The document discusses various topics related to quality management including quality partnering and strategic alliances, quality culture, customers, and employee empowerment. It describes how quality partnering can provide mutual benefits through cooperation between suppliers, competitors, internally between departments, and through education partnerships. A modern quality culture focuses on customer satisfaction rather than defects, views quality and productivity as aligned, and emphasizes continual improvement. Customers are those willing to pay for value and include internal and external groups. Innovation models and seeking customer input can help with customer retention. Employee empowerment involves giving judgment and empowering employees to make decisions to take responsibility and ownership.
The document discusses various topics related to quality management including quality partnering and strategic alliances, quality culture, customers, and employee empowerment. It describes how quality partnering can provide mutual benefits through cooperation between suppliers, competitors, internally between departments, and through education partnerships. A modern quality culture focuses on customer satisfaction rather than defects, views quality and productivity as aligned, and emphasizes continual improvement. Customers are those willing to pay for value and include internal and external groups. Innovation models and seeking customer input can help with customer retention. Employee empowerment involves giving judgment and empowering employees to make decisions to take responsibility and ownership.
The document discusses various topics related to quality management including quality partnering and strategic alliances, quality culture, customers, and employee empowerment. It describes how quality partnering can provide mutual benefits through cooperation between suppliers, competitors, internally between departments, and through education partnerships. A modern quality culture focuses on customer satisfaction rather than defects, views quality and productivity as aligned, and emphasizes continual improvement. Customers are those willing to pay for value and include internal and external groups. Innovation models and seeking customer input can help with customer retention. Employee empowerment involves giving judgment and empowering employees to make decisions to take responsibility and ownership.
The document discusses various topics related to quality management including quality partnering and strategic alliances, quality culture, customers, and employee empowerment. It describes how quality partnering can provide mutual benefits through cooperation between suppliers, competitors, internally between departments, and through education partnerships. A modern quality culture focuses on customer satisfaction rather than defects, views quality and productivity as aligned, and emphasizes continual improvement. Customers are those willing to pay for value and include internal and external groups. Innovation models and seeking customer input can help with customer retention. Employee empowerment involves giving judgment and empowering employees to make decisions to take responsibility and ownership.
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ASSIGNMENT-2
Name: Abhiram Sridhara, UCID: as2488, Course: Total
Quality Management 1. Discuss the importance of quality partnering and strategic alliances Two companies with different Business Strategies and employing divergent IT infrastructure have to think practicably about the pros and cons before entering into strategic alliances or mergers. Since the partnering philosophy is solidly grounded in the practical demands of the marketplace. The simplest way to understand partnering or the strategic alliance is to think of it as working together for mutual benefit. Various components working together may be suppliers, fellow employees, customers and even organizations that are potential competitors. Partnering can lead to continual improvements in such key areas as processes and products, relationships between customers and suppliers, and customer satisfaction. Mutual co-operation and trust between partners will further help in gaining competitive advantage over others. Internal partnering can improve relationships among employees and among departments within an organization. 2. Discuss the various forms of quality partnering and strategic alliances Partnering with suppliers: The goal of partnering with suppliers is to create and maintain a loyal, trusting, reliable relationship that will allow both partners to win, while promoting the continuous improvement of quality, productivity, and competitiveness.
Partnering with competitors: Small- and Medium-sized
enterprises (SMEs) dont typically develop major technological breakthroughs. However, there are many ways in which SMEs can work together to enhance their competitiveness in spite of being competitors in the same markets. Internal Partnering: Internal partnering is creating an environment and establishing mechanisms within it that bring managers and employees, teams, and individual employees together in mutually supportive alliances that maximize the human resources of an organization. Environment, mechanism, mutually supportive alliances and human resources are key concepts in this definition. Partnering with competitors: Small- and Medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) dont typically develop major technological breakthroughs. However, there are many ways in which SMEs can work together to enhance their competitiveness in spite of being competitors in the same markets. Education and business partnerships: The need to continually improve employees work skills is the primary force driving business and education partnerships. In such partnerships, educational institutions provide on-site customized training, technical assistance, and consulting services to help organizations continually improve their people and their processes Global partnering: Companies that market to customers worldwide should examine the possibility of partnering with suppliers worldwide
3.
Discuss the importance of quality culture
Quality assurance is the collective term for the formal activities
and managerial processes that attempt to ensure that products and services meet the required quality level. Quality assurance also includes efforts external to these processes that provide information for improving the internal processes. It is the quality assurance function that attempts to ensure that the project scope, cost, and time functions are fully integrated.
Widely shared philosophy of management.
Strong value system. High standards for performance. Definite organizational character Emphasis on the importance of human resources to the organization. Ceremonies to celebrate organizational events. Recognition and rewards for successful employees. Effective internal network for communicating the culture. Informal rules of behavior.
4. Explain the difference between traditional and modern
quality cultures Traditional quality culture used to revolve around the following factors: a. Productivity and quality are conflicting goals. Improving quality consumes additional corporate resources that are needed to maintain productivity. Therefore, quality can be improved only at the expense of productivity.
b. Quality is defined as conformance to specifications or
standards. Such conformance pays no attention to incorrect specifications or obsolete standards that are prevailed in most companies. c. Quality is measured by degree of nonconformance. It is usually measured by the defect count in "parts per million" the famous six-sigma measurement. Such measurement focuses on the degree of non-conformance instead of customer satisfaction. d. Quality is achieved through intense product inspection. Such inspection consumes much of the corporate resources. If a product fails the inspection, it needs to be reworked or scraped. Some defects are allowed if a product meets minimum quality standards. This implies that customers are willing to pay for a buggy yet working product. e. Quality is a separate function and focused on evaluating production. It is assumed that the production group will welcome such independent quality function. f. Workers are blamed for poor quality. However, replacing a worker does not mean improving quality. Furthermore, poor quality may come from the supplier side. g. Supplier relationships are short-term and cost-oriented. There is no way to control the quality of raw materials or parts delivered by the suppliers. Organizations which adopt modern quality culture and take efforts to maintain them will differ from traditional culture in following aspects: Operating Philosophy: In an organization with a traditional culture, the primary focus is return on investment and short-term profits while in an organization with a quality culture, the core of the operating philosophy is customer satisfaction. Objectives: Organizations with traditional cultures typically adopt short-term objectives while Organizations that adopt a quality
culture plan strategically. They develop both long- and short-term
objectives. Management Approach: In organizations with traditional cultures, managers think and employees do while in organizations with quality cultures, managers are seen as coaches of the team. They communicate the vision, mission, and goals; provide resources; remove barriers; seek employee input and feedback; build trust; provide training; and reward and recognize performance. Attitude toward Customers: Organizations with traditional cultures tend to look inward. They are more concerned about their needs than those of customers while Organizations with a quality culture are customer-focused. Customer satisfaction is the highest priority and is the primary motivation driving continual improvement efforts.
5.
How do you understand who is a customer?
Customers can be classified into two categories as Internal as well
as External. They are the ones who are willing to pay for the value we create for them in the form of products and services offered. In a total quality setting, customers define quality and employees produce it that is external customers define quality and internal customers help in producing it. 6. Explain customer defined value, value analysis and retention.
Organizations should measure success based on customer
retention data rather than on customer satisfaction data. Customers might migrate to the competitors out of mere curiosity even in spite of customer satisfaction. To retain customers over the long term, organizations must turn them into partners and proactively seek their input rather than waiting for and reacting to feedback provided after a problem has occurred. The key to establishing a customer focus is putting employees in touch with customers and empowering those employees to act as necessary to satisfy the customers. The customer must be the organizations top priority. The organizations survival depends on the customer. Customer satisfaction is ensured by producing high quality products. It must be renewed with every new purchase. This cannot be accomplished if quality, even though it is high, is static. Satisfaction implies continual improvement. Continual improvement is the only way to keep customers satisfied and loyal. 7. Discuss product innovation models for customer retention Organizations should measure success based on customer retention data rather than on customer satisfaction data. The issue is not whether customers are satisfied with the organizations products or services; it is whether they are satisfied enough to be retained. To retain customers over the long term, organizations must turn them into partners and proactively seek their input rather than waiting for and reacting to feedback provided after a problem has occurred. Innovation model which can give organization a competitive edge involves following 5 processes.
Target the Opportunity: Identify customer needs and use
them to innovate. Explore the Idea: Ensure the innovation will be successful Develop Alternatives: Develop alternatives for innovations Optimize the Solution: optimize the chosen alternative for the production. Commercialize the innovation: Deploy effective marketing strategy for the innovation. 8. Discuss employee empowerment Organizations should exercise cultural control influencing individual performance, interpersonal skills and his/her wellbeing. Employees should have judgmental abilities to make quick decisions in crunch situations. Senior management should clearly convey the performance requirement in order to grow in a work place. An empowered employee will care as much or even more about the quality of the work than the supervisor or the CEO because they feel responsible for that particular product or service and strive to make it a success. In order to achieve employee empowerment management must provide an open, nonthreatening, creative environment that encourages employee
involvement which expects employees to think, recognizes
employee value; and rewards employee ownership of processes, products, and services. 9. Discuss leadership for quality Quality leadership is an alternative that emphasizes results by working on methods. In this type of management, every work process is studied and constantly improved so that the final product or service not only meets but exceeds customer expectations. The principles of quality leadership are customer focus, obsession with quality, effective work structure, control yet freedom (e.g., management in control of employees yet freedom given to employees), unity of purpose, process defect identification, teamwork, and education and training. These principles are more conducive to long-term thinking, correctly directed efforts, and a keen regard for the customers interest. Quality leadership does have a positive effect on the return on investment. In 1950, Deming described this chain reaction of getting a greater return on investment as follows: improve quality decrease costs improve productivity decrease prices increase market share in business provide jobs increase return on investment. Quality is not something that can be delegated to others. Management must lead the transformation process.
Customer Focus: This means the organizations primary
goal is to meet or exceed customer expectations in a way that gives the customer lasting value
Obsession with Quality: It means that every employee
aggressively pursues quality in an attempt to exceed the expectations of customers.
Recognizing the Structure of Work: When the optimum
structure is in place, work processes should be analyzed, evaluated, and studied continually in an attempt to improve them.
Freedom through Control: Leaders must ensure that
managers and employees take control of work processes and methods by collaborating to standardize them.
Unity of Purpose: Most important responsibilities of a
leader is to articulate the organizations mission. When there is unity of purpose, all employees pull together toward the same end.
10. How to lead for a better quality change?
To give quality leadership, the historical hierarchical management structure needs to be changed to a structure that has a more unified purpose using project teams. A single person can make a big difference in an organization. However, one person rarely has enough knowledge or experience to understand everything within a process. Major gains in both quality and productivity can often result when a team of people pool their skills, talents, and knowledge. Teams need to have a systematic plan to improve the process that creates mistakes/ defects, breakdowns/delays, inefficiencies, and variation. For a given work environment, management needs to create an atmosphere that supports team effort in all aspects of business. In some organizations, management may need to create a process that describes hierarchical relationships between teams, the flow of directives, how directives are transformed into action and improvements, and the degree of autonomy and responsibility of the teams. The
change to quality leadership can be very difficult. It requires
dedication and patience to transform an entire organization. Social Networking:
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I give myself an A or 10/10 as I covered all the required topics of the assignment effectively.