Six Sigma Quality: Chapter Twelve
Six Sigma Quality: Chapter Twelve
Six Sigma Quality: Chapter Twelve
QUALITY
Chapter Twelve
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Learning Objectives
12-2
12-4
Leadership
Strategic Planning
Customer and Market Focus
Information and Analysis
Human Resource Focus
Process Management
Business Results
12-5
Baldrige Scoring
12-7
Performance
Features
Reliability/Durabi
lity
Serviceability
Aesthetics
Perceived Quality
12-8
Costs of Quality
Appraisal costs
costs of the
Prevention costs
inspection and testing
sum of all the costs
to ensure that the
to prevent defects
product or process is
Quality
acceptable
Costs
External failure costs
Internal failure costs
costs for defects
costs for defects
that pass through the
incurred within the
system
system
12-9
Six Sigma
12-10
Developed by
General Electric as
a means of focusing
effort on quality
using a
methodological
approach
DMAIC Cycle
Define - identify customers and their
priorities
Measure - determine how to measure
the process and how it is performing
Analyze - determine the most likely
causes of defects
Improve - identify means to remove the
causes of defects
Control - determine how to maintain the
improvements
12-12
Cause-and-effect
diagram - show
relationships
between causes
and problems
Opportunity flow
diagram - used
to separate
value-added
from non-valueadded
Process control
chart - used to
assure that
processes are in
statistical control
12-13
Flowchart
12-14
Run Chart
12-15
Checksheet
12-16
12-17
12-18
12-19
12-20
2.
3.
4.
12-21
Successive check
Self-check
Source inspection
Poka-yoke includes:
Checklists
Special tooling that prevents workers from making
errors
12-22
Adopted in 1987
Used in more than 160 countries
12-23
2.
3.
12-24
External Benchmarking
Steps
1.
2.
3.
4.
12-25