BUMA
BUMA
BUMA
2. Six Sigma
The term was popularized by Motorola, Honeywell, and General Electric, has two meaning in
TQM.
- In a statistical sense, it describes a process, product, or service with an extremely high
capability.
- The second definition of Six Sigma is a program designed to reduce defects to help lower
costs, save time, and improve customer satisfaction. Six Sigma is a comprehensive system –
a strategy, a discipline, and a set of tools – for achieving and sustaining business success.
The Six Sigma
- It is a strategy because it focuses on total customer satisfaction.
- It is a discipline because it follows the formal Six Sigma Improvement Model known as DMAIC.
This five-step process improvement-model
Defines the project’s purpose, scope, and outputs and then identifies the required process
information, keeping in mind the customer’s definition of quality;
Measures the process and collects data;
Analyzes the data, ensuring repeatability and reproducibility.
Improves , by modifying or redesigning, existing processes and procedures, and
Controls the new process to make sure performance levels are maintained.
- It is a set of seven tools that we introduce shorty in this chapter: check sheets, scatter diagrams,
cause-and-effect diagrams, Pareto charts, flow charts, histograms, and statistical process
control.
3. Employee Empowerment
Means involving employees in every step of the production process. Consistently, research
suggests that some 85% of quality problems have to do with materials and processes, not with
employee performance. Therefore, the task is to design equipment and processes that produce
the desired quality. This is best done with a high degree of involvement by those who understand
the shortcomings of the system. Those dealing with the system on a daily basis understand it
better than anyone else.
Techniques for building employee empowerment include (1) building communication
networks that include employees; (2) developing open, supportive supervisors; (3) moving
responsibility from both managers and staff to production employees; (4) building high morale
organizations; and (5) creating such formal organization structures as teams and quality circles.
Teams can be built to address a variety of issues. One popular focus of teams is quality. Such
teams are often known as quality circles. A quality circle is a group of employees who meet
regularly to solve work-related problems. The members receive training in group planning,
problem solving, and statistical quality control. They generally meet once a week (usually after
work but sometimes on company time). Although the members are not rewarded financially,
they do receive recognition from the firm. A specially trained team member, called the facilitator,
usually helps train the members and keeps the meetings running smoothly. Teams with a quality
focus have proven to be a cost-effective way to increase productivity as well as quality
4. Benchmarking
- Benchmarking is another ingredient in an organization’s TQM program. Benchmarking
involves selecting a demonstrated standard of products, services, costs, or practices that
represent the very best performance for processes or activities very similar to your own. The
idea is to develop a target at which to shoot and then to develop a standard or benchmark
against which to compare your performance. The steps for developing benchmarks are:
1. determine what to benchmark
2. form a benchmark team
3. identify benchmarking partners
4. collect and analyze benchmarking information
5. take action to match or exceed the benchmark
Internal Benchmarking
When an organization is large enough to have many divisions or business units, a natural
approach is the internal benchmark. Data are usually much more accessible than from outside
firms. Typically, one internal unit has superior performance worth learning from.
5. Just-in-Time (JIT)
The philosophy behind just-in-time (JIT) is one of continuing improvement and enforced
problem solving. JIT systems are designed to produce or deliver goods just as they are needed.
JIT is related to quality in three ways:
JIT cuts the cost of quality: This occurs because scrap, rework, inventory investment, and
damage costs are directly related to inventory on hand. Because there is less inventory on
hand with JIT, costs are lower. In addition, inventory hides bad quality, whereas JIT
immediately exposes bad quality.
JIT improves quality: As JIT shrinks lead time, it keeps evidence of errors fresh and limits the
number of potential sources of error. JIT creates, in effect, an early warning system for
quality problems, both within the firm and with vendors.
Better quality means less inventory and a better, easier-to-employ JIT system: Often the
purpose of keeping inventory is to protect against poor production performance resulting
from unreliable quality. If consistent quality exists, JIT allows firms to reduce all the costs
associated with inventory.
6. Taguchi Concepts
Most quality problems are the result of poor product and process design. Genichi Taguchi has
provided us with three concepts aimed at improving both product and process quality: quality
robustness, target-oriented quality, and the quality loss function. Quality robust products are
products that can be produced uniformly and consistently in adverse manufacturing and
environmental conditions. Taguchi’s idea is to remove the effects of adverse conditions instead
of removing the causes. Taguchi suggests that removing the effects is often cheaper than
removing the causes and more effective in producing a robust product. In this way, small
variations in materials and process do not destroy product quality.
Taguchi introduced the concept of target-oriented quality as a philosophy of continuous
improvement to bring the product exactly on target. As a measure, Taguchi’s quality loss function
(QLF) attempts to estimate the cost of deviating from the target value. Even though the item is
produced within specification limits, the variation in quality can be expected to increase costs as
the item output moves away from its target value.
TOOLS OF TQM
1. Check sheets - A check sheet is any kind of a form that is designed for recording data. In
many cases, the recording is done so the patterns are easily seen while the data are being
taken. Check sheets help analysts find the facts or patterns that may aid subsequent
analysis.
2. Scatter Diagrams – scatter diagrams show the relationship between two measurements.
3. Cause-and-Effect Diagram – also known as an Ishikawa diagram or a fish-bone chart. The
operations manager starts with four categories: material, machinery/equipment,
manpower, and methods. These four M s are the “causes.” They provide a good checklist
for initial analysis. Individual causes associated with each category are tied in as separate
bones along that branch, often through a brainstorming process.
4. Pareto Charts – are a method of organizing errors, problems, or defects to help focus on
problem-solving efforts. Joseph M. Juran popularized Pareto’s work when he suggested
that 80% of a firm’s problems are a result of only 20% of the causes. Pareto analysis
indicates which problems may yield the greatest payoff.
5. Flowcharts – graphically present a process or system using annotated boxes and
interconnected lines. They are simple but great tool for trying to make sense of a process
or explain a process.
6. Histograms – show the range of values of a measurement and the frequency with which
each value occurs. They show the most frequently occurring readings as well as the
variations in the measurements. Descriptive statistics, such as the average and standard
deviation, may be calculated to describe the distribution. However, the data should
always be plotted so the shape of the distribution can be “seen”. A visual presentation of
the distribution may also provide insight into the cause of the variation.
7. Statistical Process Control (SPC) – monitors standards, makes measurements, and takes
corrective action as a product or service is being produced. Samples of process outputs
are examined; if they are within acceptable limits, the process is permitted to continue.
If they fall outside certain specific ranges, the process is stopped and, typically, the
assignable cause located and removed.
Control Charts are graphic presentations of data over time that show upper and
lower limits for the process we want to control. Control charts are constructed in such a
way that new data can be quickly compared with past performance data. We take
samples of the process output and plot the average of each of these samples on a chart
that has the limits on it. The upper and lower limits in a control chart can be in units of
temperature, pressure, weight, length, and so on.
Source Inspection
The best inspection can be thought of as no inspection at all; this “inspection” is always
done at the source—it is just doing the job properly with the operator ensuring that this is so.
This may be called source inspection (or source control) and is consistent with the concept of
employee empowerment, where individual employees self-check their own work. The idea is that
each supplier, process, and employee treats the next step in the process as the customer, ensuring
perfect product to the next “customer.” This inspection may be assisted by the use of checklists
and controls such as a fail-safe device called a poka-yoke, a name borrowed from the Japanese.
A poka-yoke is a foolproof device or technique that ensures production of good units
every time. These special devices avoid errors and provide quick feedback of problems. Checklists
are a type of poka-yoke to help ensure consistency and completeness in carrying out a task. A
basic example is a to-do list.
Service Industry Inspection
In service -oriented organizations, inspection points can be assigned at a wide range of
locations. The operations manager must decide where inspections are justified and may find the
seven tools of TQM useful when making these judgments.