Module 1 TQM
Module 1 TQM
Module 1 TQM
PRINCIPLES OF QUALITY
Total Quality Management (TQM) is a management philosophy and approach that focuses
on continuously improving the quality of products, services, and processes within an
organization. TQM aims to involve every member of the organization in the quality
improvement efforts to ensure customer satisfaction and overall organizational success.
Implementing Total Quality Management often involves the use of various quality tools and
techniques, such as process mapping, statistical process control, benchmarking, root cause
analysis, and quality audits. TQM can provide significant benefits to organizations,
including improved customer satisfaction, increased efficiency, reduced costs, enhanced
employee morale, and a competitive advantage in the marketplace.
This document introduces seven quality management principles (QMPs). ISO 9000, ISO
9001 and related ISO quality management standards are based on these seven QMPs. One
of the definitions of a “principle” is that it is a basic belief, theory or rule that has a major
influence on the way in which something is done. “Quality management principles” are a
set of fundamental beliefs, norms, rules and values that are accepted as true and can be
used as a basis for quality management. The QMPs can be used as a foundation to guide
an organization’s performance improvement. They were developed and updated by
international experts of ISO/TC 176, which is responsible for developing and maintaining
ISO’s quality management standards. This document provides for each QMP:
Examples of typical actions to improve the organization’s performance when applying the
principle The seven quality management principles are:
QMP 1 – Customer focus
QMP 2 – Leadership
QMP 3 – Engagement of people
QMP 4 – Process approach
QMP 5 – Improvement
QMP 6 – Evidence-based decision making
QMP 7 – Relationship management
In any order. The relative importance of each principle will vary from organization to
organization and can be expected to change over time.
CUSTOMER FOCUS
Statement:
The primary focus of quality management is to meet customer requirements and to strive
to exceed customer expectations.
Rationale:
Sustained success is achieved when an organization attracts and retains the confidence of
customers and other interested parties. Every aspect of customer interaction provides an
opportunity to create more value for the customer. Understanding current and future
needs of customers and other interested parties contributes to sustained success of the
organization.
Key benefits
• Increased customer value
• Increased customer satisfaction
• Improved customer loyalty
• Enhanced repeat business
• Enhanced reputation of the organization
• Expanded customer base
• Increased revenue and market share
LEADERSHIP
Statement
Leaders at all levels establish unity of purpose and direction and create conditions in which
people are engaged in achieving the organization’s quality objectives.
Rationale:
Creation of unity of purpose and direction and engagement of people enable an
organization to align its strategies, policies, processes and resources to achieve its
objectives.
Key benefits
• Increased effectiveness and efficiency in meeting the organization’s quality objectives
• Better coordination of the organization’s processes
• Improved communication between levels and functions of the organization
• Development and improvement of the capability of the organization and its people to
deliver desired results
ENGAGEMENT OF PEOPLE
Statement:
Competent, empowered and engaged people at all levels throughout the organization are
essential to enhance its capability to create and deliver value.
Key benefits:
• Improved understanding of the organization’s quality objectives by people in the
organization and increased motivation to achieve them
• Enhanced involvement of people in improvement activities
• Enhanced personal development, initiatives and creativity
• Enhanced people satisfaction
• Enhanced trust and collaboration throughout the organization
• Increased attention to shared values and culture throughout the organization
appropriate actions.
PROCESS APPROACH
Statement:
Consistent and predictable results are achieved more effectively and efficiently when
activities are understood and managed as interrelated processes that function as a
coherent system.
Rationale:
The quality management system consists of interrelated processes. Understanding how
results are produced by this system enables an organization to optimize the system and its
performance.
Key benefits:
• Enhanced ability to focus effort on key processes and opportunities for improvement •
Consistent and predictable outcomes through a system of aligned processes
• Optimized performance through effective process management, efficient use of
resources, and reduced cross-functional barriers
• Enabling the organization to provide confidence to interested parties as to its
consistency, effectiveness and efficiency
IMPROVEMENT
Statement:
Successful organizations have an ongoing focus on improvement.
Rationale:
Improvement is essential for an organization to maintain current levels of performance, to
react to changes in its internal and external conditions and to create new opportunities.
10 Key benefits:
• Improved process performance, organizational capabilities and customer satisfaction •
Enhanced focus on root-cause investigation and determination, followed by prevention and
corrective actions
• Enhanced ability to anticipate and react to internal and external risks and opportunities
• Enhanced consideration of both incremental and breakthrough improvement
• Improved use of learning for improvement
• Enhanced drive for innovation
Rationale:
Decision making can be a complex process, and it always involves some uncertainty. It
often involves multiple types and sources of inputs, as well as their interpretation, which
can be subjective. It is important to understand cause-and-effect relationships and
potential unintended consequences. Facts, evidence and data analysis lead to greater
objectivity and confidence in decision making.
Key benefits:
• Improved decision-making processes
• Improved assessment of process performance and ability to achieve objectives
• Improved operational effectiveness and efficiency
• Increased ability to review, challenge and change opinions and decisions
• Increased ability to demonstrate the effectiveness of past decisions
RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT
Statement:
For sustained success, an organization manages its relationships with interested parties,
such as suppliers.
Rationale:
Interested parties influence the performance of an organization. Sustained success is more
likely to be achieved when the organization manages relationships with all of its interested
parties to optimize their impact on its performance. Relationship management with its
supplier and partner networks is of particular importance.
14 Key benefits
• Enhanced performance of the organization and its interested parties through responding
to the opportunities and constraints related to each interested party
• Common understanding of goals and values among interested parties
• Increased capability to create value for interested parties by sharing resources and
competence and managing quality-related risks
• A well-managed supply chain that provides a stable flow of goods and services
Topic 2
Introduction to Quality Management
Introduction:
Quality is by no means a new concept in modern business. In October 1887, William
Cooper Procter grandson of the founder of Procter & Gamble told his employees “The first
job is to turn out quality merchandise that customers will buy and keep on buying. If we
produce it efficiently and economically we will earn a profit, in which you will share.”
Procter’s statement addresses three issues that are critical to managers of manufacturing
and service organization; productivity, cost, and quality. productivity (the measure of
efficiency defined as the amount of output achieved per unit of input), the cost of
operations and the quality of goods and services that create customer satisfaction all
contribute to profitability, of these three determinants of profitability, the most significant
factor in determining the long-run success or failure of any organization is quality. some
123 years later this sentiment was echoed by the Conference Board, which concluded from
a survey of more that 700 CEO’s and executives from around the world that quality is
uniquely positioned that accelerate organizational growth through better execution and
alignment .and it also provide the voice of the customer critical to developing innovative
products and services.
Defining Quality:
Quality can be a confusing concept partly because people view quality subjectively and in
relation to differing criteria based on their individual roles in the production-marketing
value chain. In addition, the meaning of quality continues to evolve as the quality
profession grows and matures. Neither consultants nor business professionals agree on a
universal definition. For example, one study that asked managers of 86 firms in the
eastern United States to define quality produced several dozen different responses
including the following:
1. Perfection
2. Consistency
3. Eliminating waste
4. Speed of delivery
5. Compliance of policies and procedures
6. Providing a good, usable product
7. Doing it right the first time
8. Delighting or pleasing customers
9. Total customer service and satisfaction
• Production inventory, and product distribution of raw materials (what we now call supply
chain management)
• Production and manufacturing
• Formulating and executing quality standards
• Supervision and inspection
These departments were well organized and helped China’s central control over production
processes. The system even included and independent quality organization responsible for
end-to-end oversight that reported directly to the highest level of government.
1. Global Responsibility. An organization must be fully aware of the global impact of its
local decisions and realize that as demand grows for the planet’s finite resources, waste is
increasing unacceptable. Global responsibility also involves human rights, labor practices,
fair operating practices, consumer interests an contributions to society.
2. Consumer Awareness. With today’s technology such as the internet, Twitter, and,
Facebook, consumers have access to a wealth of information, on which to make
purchasing decisions. As a result, organizations must be quick when responding to their
customer concerns and match their products to customer wants and needs, or risk having
their customers defect to a competitor.
4. Increasing rate of change. Technology has shifted the rate of change into an entirely
new gear, which brings with it opportunities and threats. The threat lies in the possibility
that humanity won’t be able to adapt to the disruptions that accompany technological
advances. But, if it can, the opportunities are nearly limitless. Product life cycle are getting
shorter, and industries come into existence, thrive, and die within our lifetimes.
5. Workforce of the future. Competition for talent will increase, and along with
technological advances, will change how and where work is done. As a result,
organizations will need to become more flexible with how and where their work forces
operate. Organizations will need to make a greater investment in training and education,
and place greater emphasis emphasis on professional certification, which will evolve based
on organizations’ demands for demonstrated competency from its employees.
6. Aging population. As people live longer, organizations face higher costs for health care
and social welfare re programs. Retirement becomes “ a short-lived artifact of the latter
half of the twentieth century.” Demographics predicts that by 2025, the majority of the
population will be over the age of 65. The result is a growing market for organizations to
consider as the aging lifestyle become more prevalent.
7. Twenty-first century Quality. Quality isn’t the same as it was 50 years ago, or even
5 years ago. Quality is moving beyond the organization’s walls to encompass a customer’s
entire experience with the organizations rather than just the quality of the product or
service. this provides more opportunities for quality professionals to apply their skills we
may soon see quality applied to social problems, proving that “quality is exerting itself in
new wave – in helpful ways.
Topic 3
Foundation of Quality Management
Deming’s 14 points
1. Create and publish to all employees a statement of aims and purposes of the company
or other organization. The management must demonstrate constantly their commitment to
the statement.
4. End the practice of awarding business on the basis of price tag alone.
6. Institute training
9. Optimize toward the aims and purposes of the company the effort of teams, groups staff
areas
11. (a) Eliminate numerical quotas for production, instead, learn, and institute methods for
improvement.
(b) Eliminate MBO (Management by Objective), instead learn the capabilities of processes
and how to improve them
Profound knowledge
The 14 point caused some confusion and misunderstanding among business people
because Deming did not provide a clear rationale for them. Near the end of his life.
However, he synthesized the underlying foundation of the 14 points into four simple
elements which he called a system of profound knowledge.
System. Is a set of functions or activities within an organization that work together for the
aim of the organization. A system is a composed of many smaller, interacting subsystems.
• They see events as individual incidents rather than the net result of many interactions
and interdependent forces.
• They set the symptoms but not the deep causes of problems.
• They don’t understand how an intervention in one part of (an organization) can cause
havoc in another place or at another time.
• They blame individuals for problems even when those individuals have little or ability to
control the events around them.
• They don’t understand the ancient African saying that says “it takes a whole village to
raise a child.”
• Proof of the need. Managers, especially top managers, need to be convinced that
quality improvement are simply good economics. Through data collection efforts,
information on poor quality, low productivity, or poor service can be translated into the
language of money – the universal language to top management – to justify a request for
resources to implement a quality improvement program.
• Holding the gains. The final step involves establishing the new standards an
procedures, training the workforce and instituting controls to make sure that the
breakthrough does not die over time.
• There is no such thing as the economics of quality, doing the job right the first time is
always cheaper.om Grosby supports the premise that “economics of quality” has no
meaning. Quality is free, what costs money are all actions that involve not doing jobs right
the first time. The Deming chain reactions sends A similar message.
• The only performance measurement is the cost of quality, which is the expense of
nonconformance. Grosby noted that most companies spend 15 percent to 20 percent of
their sales in dollars on quality costs. A company with a well-run quality management
program can achieve a cost of quality that is less than 2.5 percent of sales, primarily in the
prevention and appraisal categories. Grosby suggested that organizations measure and
publicize the cost of poor quality. this helps to call problems to management’s attention to
select opportunities for corrective action, and to track quality improvement over time.
Juran also supported this concept.
• The only performance standard is “zero Defects (ZD).” He explained it as follows; Zero
defect is performance standard. It is the standard of the craftsperson regardless of his or
her assignment…the theme of ZD is do it right the first time. That means concentrating on
preventing defects rather than just finding and fixing them. People are conditioned to
believe that error is inevitable, thus, they not only accept error, they, anticipate it. It does
not bother us to make a few errors in our work…to err is human.