data should be collected. Addi-
tionally Six Sigma provides tools to address questions like sample size and
precision as well as capability, repeatability and reproducibility of data col-
lection.
Data displays to help drawing business-relevant conclusions and tests to
justify the significance of conclusions drawn from data collected.
DMAIC: Define – Measure – Analyze – Improve – Control as a methodology
for process improvement at a project level, which is – after necessary cus-
tomisation - applicable at all kind of processes.
Praveen Gupta: Six Sigma and ISO 9000:2000. Published in Febuary 2002 issue
of Circuits Assembly.
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