MSM 6645

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Feigenbaum, Juran, and Crosby all provided different definitions of quality, as did Deming. The focus on quality has come to rely on which professional's definition?

Feigenbaum

Organizational Profile

P.1 Organizational Description a. Organizational Environment b. Organizational Relationships P.2 Organizational Situation a. Competitive Environment b. Strategic Context c. Performance Improvement System

The most widely used continuous improvement model, introduced by Dr. Shewart and supported by Dr. Deming is

PDCA

There are multiple types of audits possible, but an audit can be designed around the Shewart model, which is

PDSA

Six Sigma projects are selected based

on their ability to contribute to and enhance an organization's financial performance.

Precision is

the ability to repeat a series of measurements and get the same value each time.

Benefits of adopting the Six Sigma methodology

- Enhanced ability to provide value to customer - Enhanced understanding of key business processes - Reduction of waste - Improved profit performance

Six Sigma's DMAIC: Control

- Evaluate and monitor improvements - Make adjustments as needed - Establish standard procedures

Poka-yoke is also known as "mistake proofing". This can be effectively used when:

- designing a new system - when analyzing issues - tuning the process steps

An example of differentiation and integration could be

a long-term horizon with the formal structure and an informal structure with short-term deadlines

Descriptive or deductive statistics describe

a population or complete group of data.

The Baldrige framework helps you

manage all the components of your organization as a unified whole to achieve your mission, ongoing success, and performance excellence (called a systems perspective).

Statistics

the collection, tabulation, analysis, interpretation, and presentation of numerical data, provide a viable method of supporting or clarifying a topic under discussion.

Chaos Theory

theoretical construct defining the random-appearing yet deterministic characteristics of complex organizations

The concept of equifinality means

there is no one best way

In step two, the improvement team is recommended to be

those affected by the change, middle management, and other representatives

Predictability enables

those studying the process to make decisions concerning the product or service.

Variation

to be different from one instance to the next, is present in any natural process, meaning that no two products or occurrences are exactly alike.

Kaizen means

to change for the better Kaizen takes a look at the current process breaks it apart and put it back together, the result should be an improved process that fully utilizes all the experience and skill of the people involved

ISO 9000 standards topics include:

- customer-focused organization, - management responsibility, - quality policies and objectives, - corrective and preventive actions, - resource management, - product realization, - measurement analysis and improvement, - document control, and - continuous improvement

Senior leadership, Criteria 1, is not responsible for

- demonstrating personal accountability for organizational actions - communicating with the entire workforce - motivating the workforce - none of these<<<<correct

Typical processes include:

- design, - delivery, - development, - manufacturing, - training, - assembly, - marketing, - evaluation, - information management, and - customer communication

Dr. Taguchi introduce the "loss function" concept, which can include variation within specifications. Knowing the loss function helps:

- designers set product and manufacturing tolerances - justify capital expenditures - minimize losses by improving performance consistency - all of the above<<<correct

Statistical Quality Control:

- focuses on product and the detection and control of quality problems; - involves testing samples and statistically infers compliance of all products; - is carried out at stages through the production process; and - relies on trained production personnel and quality control professionals.

When considering the effectiveness of the learning and development efforts, organizations should

- identify opportunities for improvements in workforce engagement, learning and development opportunities - correlate development and learning outcomes with the results of workforce engagement findings - use learning and development efforts to support performance improvements and ethics as well as ethical practices

As with any major process improvement, failure may still. Failure may be the result of: (p. 50)

- lack of an implementation plan - lack of resources or inadequate resources - individuals may not be aware about how to access the power that procedures and information provide - lack of understanding about ISO 9000

In the video about systems theory, classical management is compared to

- machines - one right way - Efficiency and control

Why Use Flow Charts?

- makes communicating and documenting a process quick and clear, so that the process will more likely be understood and applied correctly and consistently. - It can also help you to estimate the timescale of the process - identify who you should involve and at what stage - be able to focus on the detail of each individual stage, without feeling overwhelmed by the rest of the process

Auditing allows an organization to verify conformance to specifications and procedures Auditing may

- only be done by an outside auditor - are limited to software and documentation - are limited to processes - none of these<<<Correct

Brainstorming is one of the techniques used to determine possible causes; the purpose of brainstorming is to generate a list of possibilities or ideas. Brainstorming should be conducted with: (page 83, 86)

- only the people who volunteer - no arguing, but critiques can be provided - time included to evaluate ideas in the session - Time to discuss opportunities - none of the above<<<correct

Tools used during a project which applies Six Sigma can include but are not limited to

- process mapping, design of experiments, statistical process control techniques - cause and effect diagrams, multivariate analysis, customer input - failure modes and effects analysis - all of the above<<<correct

Dr. Deming described his work as

- the catalyst necessary to start an economic chain reaction - management for quality - quality efforts which should be directed at present and future needs of the consumer

Corporate culture has a big impact on quality through

- the vision statement - teamwork and a problem-solving approach - how the organization adapts to competition

Inspection was one of these tasks and

- was intended to ensure that no faulty product left the factory or workshop; - focuses on the product and the detection of problems in the product; - involves testing every item to ensure that it complies with product specifications; - is carried out at the end of the production process; and relies on specially trained inspectors.

Quality per American Society for Quality (ASQ):

a subjective term for which each person has his or her own definition. In technical usage, quality can have two meanings: 1. the characteristics of a product or service that bear on its ability to satisfy stated or implied needs and 2. a product or service free of deficiencies.

When considering development opportunities for the workforce, strategic planning should include

developing organizational core competencies

Total quality management (TQM) emphasizes continuous process system improvement to achieve long-term organizational success. Quality management

develops a culture for a never-ending commitment to the improvement of processes

Paying more attention to relationships is a sign of

different values

Perhaps the most important aspects of ISO 9000 are:

documentation and record-keeping

Flow charts are

easy-to-understand diagrams that show how the steps of a process fit together. American engineer Frank Gilbreth is widely believed to be the first person to document a process flow, having introduced the concept of a "Process Chart" to the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in 1921.

Ethics of Care has been influential in such areas as

education, medicine and counseling

Ethics of care challenges traditional more than theories and contradicts the two dominant normative moral theories of the 18th and 19th centuries. These two dominant theories

emerge from deontology and utilitarianism

The leadership triad (Leadership, Strategy, and Customers)

emphasizes the importance of a leadership focus on strategy and customers.

Although developed in Japan in the 1970s, QFD was first used in the United States in the 1980s. The objective of the QFD is to: (p. 402)

enable a company to organize and analyze pertinent information associated with the product or service

Nonfaulty systems are

error-free systems that have the ability to provide the consumer with a product or service as specified. Definition per Dr. W. Edwards Deming.

Smart decision-makers base their decisions and actions on

facts and sound evidence.

Innovative Organizations are

flexible and adaptable organizations that achieve operational excellence by partnering with stakeholders and developing innovative strategies that meet market goals.

Lean production

focuses on driving waste out of the production cycle. Lean practitioners are interested in doing more work with fewer resources. They seek ways to accomplish more in less time, space, equipment, people, and resources.

Continuous Improvement

focuses on improving processes in order to enable companies to give customers what they want the first time, every time.

Locating and eliminating the root or real cause of a problem should

follow a logical, systematic method

In Criteria 2, strategy development assumes these are considered:

forecasts, projections, options, scenarios

Dr. Joseph Juran significantly influence the movement of quality through

from a narrow statistical focus to quality as a management focus

Gen-jitsu means

get the facts; it helps us understand what's really happening, it helps us understand what words like rarely or always actually mean

Process maps (flowcharts) are

graphical representations of all the steps involved in an activity, a process or a system.

Pareto Charts

graphically rank causes of problems from the most significant to the least significant.

Control charts and run charts

graphically show the performance of a process over time.

Dr. Edwards Deming taught management strategies and practices focused on quality. Following World War II,

he helped turn Japan into an industrial force

An ethical statistician may accept work for which he or she is sufficiently qualified if

he/she is honest with the client about limitation of expertise

The Baldrige Excellence Framework consists of 7 Criteria. These are intended to:

help improve organizational processes, capabilities and results

Accuracy refers to

how far from the actual or real value the measurement is.

Strategic considerations (2.1.3) should include

how potential blind spots are identified in the strategic planning process

Force-Field Analysis

identifies and organizes the forces that alternately drive and restrain actions in a complex situation.

Cause and Effect Diagrams

identify and organize causes for problems. aka Ishikawa diagram and wishbone

Innovation comes from

identifying strategic opportunities and taking intelligent risks

Ethics of care can have a positive influence on leadership and management if

if leadership sees value in developing and training employees

TQM "caught on" starting in the West (the US)

in the 1980s

Control charts can be revised and new limits calculated under two conditions, when no out of control signals have been seen or when new operating conditions exist. Identify the steps taken to revise charts: (pages 189-191)

interpret the original charts to determine lack of control; isolate the cause, take corrective action, revise the chart

Dr. Feigenbaum's definition of Quality

is a customer determination which is based on the customer's actual experience with the product or service, measured against his or her requirements—stated or unstated, conscious or merely sensed, technically operational or entirely subjective—always representing a moving target in a competitive market.

ISO 9000

is a quality standard developed to provide guidelines for improving a company's quality management system. ISO 9000 was created to deal with the growing trend toward economic globalization.

Six Sigma

is a structured, data driven methodology for eliminating waste from processes, products, and other business activities while having a positive impact on financial performance. - The increasing complexity of systems and products used by consumers created higher than desired system failure rates. - Holistic approach to reliability and quality and developed a strategy for improving both (1988).

Poka-yoke

is a technique for avoiding simple human error in the workplace. Also known as mistake-proofing, goof-proofing, and fail-safe work methods, poka-yoke is simply a system designed to prevent inadvertent errors made by workers performing a process. The idea is to take over repetitive tasks that rely on memory or vigilance and guard against any lapses in focus. Poka-yoke is based on prediction and detection.

Inspection

refers to those activities designed to detect or find non-conformances existing in already completed products and services. Inspection, the detection of defects, is a regulatory process.

Prevention

refers to those activities designed to prevent defects, defectives, and nonconformance in products and services.

One measure of customer satisfaction, dissatisfaction and engagement is

relative to their satisfaction with your competitors

statistical process control (SPC) emphasizes the prevention of defects and

seeks to limit variation present in the item being produced or the service being provided

The Organizational Profile

sets the context for your organization. It serves as the background for all you do.

The Criteria for Performance Excellence is based on

seven categories

LEAN focuses on doing more work with fewer resources. Some of the areas included with LEAN could be:

seven forms of waste

Tolerance limits

show the permissible changes in the dimension of a quality characteristic.

Tolerance limits definition

show the permissible changes in the dimension of a quality characteristic.

A frequency diagram

shows the number of times each of the measured values occurred when the data were collected. This diagram can be created either from measurements taken from a process or from data taken from the occurrences of events.

Six Sigma projects seek out

sources of waste (overtime, warranty claims, production backlogs, and/or customer issues).

Specifications definition:

state product or service characteristics in terms of a desired design target value or dimension. Product and service designers translate customer needs, requirements, and expectations into tangible requirements.

Specifications defintion

state product or service characteristics in terms of a desired target value or dimension

Process capability calculations provide users with

statistical evidence for decision-making.

Baldrige Leadership is also responsible for ethical behavior and societal well-being. This can include

supporting environmental, social and economic systems

Process

takes inputs and performs value-added activities on those inputs to create an output. Processes are made up of interrelated activities that interact with each other.

Gemba means

the actual place, where the work is actually being done

In manufacturing, variation is often identified as

the difference between the specified target dimension and the actual part dimension.

Shape refers to

the form that the values of the measurable characteristics take on when graphed. Shape is based on the distribution's symmetry, skewness, and kurtosis

When describing a population using deductive statistics,

the investigator must study each entity within the population. This provides a great deal of information about the population, product, or process, but gathering the information is time-consuming.

Problem solving is

the isolation and analysis of a problem and the development of a permanent solution.

One of the key aspects of performance measurement (Baldrige 4.1) discusses

the need to track progress on achieving objectives and action plans

Root cause analysis

the systematic search for the true cause of a problem is supported by quality tools.

In service industries, variation may be the difference between

the type of service received and the type of service expected.

Brainstorming's purpose is

to generate a list of problems, opportunities. or ideas from a group of people.

The main idea behind the Baldridge Excellence Framework is

to improve organizations and obtain sustainable results

Quality Control refers

to the use of specifications and inspection of completed parts, subassemblies, and products to design, produce, review, sustain, and improve the quality of a product or service.

Inspection refers

to those activities designed to detect or find non-conformance existing in already completed products or services.

Dr. Kaoru Ishikawa

transformed the teachings of Dr. Deming and Dr. Juran into the Japanese approach to quality

The tool that provides a picture of workflow and information flow in an end to end process is called:

value-stream mapping

ISO

(meaning equal) encourages organizations to develop, install, and utilize a quality management system that supports continuous improvement through the prevention of defects, and the reduction of variation and waste.

In the blog (article), the ISO 9001 focus is described as:

- Innovative - Engaging customers - Developing core competencies. - None of these<<<correct

Audits

- Involve comparisons - Look for non-conformances - Study performance, documentation, and procedures - Verify compliance - Occur based on need

Ethical behavior is expected to be promoted in all interactions with

- Monitoring - responses to breaches - measures

Essential tools used with DMAIC process:

- Process Maps - Cause and Effect Diagrams - Failure Modes and Effects Analysis - Measurement System Analysis - Process Capability Studies - Multivariate studies - Design of Experiments - Process Control Plans

Lean workers recognize the seven forms of waste:

- Producing defective parts - Producing more parts than needed - Excessive inventories - Unnecessary activities - Unnecessary movement of people - Unnecessary transportation or handling of materials - People waiting

To be productive does not necessarily mean the outcome is a quality outcome. What are the differences?

- Productivity focuses on doing something more efficiently, whereas quality is about being effective - Being effective means achieving intended results or goals and meeting customer requirements, productivity is about working efficiently and using available resources - If customers are not purchasing table lamps because they are ugly, then the company is not effective; this means increased productivity would be meaningless. - All of the above<<<correct

Output examples

- Products - Services - Results

Input examples

- Raw materials - Components - Instructions - Information - Criteria

A control chart exhibits a state of control when:

1. Two-thirds of the points are near the center value. 2. A few of the points are on or near the center value. 3. The points appear to float back and forth across the centerline. 4. The points are balanced (in roughly equal numbers) on both sides of the centerline. 5. There are no points beyond the control limits. 6. There are no patterns or trends on the chart.

In technical usage, quality can have two meanings:

1. the characteristics of a product or service that bear on its ability to satisfy stated or implied needs and 2. a product or service free of deficiencies.

The basis of the Criteria is a set of

Core Values and Concepts that are embedded in high-performing organizations

Total Quality Management (TQM)

Customer focus, the involvement of all employees, continuous improvement and the integration of quality management into the total organization. In the 1980s to the 1990s, a new phase of quality control and management began.

Six Sigma projects have essential phases, this cycle is sometimes represented as

DMAIC

Benchmarking

During the benchmarking process, a company compares its performance against a set of standards or against the performance of a best-in-class company. With the information provided by the comparison, a company can determine how to improve.

Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award: Operations

Examines how an organization designs and manages the work performed, product design and delivery, innovation, and operational effectiveness.

Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award: Measurement, Analysis, and Knowledge Management

Examines how an organization gathers, analyzes, and uses information and performance measurement systems to encourage excellent performance.

Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award: Customers

Examines how well the organization listens to the voice of the customer.

Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award: Leadership

Examines senior-level leadership commitment too and involvement in process improvement, organizational governance, and social responsibilities.

Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award: Strategy

Examines senior-level leadership commitment too and involvement in process improvement, organizational governance, and social responsibilities.

Baldrige encourages you to use creative, adaptive, innovative, and flexible approaches and to choose the tools:

Example: - Lean Six Sigma - International Organization for Standardization (ISO) series - a balanced scorecard - Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDSA) that are best suited to your organization and are the most effective in driving improvements and sustainable high performance

Dr. Armand Feigenbaum is the originator of the modern total quality movement. His landmark textbook, published in 1951, remains a significant influence on today's practices. Select the most accurate statement(s) about Dr. Feigenbaum from the list below: (p. 36)

He predicted consumers would come to expect quality as an essential of the product or service they purchased, and believed quality is an approach that makes organizations more effective

Frederick W. Taylor

He published 'The Principles of Scientific Management' which provided a framework for the effective use of people in industrial organizations. One of Taylor's concepts was clearly defined tasks performed under standard conditions.

Dr. Deming's Economic Chain Reaction

Improve Quality ---> Decreased Costs ---> Fewer mistakes or delays ---> better use of resources ---> improved productivity ---> capture larger market ---> stay in business ---> provide more jobs

Statistical Process Control (SPC)

Prevention of defects by applying statistical methods to control the process. Statistical process control emphasizes the prevention of defects.

Phillip Crosby definition of quality

Quality is conformance to requirements

Dr. Joseph Juran definition of quality

Quality is fitness for use

Dr. W. Edwards Deming definition of quality

Quality is non-faulty systems

Effectiveness benchmark assessments verify

Requirement compliance and effective systems to ensure requirements are met

Statistical process control (SPC) can be used to help a company meet many goals. Select the statement below that is not true. (p. 13)

SPC does not emphasize problem-solving and statistics

Ethics of care also contradicts

Sigmund Freud and Lawrence Kohlberg

Histograms

Similar to frequency diagrams. - The most notable difference between the two is that on a histogram the data are grouped into cells. Each cell contains a range of values.

ISO 14000 Environmental Management

Standard encourages voluntary environmental protection and the prevention of pollution while taking into account the economic needs of society. ISO 14000 standards do not enforce environmental laws or regulate environmental activities of an organization.

To create a histogram:

Step 1: Collect the data and construct a tally sheet Step 2: Calculate the range Step 3: Create the cells by determining the cell intervals, midpoints, and boundaries Step 4: Label the axes Step 5: Post the values Step 6: Interpret the histogram

Business Excellence Models

TQM itself is now often called Business Excellence. This is to distinguish the "new TQM" from the past work on TQM. Business Excellence is really the same as TQM, but with a more clearly defined approach.

The Central Limit Theorem

The central limit theorem states that a group of sample averages tends to be normally distributed; as the sample size n increases, this tendency toward normality improves.

When applied in an organization (refer to the Vinton article), Chaos Theory means:

The essential ingredients for managing chaos includes flexibility, change, empowering people

There are two incorrect statements in the textbook on pages 52 and 53 about the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award.

The first one is that success is based on the stock price, the second is that the Criteria is updated annually

Butterfly effect

The idea that a small effect or thing can have a large impact if it happens to tip the balance, causing other changes that create a major event.

Mean

The mean is determined by adding the values together and then dividing this sum by the total number of values.

Median

The median is the value that divides an ordered series of numbers so that there is an equal number of values on either side of the center, or median, value.

Dr. Walter Shewart is credited with identifying two sources of variation in a process.

These are known as controlled and uncontrolled

European Foundation of Quality Management in 1992

This EFQM Excellence Model is the framework for the European Quality Award.

Quality vs. Productivity

To be productive, one must work efficiently and operate in a manner that best utilizes the available resources. Productivity's principal focus is on doing something more efficiently. Quality, on the other hand, focuses on being effective. Being effective means achieving the intended results or goals while meeting the customer's requirements. So quality concentrates not only on doing things right (being productive), but also on doing the right things right (being effective).

Processes

Value-added activities performed by individuals, work groups, functions, machines, or organizations

Aristotle saw the universe as

a coherent whole, with numerous subcomponents

Quality has many definitions. Identify the definition of quality according to the American Society for Quality:

a subjective term for which each person has his or her own definition

A sample is

a subset of elements or measurements taken from a population

Gen-butsu means

actual parts; if we look at the actual parts, and instead of a flow chart. We rather obtain the time walking and experiencing the process ourselves

The American Statistical Association's Ethical Guidelines for Statistical Practice are intended to help make statistics practitioners make decisions ethically. This includes:

an obligation to act in good faith, act in a manner consistent with the guidelines and encourage others to do the same

Quality costs typically originate from: (p. 431)

anywhere within a company

Check Sheets

are data recording devices that collect data (events) according to category.

An audit typically involves comparisons, checks of compliance and discovery of discrepancies. Audits should never be subjective and need to be conducted in a professional manner and an auditor should always (page 481)

be professional, unbiased and undistorted

Assessing work accomplishment is accomplished by

capitalizing on core competencies

Kai =

change

Juran's approach to quality included

creating awareness and emphasizing training and team problem-solving

In chapter 1, the argument for quality finds that several keywords stand out in the definition; this includes but is not limited to

customer determination

Quality is a

customer determination which is based on the customer's actual experience with the product or service, measured against his or her requirements—stated or unstated, conscious or merely sensed, technically operational or entirely subjective—and always representing a moving target in a competitive market.

Part of customer engagement includes

customer support and communication

Six Sigma is

data driven and profit focused.

Inductive statistics

deal with a limited amount of data or a representative sample of the population.

Edward Lorenz

developed the chaos theory

Senior leadership creates an environment for success by

developing organizational agility and accountability, individual learning and innovation

Affinity Diagrams

help organize the output of brainstorming sessions.

Identify the statement that is true:

inputs to processes are often the outputs of a previous process

In Baldrige, knowledge assets refers to

intellectual resources and knowledge possessed by your organization

Modern quality principles have developed over time, but in 1798 Eli Whitney began designing and manufacturing muskets with

interchangeable parts

Processes are made up of:

interrelated activities that interact with each other

Statistical Quality Control

involves collecting statistical data, analyzing it, and interpreting it to solve problems.

Total Quality Management

is a management approach that places emphasis on continuous process and system improvement as a means of achieving customer satisfaction to ensure long-term company success.

Total quality management (TQM)

is a management approach that places emphasis on continuous process and system improvement as a means of achieving customer satisfaction to ensure long-term company success.

Six Sigma

is a methodology that also provides direction for companies seeking to improve their performance. Six Sigma encourages people at all levels in the company to listen to each other, to understand and utilize metrics, to know when and what kind of data to collect, and to build an atmosphere of trust.

The Organizational Profile

is a snapshot of your organization and its strategic environment.

Measures of performance enable problem solvers to determine if the right changes were made. In step three

measures should be relevant to multiple areas of internal workings of the organization as well as external measures

Inspection involves

measuring, examining, and testing products, process and services against specified requirements to determine conformity.

Inspection is about a number of activities designed to detect or find nonconformances in products and services which already exist. Inspection involves:

measuring, examining, testing, gauging

Benchmarking can be done at different levels. Different types of benchmarking can include

perception and compliance

Variation in a process can best be described as

present in any natural process

The goal of Six Sigma is to

reach 3.4 defects per million opportunities over the long term.

Best Practices

refers to choosing a method of work that has been found to be the most effective and efficient, i.e., with no waste in the process.

Autonomation

refers to error-proofing production processes, preventing overproduction, and stopping the process when something goes wrong.

Quality control (QC)

refers to the use of specifications and inspection of completed parts, subassemblies, and products to design, produce, review, sustain, and improve the quality of a product or service.

Statistical process control can be used to

support decisions with statistical information concerning the process

Quality of design means

that the product or service has been designed to successfully fill a consumer need, real or perceived.

Quality of performance means

that the product or service performs its intended function as identified by the consumer.

Process capability refers to

the ability of a process to produce products or provide services capable of meeting the specifications set by the customer or designer.

The PDSA cycle begins when - (page 95)

the root cause has been identified

The upper control limit (UCL) and lower control limit (LCL) describe

the spread of the process.

To solve problems effectively, people need to be

trained in problem-solving procedures and techniques

Six Sigma seeks to reduce the

variability present in processes.

Three types of quality definition:

- quality of design, - quality of conformance, and - quality of performance

Building and managing customer relationships is a key element of

Baldrige Criteria 3

PDSA - Plan Do Study Act - was created by

Dr. Shewart

When looking at integrity of data and methods, the ethical statistician

all of these

Zen =

better

Variation defintion

is present in any natural process, no two products or occurrences are exactly alike

Entropy is

rundown, deteriorated, disorganized

Normal Frequency Distribution (the Normal Curve)

- A normal curve is symmetrical about μ - The mean, mode, and median are equal - The curve is unimodal and bell-shaped - Data values concentrate around the mean and decrease in number further away - The area under the normal curve equals 1 - The distribution can be described in terms of the mean and standard deviation

Dr. Deming's Theory of Profound Knowledge

- An appreciation for a system - Knowledge about variation - Theory of knowledge - Psychology

Chaos Theory

- Butterfly Effect - Systems approach

Calculating Process Capability Indices

- Capability Ratio Cr Cr = 6o/USL - LSL o = standard deviation

Uncontrolled variation, special, or assignable causes:

- Come from sources external to the process. - This type of variation is not normally part of the process. - Assignable causes are variations in the process that can be identified and isolated as the specific cause of a change in the behavior of the process. - This type of variation arises because of special circumstances.

Controlled vs uncontrolled variations

- Common (Chance) Causes: Controlled variation that is present in a process due to the very nature of the process. - Special (Assignable) Causes: Uncontrolled variation caused by something that is not normally part of the process.

Benchmarking is a tool that will:

- Compare and measure your business performance against world class companies. - Highlight areas where your business performance is sub-optimal. - Highlight worldwide best practices that lead to superior performance. - Help to continuously improve business performance. - Introduce new ideas

Control limits versus Specification limits

- Control limits are the voice of the process. - The centerline on the X-bar chart represents process centering. - The centerline on the R chart represents the average amount of variation present in the process. - Specification limits are the voice of the customer. - Specification limits communicate customers' needs, wants, and expectations.

Calculating Process Capability Indices

- Cpk Cpk = Z(min)/3

When to Use a Flow Chart

- Define a process. - Standardize a process. - Communicate a process. - Identify bottlenecks or waste in a process. - Solve a problem . - Improve a process.

TS 16949

defines automotive industry standards world-wide

Senior Leadership, Criteria 1, is responsible for

- creating an environment for success - creating a focus on action - setting vision and values - all of the above<<<correct

Dr. Walter Shewhart

- Father of Statistical Process Control - Inventor of Control Charts - Proposed concept of common cause and special cause variation A phenomenon will be said to be controlled when, through the use of past experience, we can predict, at least within limits, how the phenomenon may be expected to vary in the future. Here it is understood that prediction within limits means that we can state, at least approximately, the probability that the observed phenomenon will fall within the given limits.

Seven Tools of Quality popularized by Kaoru Ishikawa:

- Flow Chart - Control Chart - Check Sheet - Histogram - Pareto Diagram - Cause and Effect Diagram (Ishikawa diagram) - Scatter Diagram

Six Sigma's DMAIC: Measure

- Gather information about the current process - Define and measure key process steps and inputs - Refine the problem statement and goals

Six Sigma Project Participants:

- Green Belts - Formal training - Complete a cost-savings project ($10,000+) - Black Belts - Advanced training (more advanced) - Complete cost-savings projects ($100,000+) - Master Black Belts - Extensive training - Complete cost-savings projects ($1,000,000+)

Six Sigma

- Highly focused problem solving system DMAIC - Focus on profits - Tools include SPC, DOE, FMEA, Project management,capability studies, Benchmarking - 3.4 defects/million - Focus on metrics

Traditional Quality Systems

- Highly focused problem-solving system PDSA - Focus on improving organizational performance including profit - Tools include SPC, DOE, FMEA,,capability studies, bench-marking. Theory of constraints - Process capability - Measures of Performance

Quality Standards and Methodologies examples:

- ISO 9000, TS 16949, etc. - Six Sigma

the major benefits of benchmarking

- Identifies opportunities for improvement-Motivates action by external example of excellence - Clarifies current status - Stimulates change - Identifies strengths and assets - Provides an urgency for change - Uncovers new ways of improving processes - Promotes improvement

Six Sigma's DMAIC: Improve

- Identify potential root causes of the problem - Test solutions - Measure results

Six Sigma's DMAIC: Analyze

- Identify potential root causes of the problem - Validate the cause and effect relationship - Identify the vital few root causes

A quality management system must have the necessary ingredients to

- Identify, design, develop, produce and deliver what the customer wants

Dr. Juran's Philosophy Big Q versus little q

- Q = ALL processes in all industries - q = the products in manufacturing

Although many people believe quality began in the industrial revolution, the textbook notes 10,000 your old stones were uncovered in Malta that demonstrated a uniform standard in a temple that still stands today. Another example of ancient quality could include

- Roman road builders - The Zhou Dynasty - Scandinavian shipbuilders - All of the above<<<<correct

Analyze Histograms by studying:

- Shape - Spread - Location

Six Sigma Methodology is based on:

- Statistical Process Control Techniques - Data Analysis Methods - Project Management Techniques - Systematic Training of Participants

The Baldrige Excellence Framework helps you address issues that are important to your organization:

- Understanding what it takes to be competitive and achieve long-term success in your environment - Getting your leaders, managers, and workforce all on the same page - Ensuring that your employees understand and can contribute to the drivers of your organization's success - Understanding, and meeting or exceeding, customer requirements and expectations - Ensuring that your operations are efficient and lead to short- and long-term success

Positive Results of Statistical Process Control:

- Uniformity of Output - Reduced Rework - Fewer Defective Products - Increased Output - Increased Profit - Lower Average Cost - Fewer Errors - Predictable, Consistent Quality Output - Less Scrap - Less Machine Downtime - Less Waste in Production Labor Hours - Increased Job Satisfaction - Improved Competitive Position - More Jobs - Factual Information for Decision Making - Increased Customer Satisfaction - Increased Understanding of the Process - Future Design Improvements

Controlled variation, chance, or common causes:

- Variation present in a process due to the very nature of the process. - Small random changes in the process that cannot be avoided. - Consistently affect the process and its performance day after day, every day. - This type of variation can be removed from the process only by changing the process.

In order to successfully adopt the Six Sigma methodology, an organization must have:

- Visible management commitment - Visible management involvement - Clear definition of customer requirements - Understanding of key business processes - Sound measures of performance - Discipline - Rewards

The Baldrige framework helps manage all components of an organization based on

- a systems perspective - building blocks and integrating mechanisms - core values and concepts related to the Criteria - all of the above<<<<correct

Quality plays a role in innovation through

- actively listening to customer comments - word-of-mouth product and service reviews - respond to emerging needs in the marketplace before the customer is aware of the need

Dr. Shewart's control charts have advanced process improvement efforts for nearly every type of industry in spite of differing opinions about - (page 27)

- appropriateness - applicability - sampling frequency - use

One of the most widely known quality standards as ISO 9000. ISO 9000 standards

- are similar to continuous improvement philosophy - focus on compliance to standards - were developed by the International Organization for Standardization - all of the above<<<correct

The process of knowledge management typically includes

- collecting and transferring workforce knowledge among employees - assembling and transferring relevant knowledge to use in innovation and strategic planning - blending and correlating data from different sources to create new knowledge

Dr. Deming's Five Deadly Diseases/Sins

1. A lack of constancy of purpose a. no planning for the future b. lack of long term definition and goals c. why is the business still in business? 2. Emphasis on short term profits a. worship of the quarterly dividend b. sacrificing long term growth of the company 3. Annual rating of performance a. an arbitrary and unjust system b. demoralizing to employees c. nourishes short term performance d. annihilates teamwork, encourages fear e. if employees don't achieve that excellent rating in their performance, they don't get that raise and look for another job which causes the next deadly sin, mobility of management. 4. Mobility of management a. requires roots in the company b. no roots in the company c. no knowledge of the company d. no understanding of its problem 5. Use of visible figures only a. no use of figures that are unknown and unknowable b. encouraged by business schools

The Evolution of Quality:

1. Artisan 2. Inspection 3. Quality Control 4. Statistical Quality Control 5. Statistical Process Control 6. Total Quality Management 7. Continuous Improvement 8. Six Sigma 9. Future

Six Sigma Methodology focuses on

1. Customer knowledge - Critical to Quality information 2. Core processes - Key business processes that deliver value directly to the customer 3. Accurate performance measures of both

Crosby's Five Erroneous Assumptions about Quality

1. Quality means goodness, luxury or shininess. 2. Quality is intangible and therefore not measurable. 3. An economics of quality exists. 4. Workers are the source of quality problems. 5. Quality originates in the quality department.

Steps in the problem solving process, PDSA

1. Recognize a problem exists (Plan) 2. Form an improvement/investigating team (Plan) 3. Develop performance measures (Plan) 4. Clearly define the problem (Plan) 5. Document and analyze the problem and/or process (Plan) 6. Determine possible causes (Plan) 7. Identify, select, and implement the solution (Do) 8. Evaluate the solution using the performance measures (Study) 9. Ensure permanence of working solution (Act) 10. Continue improvement efforts (Act)

Control charts serve two basic functions:

1. Decision-making tools that provide an economic basis for making a decision as to whether to investigate for potential problems, to adjust the process, or to leave the process alone. a. Control charts provide information for timely decisions concerning recently produced items. b. Control chart information is used to determine the process capability, or the level of quality the process is capable of producing. Samples of completed product can be statistically compared with the process specifications. This comparison provides information concerning the process's ability to meet the specifications set by the product designer. 2. Problem-solving tools that point out where improvement is needed. a. Control chart information can be used to help locate and investigate the causes of the unacceptable or marginal quality. By observing the patterns on the chart the investigator can determine what adjustments need to be made. b.During daily production runs, the operator can monitor machine production and determine when to make the necessary adjustments to the process or when to leave the process alone to ensure quality production.

Six Sigma projects have five phases:

1. Define 2. Measure 3. Analyze 4. Improve 5. Control

To create a variable control chart:

1. Define the problem to be studied. 2. Select the quality characteristic to be measured. 3. Choose a rational subgroup size to be sampled. 4. Collect the data. 5. Determine the trial centerline for the X-bar chart. 6. Determine the trial control limits for the X-bar chart. 7. Determine the centerline and control limits for the R chart. 8. Examine the process control charts and interpret.

Creating a flow chart:

1. Define the process boundaries (start and finish) 2. Define the process by observing the process 3. Sort the steps into the order of their occurrence in the process. 4. Place the steps in appropriate flow chart symbols 5. Create the chart 6. Analyze the chart by evaluating the steps for completeness, efficiency, and possible problems (non-value-added activities)

How is benchmarking done?

1. Determine the focus 2. Understand your organization 3. Determine what to measure 4. Determine whom or what to benchmark against 5. Benchmark 6. Improve Performance

Dr. Ishikawa Proposed Seven Tools of Quality

1. Flow Chart 2. Control Chart 3. Check Sheet 4. Histogram 5. Pareto Diagram 6. Cause and Effect Diagram aka Fishbone diagram 7. Scatter Diagram

TS 16949 has two components:

1. ISO 9000 2. Customer Specific Requirements - PPAP Production Part Approval Process - FMEA Failure Modes and Effects Analysis - MSA Measurement Systems Analysis - APQP Advanced Product Quality Planning and Control

The Baldrige framework helps you answer three questions

1. Is your organization doing as well as it needs to? 2. How do you know? 3. What and how should your organization improve or change?

Key Elements of the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award

1. Leadership 2. Strategy 3. Customers 4. Measurement, Analysis, and Knowledge Management 5. Workforce 6. Operations 7. Results

Crosby's Four Absolutes of Quality

1. Quality Definition: Conformance to Requirements 2. Quality System: Prevention of Defects 3. Quality Performance Standard: Zero Defects 4. Quality Measurement: Costs of Quality

Several types of variation are tracked with statistical methods. These include:

1. Within-piece variation, or the variation within a single item or surface. 2. Piece-to-piece variation, or the variation that occurs among pieces produced at approximately the same time. 3. Time-to-time variation, or the variation in the product produced at different times of the day.

Total Quality Management (TQM) can be traced back to early

1920s

In continuous improvement (CI), the primary focus is on improving processes so organizations can give customers what they want the first time, every time. Select the statement below that is correct. (Page 14)

A company focusing on CI places greater emphasis on customer service, teamwork, and process improvement

Processes and Process Improvement:

A process takes inputs and performs value-added activities on those inputs to create an output.

Quality circles

A quality circle is a volunteer group of workers who meet and discuss issues to improve any aspects of workplace, and make presentations to management with their ideas. started in the early 60s.

Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award: Results

Examines an organization's performance in the areas of product and process results, customer-focused results, financial and market results, workforce-focused results and leadership and governance results.

Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award: Workforce

Examines how an organization enables its workforce to perform to its fullest potential in alignment with the organization's overall strategic objectives.

The Six Sigma methodology was developed at Motorola Corporation as a strategy to deal with product and system failures. From the options below, pick the statement that is true about Six Sigma:

It was developed for a manufacturing environment to increase system reliability

The only system described in chapter 3 with a clear continuous improvement mandate which represents a total quality system is

Malcolm Baldrige

Six Sigma was developed by reliability engineer who worked for

Motorola

In week three the required reading (blog) the discussion is about -

Moving an organization from conformity to excellence

DMAIC describes:

NOT the answers because DMAIC pertains to Six Sigma - the eight essential steps of PDSA - the eight essential steps of ISO 9000 - the eight essential steps all project justification

A quality-cost measurement system will help focus on which problems, if solved will provide the greatest return on investment. Identify this statement(s) below that are true: (page 435-437)

a measurement system should capture and reduce significant quality costs

Mode

The mode is the most frequently occurring number in a group of values.

Malcolm Baldrige Award in 1988

The model, on which the award was based, represented the first clearly defined and internationally recognized TQM model. It was developed by the United States government to encourage companies to adopt the model and improve their competitiveness.

Inspections vs. Prevention

The most significant difference between prevention and inspection is that with prevention, the process— rather than solely the product—is monitored, controlled, and adjusted to ensure correct performance. By using key indicators of product performance and statistical methods, those monitoring the process are able to identify changes that affect the quality of the product and adjust the process accordingly.

Range

The range is the difference between the highest value in a series of values or sample and the lowest value in that same series.

Standard Deviation

The standard deviation shows the dispersion of the data within the distribution.

Vision Statement

This vision serves as a guide, enabling company leaders to create strategic plans supporting the organization's objectives. A clear vision helps create an atmosphere within an organization that is cohesive, with its members sharing a common culture and value system focused on the customer.

A population is

a collection of all possible elements, values, or items associated with a situation. - A population can contain a finite number of things or it may be nearly infinite. Limitations may be placed on a collection of items to define the population.

All actions lead to Results—

a composite of product and process, customer, workforce, leadership and governance, and financial, market, and strategy results.

Continuous improvement is

about emphasizing customer service, teamwork, attention to details and process improvement

Dr. Ishikawa identified six fundamentals that form the Japanese quality paradigm (in addition to developing the Ishikawa Fishbone diagram model). Identify the correct fundamental from the list below.

all employees should clearly understand the objectives and business reasons

The basis of the Criteria for Performance Excellence is

an integrated performance system consisting of six categories

Audits are designed to

appraise the activities, practices, records, or policies of an organization.

Measures of Performance

provide information about a system, process, activity, or product that allows users to compare performance against requirements.

Histograms

are graphical summaries of the frequency distribution of the data (Chapter 4).

Scatter Diagrams

are graphs that are used to analyze the relationship between two different variables.

Audits potentially answer several questions such as

are records being properly retained and used to solve production problems

Reviewing organizational performance and capabilities usually includes

assessing financial health, competitive performance and assessing organizational successes

In Baldrige Criteria 2, the level of strategy that is discussed is

at the organizational level

The central limit theorem enables

conclusions to be drawn from the sample data and applied to a population.

Any benchmarking assessment should

conduct a thorough review of existing business practices

Measurement error

is considered to be the difference between a value measured and the true value. The error that occurs is one either of accuracy or of precision.

A process

is considered to be under control when the variability (variation) from one part to another or from one service to another is stable and predictable.

The system foundation (Measurement, Analysis, and Knowledge Management)

is critical to effective management and to a fact-based, knowledge-driven, agile system for improving performance and competitiveness.

Key clauses comprise ISO 9000:2015 standards. Identify three of those below:

leadership, scope, planning

Organizational learning calls for learning to be embedded in day-to-day operations. This means

learning should be a part of everyday work and problems should be solved at the source

Six Sigma was conceived by a reliability engineer for Motorola in the 1990s. The focus of six Sigma was about reducing variability in processes. Motorola used terminology from karate to indicate

level of Six Sigma competence for the individual

Audits determine whether or not a company has the ability to

meet or exceed a standard.

In strategy implementation (Baldrige), the primary responsibility belongs to leadership for

meeting workforce capability and capacity needs

Thriving on chaos reading: Five questionable assumptions about direct control could include: (page 27)

mistakes can be discovered in time but not usually in time for effective (corrective) action, and that the person responsible will take corrective steps

Ethics of Care was defended by Noddings as a form of

moral relationship

Choose the statement below that is most accurate: The ethical statistician-

must maintain respectful discourse with colleagues

According to your textbook, the potential economic benefits of the Baldrige award to the US economy is approaching $25 billion because: (p. 52)

of better utilization of economic resources

Dr. Walter Schubert recognized

once a process is under control future process performance can be predicted

Why-Why Diagrams

organize the thinking of a problem-solving group. Asking why creates a chain of symptoms leading to the true cause of a problem.

Continuous Improvement (CI)

philosophy focuses on improving processes to enable companies to give customers what they want the first time, every time. Most CI efforts begin with a vision.

Statistical Process Control

prevents defects by applying statistical methods to control the processes making products or providing services.

Quality Control

was introduced to detect and fix problems along the production line to prevent the production of faulty products. Statistical theory played an important role in this area.

Total Quality

was used for the first time in a paper by Feigenbaum at the first international conference on quality control in Tokyo in 1969. The term referred to wider issues within an organization.

There are three levels in an SOP. The best description of the three levels from the options below:

what must be done, what must be done and how it is to be done

The centerline of a variable control chart shows

where the process average is centered, the central tendency of the data.

Statistical Quality Control (SQC)

wherein statistical data are collected, analyzed, and interpreted to solve problems.

Visions,

which are developed and supported by senior management, are statements describing how a company views itself now and in the future.

Total Quality Control in Japan

which is different from the western idea of total quality. According to Ishikawa, his explanation, it means 'company-wide quality control' that involves all employees, from top management to the workers, in quality control.

In systems theory, as system is viewed as a

whole, not a collection of processes that exchanges with an unpredictable environment

The results triad (Workforce, Operations, and Results) includes

your workforce-focused processes, your key operational processes, and the performance results they yield.

Quality of conformance

—conformance to requirements—refers to the manufacture of the product or the provision of the service that meets the specific requirements set by the consumer.


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