SAP QM Quality Management
SAP QM Quality Management
SAP QM Quality Management
Overview
Functions and Features of the Quality Management Module
Quality Management in the Logistical Processes
Quality Planning in the QM Module
Quality Inspection in the QM Module
Basic Data
Maintaining QM Master Data
Master Inspection Characteristics
Inspection Methods
Inspection Catalogs
Dynamic Modification
Quality Management Data in the Material Master Record
Where-Used Lists and Replacements
Inspection Planning
Inspection Plans and Reference Operation Sets
Material Specification as a Planning Tool
Inspection Processing
Inspection Lots
Inspection Results
Defects Recording
Inspection Processing Using the Work List Function
Inspection Completion
Quality Level
Quality-Related Costs
Quality Notifications
Quality Notifications
Control Charts
Quality Management in Sales & Distribution
Quality Certificates
Evaluations
Quality Management Information System
Archiving
Archiving Quality Management Data
Interface to Subsystem
QM-IDI Interface
The QM module is integrated with the master data and processes of the following Logistics
applications:
The QM module supports the exchange of data with other applications in order to prevent related
data from being recorded and stored redundantly. For example, the information provided by a goods
receipt posting relating to the material, vendor and lot size is automatically transferred to the
inspection lot data record when an inspection is triggered.
Manages the material-relevant quality information for vendors and customers or sales areas
Links the quality characteristics with the inspection characteristics in the material specifications
Links the tasks for quality inspection and problem processing (quality notifications) to the SAP
Workflow function
Materials Management
Releases vendors
Manages the release status of supply relationships (for example, for model deliveries or other
types of deliveries)
Manages and dispatches vendor-related technical delivery terms and quality assurance
agreements
Production
Sales/Distribution
Controlling
See also:
Quality Management in the Logistical Processes
Quality Management in Production
Quality Management in Sales & Distribution
Material specifications
Inspection planning
Quality Inspection
Trigger inspections
Quality Control
Quality notifications for processing internal or external problems and initiating corrective action
to correct the problems
Inspection lot processing and problem processing linked to the SAP Workflow function
Quality Management Information System (QMIS) for inspections and inspection results
See also:
Quality Planning in the QM Module
Quality Inspection in the QM Module
QM in Procurement
QM in Production
The quality inspection and the inspection lot play an important role in these processes.
The inspection lot data records or inspection lots, as they are more commonly called, fulfill a
number of different functions from the time they are created until they are archived. Most
importantly, they document an inspection requirement; an event has taken place that makes it
necessary to carry out a quality inspection. During the inspection process, the inspection lot
becomes the central control record that documents the current status of the inspection. It is the
repository for all inspection data, including the inspection specifications, inspection results and
usage decision.
Quality inspections are usually not triggered by the quality department. In most cases, the request
for an inspection comes from the various applications in the logistics chain (for example, from
materials management or production). In such cases, the affected modules in the R/3 System create
the inspection lots and place them at the disposal of the QM module. Of course, the quality
department - or another department with the proper authorization - can also create inspection lots
manually.
See also:
Quality Planning in the QM Module
Quality Inspection in the QM Module
Inspection Lots
QM in Procurement
The QM module is involved in the following decision-making phases of the procurement processes:
inquiry, vendor selection, purchase order, goods receipt, incoming inspection and release of goods
receipt quantity.
Vendor Release
The quality department releases a vendor for a specific material. It can restrict the release or limit
the release to a certain quantity. If the vendor consistently has critical quality problems, the quality
department can block inquiries, purchase orders or goods receipts for specific materials supplied by
this vendor.
Inquiry
As a supplement to the inquiry, the vendor can automatically receive the technical delivery terms for
the material as defined by the quality department. If the material has to be released by the quality
department, the purchasing agent is notified accordingly.
Vendor Selection
The Materials management (MM) module informs the purchasing agent of the vendor's delivery
reliability and price behavior. The QM module provides information on the quality of the previously
delivered goods and the vendor's quality management system. For this purpose, the system
maintains summarized quality scores that are automatically updated for the vendor evaluation.
In many industries, vendors must maintain quality management systems that conform to recognized
standards (for example, ISO 9003) and are certified by accredited organizations. The QM module
allows you to define the quality management systems you require, observe and evaluate vendors'
existing quality management systems and compare vendors.
Purchase Order
When the purchase order is issued, the vendor must have been released by the quality department to
deliver the material in question (if this requirement has been specified). The release of the supply
relationship may be limited to a specific period of time and a specified quantity. With the purchase
order, the vendor automatically receives information about the latest technical delivery terms and the
currently valid quality assurance agreement, as well as the vendor's obligation to include a quality
certificate with the delivery.
Goods Receipt
If a certificate is required for a material, it must be available no later than when the goods are
received. A certificate may be required for each individual purchase order item, batch or goods
receipt.
Normally, the quantity of goods received is posted to inspection stock for the duration of the goods
receipt inspection. This stock is classified as "not available." It is managed solely within the scope
of inspection lot processing and cannot be posted separately using the functions of materials
management. The duration of the goods receipt inspection is also taken into consideration by the
material requirements planning (MRP) department.
QM in Production
Integrated Planning
Production operations and inspection operations in the production process are becoming
increasingly more interdependent or are being combined altogether. As a result, teams from both the
production and quality inspection areas typically create the routings together.
Inspection Operations
You can integrate the QM inspection characteristics into the work scheduling and production
processing activities of the Production Planning (PP) module. You create the characteristics (either
inspection characteristics or process characteristics) for a production operation and you can assign
test equipment as production resources and tools. You can combine both production and inspection
activities within the same production operation. In all other respects, the operation is treated as a
production operation.
Inspection Lots
When a production order is created, the system also creates a special inspection lot record for
managing the inspection specifications and inspection results for all operations.
Confirmations
It is possible to link the confirmation of inspection results in the QM module with the confirmation
of production operations the PP module.
Inspection Intervals
The routings may prescribe regular inspection intervals for a production run. It is possible to define
inspection points based on time, quantity or events. With the help of the inspection points, the
production process can be monitored continuously with respect to the process or inspection
characteristics.
Partial Lots
The total quantity of a production order can be processed in several partial lots. This may be
necessary, for example, if the quantity for a production order has different qualities. If the final
product is maintained in batches, the partial lots can be assigned to individual batches when the
production order is completed. The inspection results will be used as batch characteristic values.
Control Charts
During production, you can apply statistical process control (SPC) techniques to monitor and control
the production process. This involves the use of control charts to display the mean value and
standard deviation of samples. Control charts are graphical tools that document the quality trend in
a production process.
The QM module supports the following types of control charts for inspection characteristics with a
normal distribution pattern:
Control charts are updated and displayed during results recording. The system calculates the action
limits and warning limits upon request, based on the current inspection results or the results from a
previous inspection. A control chart may include several inspection lots or production orders.
Although control charts are primarily intended to be used for QM applications during production,
they may also be used with inspection lots of other origins (for example, goods receipt).
Batch Specification
If the stock of a material is managed in batches, the QM module can automatically transfer
inspection results to the batch specification. In this way, a batch can be selected on the basis of
specific batch characteristics.
Certificates
In some industries it is customary to include quality certificates with the delivery. Quality
certificates document the material specification or the inspection results for a batch. Triggered by
the central message control function in the SAP System, the certificate is printed when the shipping
documents are created.
To be able to use the certificate processing capabilities, the user must:
determine the method for distributing the certificates (recipient, language, shipping method)
Once these requirements have been met, the system automatically generates the quality certificates
and distributes them via the following output devices:
printer
telefax
The system can store the quality certificates in the optical archive using the SAP ArchiveLink
function.
When the quality certificates are created, the system retrieves information from its environment.
This includes data from:
quality management
-
inspection lot
usage decision
inspection results
materials management
-
material master
batch master
delivery
sales order
customer master
Complaints
Occasionally customers may not be satisfied with the delivered goods. Customer complaints can be
processed by the quality notifications component of the QM module.
See also:
Quality Management in Sales & Distribution
Chapter 2:
This section provides an overview of the basic data necessary for inspection planning and
processing. You must maintain this basic data in the system before you create an inspection lot and
record inspection results.
Quality Management Data: Overview
Basic Data in QM Module
QM-Specific Basic Data
Basic Data for Inspection Plans
See also:
Graphic: Usage of Master Data in Inspection Plan from Goods Receipt View
Functions and Features of the Quality Management Module
Quality Inspection in the QM Module
Tech. delivery
terms
Material master
Quality assurance
agreement
Work center
Test equipment
Dynamic
modification data
Vendor master
Quality info record
Insp. method
Master inspection
characteristic
Goods receipt
document
Insp. catalog
Quality level record
Inspection plan
Inspection lot
Inspection results
Usage decision
info records
material specifications
Material Master
The material master is used by several logistics applications and serves as an important integrating
element. The material master controls:
quality management in procurement. For example, it references such quality documents as the
technical delivery terms and stipulates whether a certificate must be included with a delivery.
the quality inspection processes. Among other items, the material master determines whether a
quality inspection must take place, whether the inspection will be carried out with or without an
inspection plan, and whether characteristic results must be recorded. This is determined for
each inspection lot origin (for example, goods receipt or production) or inspection type (for
example, preliminary inspection or production series inspection).
Info Records
Some processes in quality management not only depend on the material, but also on such object
types as vendor or sales organization. For this reason, there are master data and information records
related to such object links that provide additional information for quality management. The release
of externally procured materials is an example of this; the release applies to a specific material and
its vendors. In addition to the information concerning the release and block status of the material,
the info record for this object link also contains information on the status of the supply relationship
and a reference to the quality documentation (for example, quality assurance agreements).
Because the system manages separate info records for each revision level of a material, changes in
master data can be reflected by the supply relationship.
Quality Documents
All quality-relevant documents such as the quality assurance agreements, technical delivery terms or
inspection drawings are centrally managed in the Logistics system's general document management
function.
The features of the general document management function, in particular its status and version
management capabilities, ensure that the applicable requirements for quality documents can be
fulfilled. The document management function can also manage external documents such as PC
files.
Material Specification
If a company uses the batch management function, it can create material specifications on a
company-wide basis by assigning the material to a batch class and assigning specific values to the
class characteristics.
In the material specification, the quality characteristics assigned to the batch classes can be linked
with the corresponding inspection characteristics in the QM module. The default values in the
material specification can then be used to create an inspection specification, which may supplement
or even replace the inspection plan at the plant level.
The material specification also determines which class characteristics will be supplied with the
corresponding inspection characteristic values that were recorded in the inspection. The material
specification thereby controls the automatic transfer of inspection results to the classified batches.
You can then select the batches on the basis of the batch characteristic values in sales and
distribution.
See also:
Quality Management Data in the Material Master Record
Material Specification as a Planning Tool
inspection characteristics
inspection methods
catalogs
This independent master data are the building blocks that you use to create inspection plans. The
inspection characteristics, inspection methods and catalogs are maintained in several languages and
are subject to a status management function.
Inspection Characteristics
Inspection characteristics can be stored as master records in the system. The classification system
provides a means of systematically defining, retrieving, and reusing the master inspection
characteristics. A version management function ensures that all changes are documented.
The master inspection characteristics can be used as building blocks in the inspection plan; they
ensure that the inspection plan is developed systematically, uniformly and efficiently. The system
provides central where-used lists and replace functions for maintaining the inspection plans. You
can also use master inspection characteristics as copy models to create inspection plan
characteristics.
Assigned in the material specification, the master inspection characteristics provide the links to the
general characteristics in a material class.
See also:
Master Inspection Characteristics
Inspection Methods
The inspection methods describe the procedures for carrying out inspections. The inspection
methods are assigned to the inspection characteristics. The system provides central where-used lists
and replace functions assist the inspection planner in maintaining the master data. A version
management function ensures that all changes are documented.