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"As much as 95% of quality related problems in the factory can be solved with seven fundamental quantitative tools." - Kaoru Ishikawa
By Zaipul Anwar Business & Advanced Technology Centre, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
The Basic Seven Tools made statistical analysis less complicated for the average person
Good Visual Aids make statistical and quality control more comprehendible.
Exercise
Ham Industries
Resembles skeleton of a fish Focus on causes rather than symptoms of a problem Emphasizes group communication and brainstorming Stimulates discussion
Use in Organizations (1 of 2)
Can be used to improve any product, process, or service
Any area of the company that is experiencing a problem Isolates all relevant causes
Use in Organizations (2 of 2)
Helps bring a problem into light
Group discussion and brainstorming Finds reasons for quality variations, and the relationships between them
As a group:
group
.3
for each of the 5. Brainstorm secondary causes major causes 6. Connect these secondary causes to their respective major causes 7. Repeat steps 5 & 6 for sub-causes dividing with increased specificity
- usually four or five levels
Example (1 of 4)
Step 1 & 2:
(backbone)
Example (2 of 4)
Step 3 & 4:
Appearance Responsiveness
Poor Service
Attention
Reliability
Example (3 of 4)
Step 5, 6, & 7:
Appearance equipment personnel Responsiveness time
facility
Poor Service accuracy One on one service dependability Reliability
courtesy
Attention
Example (4 of 4)
Step 8 & 9:
Use tools to analyze and evaluate causes
Pareto diagrams, charts, and graphs Statistical analysis for causes in processes Use fishbone diagram, analysis and evaluations to find causes that can be fixed Take action to eliminate and fix problem causes
Summary (1 of 3)
Fishbone Diagrams
- visual diagram - resembles fish skeleton - identifies the causes of a problem (effect), and their relationships
- created by Kaoru Ishikawa for Quality Management
Summary (2 of 3)
Organizational Uses
Increases communication about problems Used to improve any product, process, or service Important part of quality management
Summary (3 of 3)
Creation of Fishbone diagrams
Problem or effect is head of fish Identify major, secondary and tertiary causes, and attach to backbone identifying relationships Analyze and Evaluate results Act to fix the problem(s)
Exercise
Create a Fishbone (cause and effect, Ishikawa) Diagram for the following:
Management at Ham Industries has noticed that the productivity of its workers is well below the standard. After interviewing its employees, it was noticed that a vast majority felt dissatisfied and unhappy with their work. Your boss has asked you and a group of your peers to find the causes of worker dissatisfaction . Include all possible causes to at least the secondary level.
Bibliography
//home.t-online.de/home/kfmaas/q_ishika.html www.zi.unizh.ch/software/unix/statmath/sas/sasdoc/qc /chap17/sect1.htm www.dti.gov.uk/mbp/bpgt/m9ja00001/m9ja0000110.ht ml Foster, S. Thomas. Managing Quality: An Integrative Approach. 2001, Prentice-Hall
Overview
What is a Histogram? What are some possible uses for a Histogram? Where did the Histogram come from? How do Histograms work? A real world example. An exercise.
(1 (2
(3
(4 (5
(6
What is a Histogram?
A Histogram is a variation of a bar chart in which data values are grouped together and put into different classes. This grouping allows you see how frequently data in each class occur in the data set.
Example of a Histogram
Negatively Skewed:
Multi-Modal Distribution:
This analysis will help you to make better decisions toward quality improvements.
Constructing a Histogram
From a set of data compute sum mean (x) Max Min Range (max-min)
Constructing a Histogram
Use range to estimate beginning and end Calculate the width of each column by dividing the range by the number of columns
Range
# of Columns
= Width
Range/Columns=7/7=1 slice
Slices of Pizza
Constructing a Histogram
How is this helpful to Acme? 2 slices of pizza most common order placed Distribution of sales useful for forecasting next Thursdays late night demand If you were an Acme manager how could you apply this information?
1
33 65
8
12 0 0 1
Slices 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1 2 2
3 4
4 3
5 7
6 5
7 6
Slices of Pizza
Percent
50
Count
60 40 20
40 30 20 10 0
t en on mp Co
0
ild Bu er Oth
Design Faults
100
Defect
Count Percent Cum %
n s ig De
57 75.0 75.0
13 17.1 92.1
4 5.3 97.4
2 2.6 100.0
50 80 40
Percent
t ec nn Co le du Mo s tor Mo ue q r To t uc tar sd ld S Tran Co le du Mo er IC AS n atio libr Ca IOP n Imo
Count
60 40 20 0
30 20 10 0
Defect
Count Percent Cum %
21 36.8 36.8
10 17.5 54.4
8 14.0 68.4
8 14.0 82.5
5 8.8 91.2
3 5.3 96.5
2 3.5 100.0
Process
Flowcharts
Dont Forget to: Define symbols before beginning Stay consistent Check that process is accurate
Window (start)
Get Pizza
yes no
Lockup Put More in
2 Pies Oven
Available?
no no
Time to close? yes
yes
Take to Customer
How can we use the flowchart to analyze improvement ideas from the Histogram?
Money?
Window (start)
Get Pizza
yes no
Lockup Put More in
2 Pies Oven
Available?
no no
Time to close?
yes
Take to Customer
yes
In this simple example, you can find the existing relationship without much difficulty but
Scatter Diagrams
Easier to see direct relationship
25 20 15 10 5 0 0 20 40 60 80
Scatter Diagrams
As a quality tool What does this tell Acme management about their processes? Improvements?
25 20 15 10 5 0 0 20 40 60 80
Run Charts
Slices/hour
8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4
8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4
Time
PM- AM
Thursday Week 1
PM- AM
Thursday Week 2
PM- AM
Thursday Week 3
Range
Control Charts
Upper Limit
Control Charts
Acme Pizza Management wants to get in on the control chart action
Average Diameter = 16 inches Upper Limit = 17 inches
17 inches
16 inches= X
Lower Limit 15 Inches
Small Pie
Flow Chart
Check Sheet
Histograms
Pareto Analysis
Scatter Diagrams
Control Charts
Summary
Basic Seven Tools of Quality Measuring data Quality Analysis Democratized statistics
Bibliography
Foster, Thomas. Managing Quality. An IntegrativeApproach. Upper Saddle River : 2001. Prentice Hall, Stevenson, William. Supercharging Your Pareto Analysis. Quality Progress 51-55. October 2000: Dr Kaoru Ishikawa. Internet http://www.dti.gov.uk/mbp/bpgt/m9ja00001/m9ja0000110.html. 16 February 2001. Chemical and Process Engineering. Internet. February 2001. http://lorien.ncl.ac.uk/ming/spc/spc8.htm. 17