Implementing Quality Concepts
Implementing Quality Concepts
CHAPTER
IMPLEMENTING QUALITY CONCEPTS
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Learning Objectives
After reading and studying Chapter 16, you should be able to answer the following
questions:
4. What types of quality costs exist and how are those costs related?
6. How can the balanced scorecard and cost management system be used to
provide information on quality in an organization?
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Chapter 16: Implementing Quality Concepts
Terminology
Appraisal cost a quality control cost incurred for monitoring or inspection;
compensates for mistakes not eliminated through prevention activities
Control chart a graphical presentation of the actual process results that indicates
the upper and lower control limits and those results that are out of control
External failure costs are expenditures for items such as warranty work, customer
complaints, litigation, and defective product recalls incurred after a faulty unit of
product has been shipped to the customer
Failure cost a quality control cost associated with goods or services that have been
found not to conform or perform to the required standards as well as all related
costs (such as that of the complaint department); it may be internal or external
ISO 9000 a comprehensive series of international quality standards that define the
various design, material procurement, production, quality-control, and delivery
requirements and procedures necessary to produce quality products and services
Process benchmarking benchmarks against companies that are the best in a specific
characteristic rather than just the best in a specific industry
Quality all the characteristics of a product or service that make it able to meet the
stated or implied needs of the buyer; it relates to both performance and value; the
pride of workmanship; it is conformance to requirements
Quality audit a review of product design activities (although not for individual
products), manufacturing processes and controls, quality documentation and
records, and management philosophy
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Chapter 16: Implementing Quality Concepts
Quality control (QC) the implementation of all practices and policies designed to
eliminate poor quality and variability in the production or service process; it places
the primary responsibility for quality at the source of the product or service
Value the characteristic of meeting the highest number of customer needs at the
lowest possible total cost
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Chapter 16: Implementing Quality Concepts
Lecture Outline
A. What is Quality?
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Chapter 16: Implementing Quality Concepts
c. Product quality possesses eight basic characteristics. (See text Exhibit 16-
2.)
2. Additional comparisons should be made against companies who are the best
in a specific category rather than simply the best in a specific industry.
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Chapter 16: Implementing Quality Concepts
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Chapter 16: Implementing Quality Concepts
b. A company must first determine who its value-adding customers are and
then understand what they want.
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Chapter 16: Implementing Quality Concepts
b. Entrants for the award are in five areas: manufacturing, service, small
business, education, and health care.
E. Benefits of TQM
1. Some critics of TQM have called it nothing more than a management fad that
does not work when practical attempts are made to implement its concepts.
2. However, most companies using TQM have cited many positive outcomes
and benefits, such as those included in text Exhibit 16–6.
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Chapter 16: Implementing Quality Concepts
e. External failure costs are expenditures for items such as warranty work,
customer complaints, litigation, and defective product recalls incurred
after a faulty unit of product has been shipped to the customer.
2. The TQM philosophy stipulates that total costs will decrease as quality
improvements are made in an enterprise.
b. The lowering of costs allows the company to contain (or reduce) selling
prices; customers, satisfied with the higher quality at the same (or lower)
price, believe that they received value and will therefore buy more.
c. Such factors create greater profits for the company for reinvestment and
research activities that will in turn generate new products or services of
higher quality.
3. Two types of cost exist which constitute the total quality cost of a firm: (1)
cost of quality compliance or assurance and (2) cost of noncompliance or
quality failure. (See text Exhibit 16-8.)
a. Costs of compliance equal the sum of prevention costs and appraisal costs.
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Chapter 16: Implementing Quality Concepts
d. Refer to text Exhibit 16–9 for points in the production–sales cycle that
quality costs are usually incurred. An information feedback loop should
be in effect to link the types and causes of failure costs to future
prevention costs.
1. Prevention and appraisal costs that are prudently incurred should ideally
result in zero failure costs.
2. Pareto analysis is one way management can decide where to concentrate its
quality prevention cost dollars by classifying the causes of process problems
according to the impact on an objective.
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Chapter 16: Implementing Quality Concepts
b. internal business,
c. customers, and
d. finance.
4. A strategic CMS differentiates between costs that add value and those that
do not so that managers and employees can work to reduce the nonvalue-
added costs and enhance continuous improvement.
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Chapter 16: Implementing Quality Concepts
2. The cost of scrap, rework, and tooling changes in a product quality cost
system are categorized as a(n):
a. external failure cost.
b. internal failure cost.
c. training cost.
d. prevention cost.
e. appraisal cost.
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Chapter 16: Implementing Quality Concepts
5. Listed below are selected line items from the cost-of-quality report for
Jennifer Products for the last month.
Category Amount
Rework $ 725
Equipment maintenance 1,154
Product testing 786
Product repair 695
What is Jennifer’s total prevention and appraisal cost for the last month?
a. $786
b. $1,154
c. $1,940
d. $2,665
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