This document discusses quality management and continuous improvement. It defines quality as fitness for use and as a predictable degree of uniformity and dependability at low cost. Quality management aims to manage all organization aspects to meet customer needs. There are two aspects of quality - features that meet customer needs and freedom from trouble with fewer defects. Cost of quality includes prevention, appraisal, internal failure, external failure, and opportunity costs. The document outlines the history and key figures in quality management from 1900 to present. It discusses the elements of quality management including commitment, customer satisfaction, measurement, prevention, training, and continuous improvement.
NewBase 22 April 2024 Energy News issue - 1718 by Khaled Al Awadi (AutoRe...
Quality management
1. (Process of quality management and continuous
improvement)
Presented By:
Mamta Bhola
2. “Quality is fitness for use or purpose.”
-Joseph M. Juran
“A predictable degree of uniformity and
dependability at low cost and suited to
market.” W.Edward Deming
3. What is quality management all about?
Try to manage all aspects of the
organization in order to excel in all
dimensions that are important to
“customers”
Two aspects of quality:
features: more features that meet customer needs
= higher quality
freedom from trouble: fewer defects = higher
quality
6. 1904 - 2008
1951
Quality is “fitness
for use”
Pareto Principle
Cost of Quality
General
management
approach as well as
statistics
7. What does Quality Management
encompass?
TQM is a management philosophy:
• continuous improvement
• leadership development
Cultural
Alignment
Technical
Tools
(Process Analysis,
SPC)
Customer
9. elements of quality management
Commitment to Quality
Customer Satisfaction
Measurement of Quality
Prevention rather than Detection
Proper Training
Continuous Improvement
Reasons for the Problems Solved
Benchmaing
16. Principle 1 – Improvements are based on small changes, not major
paradigm shifts or new inventions
Principle 2 – Ideas come from employees
Principle 3 – Incremental improvements are typically inexpensive to
implement
Principle 4 – Employees take ownership and are accountable for
improvement
Principle 5 – Improvement is reflective
Principle 6 – Improvement is measurable and potentially repeatable
17. Case: shortening telephone waiting
time…
• A bank is employing a call answering service
• The main goal in terms of quality is “zero waiting time”
- customers get a bad impression
- company vision to be friendly and easy access
• The question is how to analyze the situation and improve quality
19. Makes
custom
er wait
Absent receiving
party
Working system of
operators
Customer Operator
Fishbone diagram analysis
Absent
Out of office
Not at desk
Lunchtime
Too many phone
calls
Absent
Not giving
receiving party’s
coordinates
Complaining
Leaving a
message
Lengthy talk
Does not know
organization
well
Takes too much
time to explain
Does not
understan
d
customer
20. Ideas for improvement
1. Taking lunches on three different shifts
2. Ask all employees to leave messages when leaving desks
3. Compiling a directory where next to personnel’s name
appears her/his title
21. In general, how can we monitor quality…?
1. Assignable variation: we can assess the cause
2. Common variation: variation that may not be possible to correct
(random variation, random noise)
By observing
variation in
output measures!
22. 1. Leadership that walks the talk
2. A focus on "fire prevention" rather than "fire fighting“
3. Constancy of purpose
4. Shift to long term mind-set