Course Outline TQM
Course Outline TQM
Process improvement
Benchmarking
Cause and effect
Measurement
Cost of quality
Implementing Total Quality Management
TQM is a way of thinking about goals, organisations, processes and people to ensure
that the right things are done right first time. This thought process can change
attitudes, behaviour and hence results for the better.
TQM is not a system, a tool or even a process. Systems, tools and processes are
employed to achieve the various principles of TQM.
The total in TQM applies to the whole organisation. Therefore, unlike an ISO 9000
initiative which may be limited to the processes producing deliverable products,
TQM applies to every activity in the organisation. Also, unlike ISO 9000, TQM covers
the soft issues such as ethics, attitude and culture.
There are several ways of expressing this philosophy. There are also several gurus
whose influence on management thought in this area has been considerable, for
example Deming, Juran, Crosby, Feigenbaum, Ishikawa and Imai. The wisdom of
these gurus has been distilled into eight principles defined in ISO 9000:2000.
The European Quality Award model is used to assess business excellence. Business
excellence is the result of adopting a TQM philosophy and realigning the
TQM can be adopted at any time after executive management has seen the error of
its ways, opened its mind and embraced the philosophy. It cannot be attempted if
management perceives it as a quick fix, or a tool to improve worker performance.
TQM will force change in culture, processes and practice. These changes will be
more easily facilitated and sustained if there is a formal management system in
place. Such a system will provide many of the facts on which to base change and
will also enable changes to be implemented more systematically and permanently.
In order to focus all efforts in any TQM initiative and to yield permanent benefits, a
company must answer some fundamental questions:
Methodology
There are a number of approaches to take towards adopting the TQM philosophy.
The teachings of Deming, Juran, Taguchi, Ishikawa, Imai, Oakland etc can all help an
organisation realign itself and embrace the TQM philosophy. However, there is no
single methodology, only a bundle of tools and techniques.
flowcharting
statistical process control (SPC)
Pareto analysis
cause and effect diagrams
employee and customer surveys
benchmarking
cost of quality
quality function deployment
failure mode effects analysis
design of experiments
Measurements
After using the tools and techniques an organisation needs to establish the degree
of improvement. Any number of techniques can be used for this including selfassessment, audits and SPC.
Pitfalls
TQM initiatives have been prone to failure because of common mistakes. These
include:
2.
3.
4.
End the practice of awarding business on price alone; instead, minimize total cost by
working with a single supplier.
5.
Improve constantly and forever every process for planning, production and service.
6.
7.
8.
9.
W. Edwards Deming
Joseph Juran
Philip B. Crosby
Kaoru Ishikawa
Edward Deming was a student under the instruction of Walter Shewart. He refined TQM
and got a chance in Japan to try these approaches to management in mid 1950's. As
Japan's quality and performance levels surpassed previously dominated fields of work
controlled by the U.S., the U.S. companies took notice and adopted the TQM philosophy.
While many failed to properly implement, some did succeed and awards such as the
Deming Prize, Shingo Prize, and Malcolm Baldridge Award recognizes a few of them.
Total - Encompasses the entire organization, supply chain, human resources, IT,
processes, and product development. Everyone is involved, practicing what is preached,
and regular communication of the purpose driven goal.
Quality - defined by the beholder and can take on many forms but in the case it is the
perception of the customer(s). The emphasis is on things being done right the first time.
Management - continuous management with cycle such as PDCA cycle, Plan, Do,
Check, Act also known as the Shewhart Cycle or Deming Cycle.
TQM is a structured system much like a Six Sigma program. When all of its elements are
implemented properly, TQM is like a well-built house. It's solid, strong, and exploits the
value of synergy. The sum of the collective efforts of everyone in the organization is
greater than the sums that each individual can contribute.
Total Quality Management strives to maximize the competitiveness of an organization
through the continual improvement of the quality of its products, services, people,
processes, and environment.
TQM is not a flavor of the month, and when it is implemented in such a way it earns a
poor reputation for all the wrong root causes and the same applies for some Six Sigma
programs. Many companies strive for awards and decorations to bragging rights, public
relations, and customer appeal and sometimes this works. Quality requires a never
ending pursuit of improvement and significant breakthroughs that are sustainable often
require a lot of time, education, and effort along with difficult choices.
The methodolgy includes everyone from managerial to hourly workforce. It does not
necessarily mean that zero defects or absolute perfection must be acheived as this can
be more costly and unpractical than making balanced sustained gains.
TQM requires cross functional cooperation and the elimination of corporate and
departmental silos. However, it does not demand radical organizational realignment. It
needs the liberation of people from stifling control systems and the tyranny of
functionalism which precludes teamwork. Public rewards whould be provided (not
necesssary money) for long term success and remove praise for short term and
uncontrolled changes.
Dr. Deming included 14 points in his book "Out of the Crisis" that he believed a
company's leaders shall adhere in order to have successful total quality management.
1) Change is constant. Constantly improve the system of operations and service.
Management and employees are obligated to continually look for ways to reduce waste
and improve quality.
2) Create constancy of purpose for improvement of product and service. Management
must change from a short term focus to delivering on the long term and creating
stability. This requires dedication to innovation in all areas to best meet the needs of
citizens or clients.
3) Cease dependence on mass inspection. Create mistake proof processes and focus on
proactive rather than being reactive. Inspection is equivalent to planning for defects; it
comes too late, and it is ineffective and costly.
4) End the practice of awarding contracts on the basis of price tag. This is often a
contradiction to the typical paradigm on modern supply chain management. Frequently,
this leads to supplies or services of low quality. Instead, they should seek the best
quality and work to achieve it with a single supplier for any one item in a long-term
relationship.
5) Adopt the new philosophy in which mistakes and negativism is unacceptable.
Confront poor performance and take the courage to deal with distracting conflict.
6) Institute modern methods of training on the job. Too often, employees learn their jobs
from other employees who were never trained properly. They may be prone to follow
non-standard instructions and learn bad habits.
2) Successful TQM aligns itself with organizational management systems and human
resource management systems.
3) Successful TQM becomes a system within itself by default or choice.
4) Successful TQM system brings two other management systems together with a
behavioral and cultural commitment to customer quality.
TQM is infinitely adaptable so each impementation is unique and needs to suit
the company. There can be some downfalls that are mitigated by first
understanding them.
TQM focuses people's attention on internal processes rather than on external results. An
asset of TQM is that it gets managers to attend to internal processes. It avoids being
number bound and too data driven, or the complete reliance on performance evaluation
and measurement, and losing touch with the voice of the customer and the shifting
preferences of new, lost, and potential customers.
TQM focuses on minimum standards. Zero defects and no rework demands distract
people from adding value and the price for perfection may not be economical or
practical.
TQM does not demand entirely new relationships with outside partners. Working with
suppliers is essential as marketing converts to relationship based strategies and
partnering with expertise.