Quality Function Deployment (QFD)
Quality Function Deployment (QFD)
Quality Function Deployment, or QFD, is a tool that can help improve your existing processes by focusing your energy
and your attention on efforts that will ensure the greatest result. QFD works by first identifying and prioritizing
customer requirements and expectations. You then can use this information to focus with greater confidence on the
important customer requirements as a starting place to define such things as product requirements, design features,
manufacturing processes or support requirements.
The payoff of a Quality Function Deployment is the creation of more robust designs and processes that work together to
assure customer satisfaction. An added benefit is that QFD is able to document key decisions in a form that can become
a template for future improvement efforts.
A full-blown application of the Quality Function Deployment discipline produces a complex-looking series of matrices.
In almost all instances, this level of detail is not necessary. Normally, an abbreviated version of QFD with only one or
two matrices is enough to do the job of resolving a problem, defining Critical-To-Quality (CTQs) characteristics or
implementing actions to reduce costs.
The effort and discipline of Quality Function Deployment produces the greatest results in situations in which customer
requirements have not or cannot be sharply defined, those requirements cannot be met through conventional processes
or practices, or the elements of the business that must work together to deliver the requirements have divergent or
conflicting goals.
Although Quality Function Deployment is a disciplined tool, it is also a flexible and adaptable one. Through QFD,
customer expectations can be logically and practically linked to almost any business process. Virtually any cause-and-
effect relationship can be adapted to the Quality Function Deployment discipline.
The application of QFD can range from one person constructing a simple matrix to classic Quality Function
Deployment in which a formal team generates a systematic flow down of customer expectations to technical
requirements, critical part requirements, critical process requirements, and process controls. The most practical
application of Quality Function Deployment is usually somewhere between these two strategies.
Quality Function Deployment is especially useful in Define, Measure and Improve phases of Lean Six Sigma
methodology.
The first step is to define the project and describe the intended results. This will enable you to decide if Quality Function
Deployment is the right tool.
• If the approach is clear, but the requirements are not, or you want to clarify the link between customer
requirements and process requirements, a simplified Quality Function Deployment might be appropriate.
• If the objective is a significant challenge or there are many conflicting requirements, a more complex Quality
Function Deployment is probably a good idea.
Here are some tips to help calibrate that judgment to make the most useful matrix.
• Try to avoid making a matrix that contains mostly weak or moderate relationships.
• On the other hand, avoid making a matrix that shows every requirement related in some way to each customer
expectation.
• A good general rule is that only one-third to one-half of the intersections in the matrix should have symbols in
them.
9. Establish targets.
Through team discussion, develop target
values for the requirements. Take into
account whether the goal is to maximize
or minimize a value or condition or to
hit a specific target value.
The other requirements are not forgotten. They are often able to be handled by practices other than QFD, however. The
team must decide which are the most important for entry into the second matrix to keep the focus sharp.
• By completing and evaluating this second matrix in the same way as the team did the first one, they arrive at a
prioritized list of design features and Critical To Quality characteristics (CTQs). The matrix scoring helps keep
the focus tied to what is most important in ultimately satisfying the customer.
• In selecting those most important CTQs, it is helpful to ask, “Is this measurable, controllable and relevant?”
• A characteristic should be all three to be considered as a CTQ.
Now what?
Classic Quality Function Deployment can be time-consuming and may involve several teams or teams with shifting
membership as the Quality Function Deployment looks at different processes. In actual application, the QFD tool is
usually modified, simplified and individually targeted to improve a wide range of process challenges. Quality Function
Deployment is not limited to new products or services. It can be applied to the improvement of existing products,
services or processes as well as for resolving problems that affect both external and internal customers.
It is a good idea to get help from your area’s Black Belt or Master Black Belt before starting a QFD process. If you
would like to read about QFD, a good book is “The Customer Driven Company: Managerial Perspectives on QFD” by
William E. Eureka and Nancy E. Ryan (ASI Press, Dearborn, MI, 1988.)
Steven Bonacorsi is a Senior Master Black Belt instructor and coach. Steven Bonacorsi has trained
hundreds of Master Black Belts, Black Belts, Green Belts, and Project Sponsors and Executive
Leaders in Lean Six Sigma DMAIC and Design for Lean Six Sigma process improvement
methodologies.