Frameworks for Quality and Performance Excellence

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CHAPTER 2: “Frameworks for Quality and Performance Excellence”

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Transcript of Frameworks for Quality and Performance Excellence

Page 1: Frameworks for Quality and Performance Excellence

CHAPTER 2:“Frameworks for Quality

and Performance Excellence”

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Foundations of Performance Excellence

Prepared by:MS.MARY MAE YALONG

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Foundations of Performance Excellence

True Management Gurus▫W. Edwards Deming▫Joseph M. Juran▫Philip B. Crosby

The Deming Philosophy▫The Deming Chain Reaction▫A System of Profound Knowledge

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William Edwards Deming was an

American statistician, professor,

author, lecturer, and consultant. He is perhaps

best known for the "Plan-Do-

Check-Act" cycle popularly

named after him.

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Joseph Moses Juran was a

Romanian-born American

management consultant and engineer. He is

principally remembered as

an evangelist for quality and

quality management.

 

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Crosby initiated the Zero Defects program at the

Martin Company. As the quality

control manager of the

Pershing missile program, Crosby was credited with

a 25 percent reduction in the overall rejection

rate and a 30 percent reduction

in scrap costs.

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THE DEMING CHAIN REACTIONImprove Quality

Costs decrease because of less rework, fewer mistakes, fewer delays and snags, and better use of time and materials

Productivity improves

Capture the market with better quality and lower price

Stay in business

Provide jobs and more jobs

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A SYSTEM OF PROFOUND KNOWLEDGE•Appreciation for a system•Understanding process variation•Theory of knowledge•Psychology

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A SYSTEM OF PROFOUND KNOWLEDGE

Appreciation for a system▫Systems – is a set of functions or activities within an

organization that work together to achieve organizational goals.

▫Systems require “cooperation”

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A SYSTEM OF PROFOUND KNOWLEDGEUnderstanding process variation

▫Common causes of variation – factors that are present as a natural part of a process

▫Special causes of variation, often called assignable causes

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A SYSTEM OF PROFOUND KNOWLEDGETheory of Knowledge – a branch of philosophy

concerned with the nature and scope of knowledge▫Management decisions should be driven by facts, data,

and justifiable theories, not solely by opinions.

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A SYSTEM OF PROFOUND KNOWLEDGEPsychology – helps us to understand people,

interactions between people and circumstances, interactions between leaders and employees, and the drivers of behavior.

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14 POINTS FOR MANAGEMENT1. Management Commitment2. Learn the New Philosophy3. Understand Inspection4. End Price Tag Decisions5. Improve Constantly6. Institute Training7. Institute Leadership

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14 POINTS FOR MANAGEMENT8. Drive Out Fear9. Optimize Team Efforts10. Eliminate Exhortations11. Eliminate Quotas and MBO12. Remove Barriers to Pride in Workmanship13. Institute Education14. Take Action

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JURAN PHILOSOPHY• Joseph M. Juran wrote, edited, and published one of

the most comprehensive books on quality, Quality Control Handbook

•He defines quality as “fitness for use”

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JURAN PHILOSOPHYFour Categories of Fitness for Use:1. Quality of design2. Quality of Conformance3. Availability4. Field Service

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JURAN PHILOSOPHYQuality Trilogy

1. Quality Planning – the process for preparing to meet quality goals

2. Quality Control – the process for meeting quality goals during operations

3. Quality Improvement – the process for breaking through the unprecedented levels of performance

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CROSBY PHILOSOPHY•His first book, Quality Is Free, is credited with

bringing quality to the attention of top American executives

•The essence of Crosby’s quality philosophy is embodied in what he calls the Absolutes of Quality Management and the Basic Elements of Improvement

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CROSBY PHILOSOPHYAbsolutes Quality of Management•Quality means conformance to requirements not

elegance•There is no such thing as a quality problem•There is no such thing as the economics of quality: it

is always cheaper to do the job right the first time•The only performance measurement is the cost of

quality•The only performance standard is Zero Defects

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CROSBY PHILOSOPHYBasic Elements of Improvement1. Determination2. Education3. Implementation•He placed more emphasis on management and

organizational processes for changing corporate culture and attitudes than on the use of statistical techniques

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THE MALCOLM BALDRIDGE NATIONAL QUALITY AWARD (MBNQA)

Prepared by :MS.RYAN BEATRICE ROBLES

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Malcolm Baldrige was nominated to be

Secretary of Commerce by

President Ronald Reagan on December

11, 1980, and confirmed by the

United States Senate on January 22, 1981. During his tenure, Baldrige played a

major role in developing and

carrying out Administration trade

policy.

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History and Purpose• President Reagan signed legislation

mandating a national study/conference on productivity in October 1982.

• Baldridge Award was signed into law on August 20, 1987.

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•The purpose of the award are to:▫Help stimulate American companies to

improve quality and productivity▫Recognize the achievements of those

companies that improve the quality of their goods and services

▫Establish guidelines and criteria▫Provide specific guidance for other

American enterprises that wish to learn how to manage for high quality

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•Baldridge Award recognizes US companies that excel in quality management practice and performance.

•The award has evolved into a comprehensive National Quality program of which Baldridge Award is only one part.

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The Criteria for Performance Excellence•Designed to encourage companies to enhance

their competitiveness through an aligned approach to organizational performance management that results in:▫Delivery of ever-improving value to customers,

contributing to marketplace success.▫Improvement of overall company performance

and capabilities.▫Organizational and personal learning.

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7categories of the Criteria:1.Leadership2.Strategic Planning3.Customer focus4. Measurement, Analysis, and Knowledge Management5. Workforce Focus6. Process Management7. Results

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INTERNATIONAL QUALITY AWARD PROGRAMS

Prepared by:MS.SANDRA LIBUNAO

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1.The DEMING PRIZE •Instituted in 1951 by the Union of

Japanese Scientists and Engineers (JUSE) in recognition and appreciation of W. Edwards Deming’s achievements in

statistical quality control and his friendship with the Japanese people.

.

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\

•Annual award presented to a company or a division of company that has achieved distinctive performance improvements through the application of Companywide Quality Control –defined by JUSE as a system of activities to assure that quality products and services required by customers are economically designed,produced and supplied while respecting the principle of customer -orientation and the overall public well-being.

•  

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10 CATEGORIES AS JUDGING CRITERIA:•Policies•The organizations and its operations•Education and dissemination•Information gathering•Communication and its utilization•Analysis•Standardization•Control/management •Quality assurance•Effects

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•Objectives are to ensure that that a company has so thoroughly deployed a quality process that it will continue to improve long after a prize is awarded.

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2.EUROPEAN EXCELLENCE AWARD(European Quality Award )• In October 1991,it was created by the European

Foundation for Quality Management (EFQM) in partnership with the European commission and the European Organization for quality.

• Designed to increase awareness throughout the European Community and business in particular, of the growing importance of quality to their competitiveness in the increasingly global market and to their standards of life.

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•Base on this premise: Excellent results with respect to performance , customers, people, and society are achieved through leadership driving policy and strategy , that is, delivered through people partnerships and resources, and processes.

• 

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THREE RECOGNITION LEVELS OF EFQM

▫A. EFQM excellence award▫B. Recognized for excellence▫C. Committed to excellence

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3.CANADIAN AWARD FOR BUSINESS EXCELLENCE•Canada’s National Quality Institute

(NQI)recognizes Canada’s foremost achievers of excellence through this award.

•Quality criteria are similar in structure to the Baldrige Award Criteria, with some key differences.

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MAJOR CATEGORIES AND ITEMS IN THIS CATEGORY:

▫A .Leadership▫B. Customer Focus▫C. Planning for improvement▫D. People Focus▫E. Process Optimization▫F. Supplier Focus

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4. AUSTRALIAN BUSINESS AWARD( Australian Quality Awards)•Developed independently from

Baldrige Award in 1998.•Administered by Australian Quality

Awards Foundation ,subsidiary of Australian Quality control

•Prominent award available for business in Australia

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FOUR LEVELS OF AWARDS:▫The Foundation In Business Excellence

award▫Bronze Award Level▫The Silver Award Level▫The Gold Award Level

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•Assessment criteria are leadership, strategy and planning ,information and knowledge, people, customer focus, processes, products and services and business results

•Criteria are benchmarked with the Baldrige criteria and European Business Excellence Model.

 

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5.QUALITY AWARDS IN CHINA• In 2001,National Quality award was introduced

by China Association for Quality (CAQ).• Criteria are based on components of the

Baldrige National Quality Award • In 2004,Shenzen became the first city to

launch a Local quality award called Mayor’s Cup Quality Award

• Encouraged many organization to participate and share best practices. 

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INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION for STANDARDIZATION(ISO)

Prepared by:MS.SANDRA C. LIBUNAOMR.KEN GUIAL

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• The organization's name would have different acronyms in different languages – e.g. IOS is English, OIN in French – so it adopted the short name ISO, based on the Greek word isos (ἴσος, meaning equal)

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International Organization for StandardizationOrganisation internationale de normalisation

Международная организация по стандартизации[1]

Logo of the ISO

Formation 23 February 1947

Type Non-governmental organization

Purpose/focus International standardization

Headquarters Geneva, Switzerland

Membership 163 members[2]

Official languages English, French and Russian[3]

Website iso.org

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History• The organization today known as ISO began in 1926 as the

International Federation of the National Standardizing Associations (ISA), whose focus was mainly mechanical engineering.

• disbanded in 1942 during World War II but was reorganized under its current name, ISO, in 1946, when delegates from 25 countries met at the Institute of Civil Engineers in London

• the new organization officially began operations in February 1947.

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INTERNATIONAL STANDARD ORGANIZATION(ISO)

•ISO 9000:2000▫Founded in 1946 and composed of

representatives from the national standards bodies of 91 nations.

▫Most recent version▫Defines quality system standards

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FIVE OBJECTIVES1.Achieve, maintain and seek to continuously improve product quality in relationship to requirements.

2.Improve the quality of operations to continually meet customers and stakeholders stated and implied needs.

3.Provide confidence to internal management and other employees that quality requirements are being fulfilled and that improvement is taking place.

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4.Provide confidence to customers and other stakeholders that quality requirements are being achieved in the delivered product.

5.Provide confidence that quality system requirements are fulfilled.

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FACTORS LEADING TO ISO:

•Dissatisfaction•Deficiencies in the old ISO 9000 on

quality process

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IMPLEMENTATION AND REGISTRATIONRegistration Process:

▫Document review▫Preassessment▫Assessment by a team of two or three auditors▫Surveillance or periodic reaudit▫Recertification is required every three years.▫Individual sites must achieve registration

individually• 

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Benefits of ISO 9000:2000▫Set good basic practices for initiating a

quality system▫Provide detailed guidance on process and

product control▫It helped improve quality and service

customers▫It improves productivity, decrease cost, and

increase customer satisfaction.

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SIX SIGMA

Prepared by:MS.KCLYN BULAONG

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Sigma is the eighteenth letter of the Greek alphabet ; standard deviation.

The term "six sigma process" comes from the notion that if one has six standard deviations between the process mean and the nearest specification limit, as shown in the graph, practically no items will fail to meet specifications.

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Graph of the normal distribution

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Hence the widely accepted definition of a six sigma process is a process

that produces 3.4 defective parts per million opportunities (DPMO). This is based on the fact that a process that is normally distributed will have 3.4 parts per million beyond a point that is 4.5 standard deviations above or

below the mean.

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Sigma level

Sigma (with 1.5σ shift)

DPMOPercen

t defecti

ve

Percentage yield

Short-term Cpk

Long-term Cpk

1 -0.5 691,462 69% 31% 0.33 –0.17

2 0.5 308,538 31% 69% 0.67 0.17

3 1.5 66,807 6.7% 93.3% 1.00 0.54 2.5 6,210 0.62% 99.38% 1.33 0.83

5 3.5 233 0.023% 99.977% 1.67 1.17

6 4.5 3.4 0.00034%

99.99966% 2.00 1.5

7 5.5 0.019 0.0000019%

99.9999981% 2.33 1.83

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SIX SIGMA can be best described as a BUSINESS

INPROVEMENT approach that seeks to find and eliminate causes of defects

and errors in manufacturing and services processes by focusing on

outputs that are critical to customers and a clear financial return for the

organization.

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Six Sigma projects follow two project methodologies inspired by Deming's Plan-Do-

Check-Act Cycle.• DMAIC is used for projects aimed at improving an existing business process. DMAIC is pronounced as "duh-may-ick".

• DMADV is used for projects aimed at creating new product or process designs. DMADV is pronounced as "duh-mad-vee“.

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DMAICDefine the system, the voice of the customer and their requirements, and the project goals, specifically.Measure key aspects of the current process and collect relevant data.Analyze the data to investigate and verify cause-and-effect relationships. Improve or optimize the current process based upon data analysis using techniques .Control the future state process to ensure that any deviations from target are corrected before they result in defects.

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DMADV or DFSS ("Design For Six Sigma")Define design goals that are consistent with customer demands and the enterprise strategy.Measure and identify CTQs (characteristics that are Critical To Quality), product capabilities, production process capability, and risks.Analyze to develop and design alternativesDesign an improved alternative, best suited per analysis in the previous stepVerify the design, set up pilot runs, implement the production process and hand it over to the process owner(s).

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EVOLUTION OF SIX SIGMA•Mid-1980

▫Motorola pioneered the concept of six sigma as an approach to measuring product and service quality.

•1989-1991▫Motorola Improve product service ten

times by 1989 and at least one hundred fold by 1991.

•1992▫Achieve six-sigma capability by 1992.

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The core philosophy of Six Sigma is based on some key concepts:

• Think in terms of key business processes and customer requirements with a clear focus on overall strategic objectives.

• Focus on corporate sponsors responsible for championing projects, support team activities, help to overcome resistance to change, and obtain resources.

• Emphasize such quantifiable measures as defects for million opportunities (dfmo) that can be applied to all parts of an organization.

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The core philosophy of Six Sigma is based on some key concepts:• Ensure that appropriate metrics are identified early

in the process and that they focus on business results, thereby providing incentives and accountability.

• Provide extensive training followed by project team deployment to improve profitability, reduce non- value added activities, and achieve cycle time reduction

• Create highly qualified process improvement experts who can apply improvement tools and lead teams

• Set stretch objectives for improvement

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•The recognized benchmark for Six Sigma implementation is General Electric which efforts are driven by former CEO, Jack Welch.

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Jack Welch brought

significant media attention to the concept and made Six

Sigma a popular approach to

quality improvement. One of the key learnings GE

discovered was that Six Sigma is not only for

engineers.

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•Mid-1990s▫Quality emerged as a concern of many

employees at General Electric.•1996-1997

▫GE increase the number of six sigma projects from 3,000 to 6,000 and achieve 320 million dollars in productivity gains and profits.

•1998▫GE generated 750 million dollars in six sigma

savings over and above their investment.

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Welch observed that it can also be used by: • Plant managers• Human

Resource managers

• Regional sales managers

• plumbers, car mechanics, and gardeners

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SIX SIGMA AS A QUALITY FRAMEWORK •In many ways, Six Sigma is the realization

of many fundamental concepts of "total quality management".

•However it is more than simply a repackaging of older quality approaches and traditional concepts of "total quality".

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Total Quality Six SigmaBased largely on working empowerment and teams

Owned by business leader champions

Activities generally occur within a function, process or

individual workplace

Projects are truly cross-functional

Training is generally limited to simple improvement tools and

concepts

Focuses on more rigorous and advanced set of statistical methods and a structured

problem-solving methodologyFocused on improvement with little financial accountability

Requires a variable return on investment and focus on the

bottom line

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SIX SIGMA IN SERVICE ORGANIZATIONS All Six Sigma projects have three key characteristics:•A problem to be solved•A process in which the problem exists •One or more measures that quantify the

gap to be closed and can be used to monitor progress.

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Applying Six Sigma to services require examination of four key measures of the performance: •Accuracy •Cycle time •Cost•Customer Satisfaction

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Some examples of financial applications of Six Sigma include the following: • Reduce the average and variation of days

outstanding of accounts receivable • Close the books faster• Improve the accuracy and speed of the audit

process • Reduce variation in cash flow • Improve the accuracy of journal entries • Improve accuracy and cycle time of standard

financial reports

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COMPARING BALDRIGE, ISO 9000,

AND SIX SIGMAPrepared by;

MR.KEN GUIAL

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 COMPARING BALDRIGE, ISO 9000, AND SIX SIGMA• Baldrige focuses on performance excellence for the entire organization

in an overall management framework.• ISO focuses on product and service conformity for guaranteeing equity

in the marketplace and concentrates on quality system problems and product and service nonconformities

• ISO provides a set of good basic practices for initiating a quality system. In fact it provides more detailed guidance on process and product control than baldrige, and provides systematic approaches to many of the baldrige criteria requirement in the process management category.

• Six Sigma concentrates on measuring product quality and driving process improvement and cost savings throughout the organization.

• Implementing Six Sigma fulfills in many part of the elements of ISO 9000:2000

•  

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