Quality Gurus and Their Key Contributions
Quality Gurus and Their Key Contributions
Quality Gurus and Their Key Contributions
Philip Crosby:
The Four Absolutes of Quality Management:
Quality is conformance to requirements
Quality prevention is preferable to quality inspection
Zero defects is the quality performance standard
Quality is measured in monetary terms – the price of non-conformance
14 Steps to Quality Improvement:
1. Management is committed to quality – and this is clear to all
2. Create quality improvement teams – with (senior) representatives from all
departments.
3. Measure processes to determine current and potential quality issues.
4. Calculate the cost of (poor) quality
5. Raise quality awareness of all employees
6. Take action to correct quality issues
7. Monitor progress of quality improvement – establish a zero defects committee.
8. Train employees in quality improvement
9. Hold “zero defects” days
10. Encourage employees to create their own quality improvement goals
11. Encourage employee communication with management about obstacles to
quality
12. Recognize participants’ effort
13. Create quality councils
14. Do it all over again – quality improvement does not end
Dr. Edwards Deming
Deming’s Fourteen Obligations of Top Management
1. Create constancy of purpose for improvement of product and service. Allocate
resources to provide for long range needs rather than only short term profitability
2. Adopt the new philosophy. We can no longer live with commonly accepted
levels of delays, mistakes, defective materials, and defective workmanship.
3. Cease dependency on mass inspection to achieve quality. Quality is achieved
by building quality into the product in the first place.
4. End the practice of awarding business on the basis of price tag alone. The
aim is to minimize total cost, not merely initial cost. Establish long term relationship
with suppliers to develop loyalty and trust.
5. Improve constantly and forever every process for planning, production, and
service. It is management’s job to work continually on improving total system.
6. Institute training on the job for all, including management, to make better use
of every employee. New skills are required to keep up with changes in products and
processes.
7. Adopt and institute leadership aimed at helping people do a better job.
Management must ensure that immediate action taken on issues that are detrimental to
quality.
8. Drive out fear so that everybody may work effectively and more productively
for the company.
9. Break down barriers between departments and staff areas. Everyone must
work together to tackle problems that may be encountered with products or service.
10. Eliminate slogans and exhortations for the work force as they create
adversarial relationships. Also, bulk of the causes of low quality & productivity
belong to the system and lie beyond the power of the work force.
11. Eliminate arbitrary numerical targets for the workforce and management.
Substitute aids and helpful leadership in order to achieve continual improvement.
12. Remove barriers that rob people of pride of workmanship. This includes the
annual appraisal of performance and Management by Objective.
13. Encourage education. Institute a vigorous program of education and self-
improvement for everyone
14. Clearly define top management’s permanent commitment to ever improving
quality and productivity. Put everybody in the company to work to accomplish the
transformation. Support is not enough, action is required.
Dr. Armand Feigenbaum
Developed Total Quality Control (TQC) philosophy
Quote: “Quality is everybody’s job, but because it is everybody’s job, it can
become nobody’s job without the proper leadership and organization.”
Steps to quality:
Quality leadership
Modern quality technology
Organizational commitment
Dr. Kaoru Ishikawa
Known as father of Japanese quality control effort
Established concept of Company Wide Quality Control (CWQC) –
participation from the top to the bottom of an organization and from the start to the
finish of the product life cycle
Started Quality Circles – bottom up approach – members from within the
department and solve problems on a continuous basis
The fishbone diagram is also called Ishikawa diagram in his honor
Introduced concept that the next process is your customer
Dr. Joseph Juran
Juran’s Quality Trilogy (compared to financial management):
Quality planning (financial budgeting) – create process that will enable one to
meet the desired goals
Quality control (cost control) – monitor and adjust the process
Quality improvement (profit improvement) – move the process to a better and
improved state of control through projects
Key points of Juran’s approach to quality improvement:
Create awareness of the need for quality improvement
Make quality improvement everyone’s job
Create infrastructure for quality improvement
Train the organization in quality improvement techniques
Review progress towards quality improvement regularly
Recognize winning teams
Institutionalize quality improvement by including quality
Concentration on both external and internal customers
Dr. Walter Shewhart
Shewhart’s control charts are widely used to monitor processes. Problems are
framed in terms of special cause (assignable cause) and common cause (chance-
cause).
The Shewhart Cycle – PDCA Problem Solving Process:
Plan – what changes are desirable? What data is needed?
Do – carry out the change or test decided upon
Check – observe the effects of the change or the test
Act – what we learned from the change should lead to improvement or activity
Referred to as the “Father of Statistical Quality Control”
Dr. Genichi Taguchi
The lack of quality should be measured as function of deviation from the
nominal value of the quality characteristic. Thus, quality is best achieved by
minimizing the deviation from target (minimizing variation).
Quality should be designed into the product and not inspected into it. The
product should be so designed that it is immune to causes of variation.
Taguchi recommends a three-stage design process:
System Design (Stage 1):
development of a basic functional prototype design
determination of materials, parts and assembly system
determination of the manufacturing process involved
Parameter Design (Stage 2):
selecting the nominals of the system by running statistically planned
experiments (DFSS/DOE)
Tolerance Design (Stage 3):
deals with tightening tolerances and upgrading materials
By Kush Shah
GM Fellow & Sr. Mgr. – Operational Excellence|ASQ Fellow|SSMBB|Red X Master|
DFSSBB|ASQ-CMQ/OE|CSSBB|CQE|CQA|CBA|
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/quality-gurus-key-contributions-kush-shah
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