...IMSE561/EMGT525 - TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT AND SIX SIGMA HOMEWORK-6 Name: Shyam V.H Karumanchi UM ID 0833-3824 Question 1: Describe the design procedure for robust design REFERENCES: 1. Chapter 20 Quality engineering lecture notes Products and services should be designed to be inherently defect free and of high quality. Robustness The product or process performs its intended function well within user profiles and insensitive to the variation including: Variation in production Differences in materials Differences in users or operators aging of the product or process, and the product or process accomplishes this without major cost impact. General procedure for robust design 1. Problem Formulation: This step consists of identifying the main function, developing the P-diagram, defining the ideal function and S/N ratio, and planning the experiments. The experiments involve changing the control, noise and signal factors systematically using orthogonal arrays. 2. Data Collection/Simulation: The experiments may be conducted in hardware or through simulation. It is not necessary to have a full-scale model of the product for the purpose of experimentation. It is sufficient and more desirable to have an essential model of the product that adequately captures the design concept. Thus, the experiments can be done more economically. 3. Factor Effects Analysis: The effects of the control factors are calculated in this step and the results are analyzed to select optimum setting of the...
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...Total Quality Management Total Quality Management (TQM) is a methodology to business, which basically takes a gander at the items and administrations of an organization to get complete client fulfilment. In TQM exertion, each part of an association take an interest in enhancing courses of action, administrations, items and the society in which they put effort. It intends to outfit the anthropological and material possessions (of an association) in the best approach to attain the association's targets. TQM utilizes method, information, and powerful interchanges to coordinate the quality control into the society and exercises of the association. TQM incorporates the saying "Total" in light of the fact that it includes everything the organization ensures i.e. all its methods and representatives at each end. It is the total of three properties i.e. i. Total: Any choice or activity transpiring in a specific division is not restricted to that office yet thusly impacts the whole arrangement of that association. Subsequently, each matter ought to be concentrated on in general. ii. Quality: Quality is the incorporation of value in creation, amenities and administration process. iii. Management: Administration is a specialty of achieving activities through others. Basically TQM is composed of 10 basic or key elements. Which are listed below 1. Process Thinking 2. Customer Satisfaction 3. Total Employee Commitment 4. Team Work and Quality Chain 5. Strategic...
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...EKONOMIKA I ORGANIZACIJA POSLOVANJA SEMINARSKI RAD: TQM Predmetni nastavnik: Ivana Zlatanović Student: Branko Puzić 03/05 Datum predaje: 02.05.2006. TQM Branko Puzić SADRŽAJ: 1. TOTALNO UPRAVLJANJE KVALITETOM................................................................................4 1.1 OSNOVNI PRNCIPI TQM-a.....................................................................................................8 2. OSNOVNI ELEMENTI TQM-a ....................................................................................................10 3. VEZA IZMEðU TQM-a I SERIJE STANDARDA ISO 9000......................................................13 3.1 ISO9000 NASUPROT TQM-u ................................................................................................13 3.2 UPOREðIVANJE KARAKTERISTIKA STANRDA ISO9000 I TQM SISTEMA ..............13 4. TQM ORGANIZACIJA.................................................................................................................15 5. NAJPOZNATIJI MENADŽERI KVALITETA ............................................................................19 ZAKLJUČAK ....................................................................................................................................21 LITERATURA...................................................................................................................................22 2/22 TQM Branko Puzić UVOD Svet u oblasti proizvodnje,...
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...Total Quality Management in Hospital Pharmacy Introduction Hospital pharmacies in the present day context face various issues including cost containment, productivity and leadership, patient safety, medical-legal and ethical considerations, human resource management and application of new technological developments in the functioning of the pharmacies. The pharmacists employed by the hospitals are expected to attend to a number of different functions that include writing down therapy management plans and desired patient outcomes, monitoring the drug-based therapies, educating patients and counseling them and writing medication histories. Despite these many different functions being discharged by the pharmacists, hospitals find it difficult to recruit pharmacists (Smith). At the same time many of the hospitals take initiatives like staff reductions due to lower patient concentration, reorganization of the hospital facilities, carrying out recommendations of external consultants, implementing automation in drug distribution and mergers and acquisitions of hospitals. In this context, a methodological review of the operations of a hospital becomes necessary for improving the efficiency and functioning of the healthcare settings. One of the recommendations is to apply Total Quality Management (TQM) for improving the performance of pharmacies in the hospitals. Although TQM has been practiced in manufacturing industries for quite some time, it is relatively a newer concept in...
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...of a TQM orientation. However, customer satisfaction, continuous improvement, and teamwork frequently are cited as core factors for TQM (Dean & Bowen, 1994; Morrow, 1997). However, Reed and Lemak (1998) expanded this to include empowerment and statistical process control, at the same time recognizing continuous improvement as one of the central TQM doctrines. For employees, a significant aim of TQM is the broadening of work responsibilities. The adoption of TQM requires employees to reconceptualize the boundaries of their jobs, reshape their attitudes toward quality, and engage in new behaviors. In essence, TQM blurs the boundary between previously defined in-role and extra-role behavior such that what were considered discretionary functional activities now become part of an individual's job, which he or she is expected to fulfill in a TQM environment. Waldman (1994) argued that work responsibilities in a quality culture would include "accomplishing tasks and taking initiatives above and beyond the call of duty, and sharing information with and helping co-workers" (p. 515). In terms of the key principles of TQM, employees are required to have a customer-focused orientation and develop attitudes and behaviors that reflect a commitment to customer service; a pervasive emphasis on collaboration and cooperative efforts between individuals and groups within organizations (Stone-- Romero & Stone, 1998), requiring an individual to develop a collectivist orientation and to engage...
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...Total Quality Management: A Continuous Improvement Process Introduction In order to comprehend the need for improvement in the construction industry and to better manage our projects and construction companies, we need to look for a method to do so. Construction managers need to improve their performance. Construction costs are becoming far too high. Construction project management is more difficult than it should be. When turnaround at the end of a project becomes a gut-wrenching experience with unnecessary disputes (which must be settled) that arise due to insufficient quality or indifference to quality, settlement by negotiation, arbitration, or even litigation imposes a serious drain on the financial resources of a company and limits profit potential. To be competitive in today’s market, it is essential for construction companies to provide more consistent quality and value to their owners/customers. Now is the time to place behind us the old adversarial approach to managing construction work. It is time to develop better and more direct relationships with our owners/customers, to initiate more teamwork at the jobsite, and to produce better quality work. Such goals demand that a continuous improvement (CI) process be established within the company in order to provide quality management. Ancient Greeks referred to the concept of continuous improvement as well as the Chinese. Recently CI has been referred to as Total Quality Management (TQM). Whichever name is preferred, the...
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... This discussion is really a continuation and conclusion of the top management support discussion that ended Lesson #7. The remainder of the lesson is a “catch-all” – covering several important performance management and appraisal aspects that are more performance management than appraisal related. We continue with Chapter 12 on creating a system for initial and sustaining performance management and appraisal system training. We then address the almost universal relationship between pay and performance appraisals (Chapter 14). The performance appraisal portion of the course ends with Chapter 16’s review of several important “Emerging Trends” in performance management and appraisal – specifically: teams and performance appraisal; total quality management (TQM) and performance appraisal; and computer-based software programs for automating performance appraisals. OBJECTIVES: After studying this lesson, the student should: 1. Be able to implement a new or replacement performance management and appraisal system in terms of: • involving top management • communicating the system throughout the organization • monitoring and evaluating the first complete system cycle • establishing a legally useful appeals mechanism 2. Be able to develop effective appraiser and appraisee training systems for introducing a new...
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...What quality means to me in the profession I pursue? “Quality is Great achievement, usually born of great sacrifice, and is never the result of selfishness”. - Napoleon Hill. Quality to me means something that will last for a long time and if I am reasonably satisfied for the worth of money spent on the product then I am happy. It is the reliability, usefulness, longevity, and effectiveness of the element delivered. If a tool is going to fall apart, be cumbersome or awkward, give wrong measurements or just give more trouble than it’s worth then the quality is bad. It displays the competency of the person making the tool and their own expertise in terms of how well they design the tool. Is it that in maintaining quality what matters is establishing the base that enables you to make big gains? You are quiet right if that’s what you feel. To every organization maintaining a healthy environment is maintaining quality .Quality is also the power to measure and control costs. The profession I pursue is to be a Tax Consultant and then become an Entrepreneur, providing employment to people. In my opinion, quality in a profession is one that lives up to all the claims from the maker; it does everything it is supposed to do every time in the suggested lifetime. A tax consultant files returns of clients anually,advices on tax savings and ensures that legality is maintained in co operative housing societies .This job profile can be handled by any person who has the relevant qualification in...
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...doctors are men. Surgeons maintains larger jeopardy of a lawsuit than additional specialists. After the beginning request been file, the doctor is at greater jeopardy of increased cases. it possible to predict medical injuries? 3. According to Kavaler and Spiegel (2003), each outline in the guidebook point out how evaluation and planning for part of the organization of the risk management program includes activities, process measures, outcome measures, and action plans. Process measures assess whether these activities carry out as intended. Result measures will determine whether the program has the effect intended to support. 4. Quality management according to Kavaler and Spiegel (2003) explains meanings of analyzing information including patient care, employee knowledge, management, and institutional resources to advance service and decrease risk. Quality management consists of gathering...
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...figures in the world as pertains to quality management. Ishikawa's practices of Total Quality Management have influenced many of those in the business world, even to his day. Ishikawa has helped thousands of companies, which include big names, such as IBM, Ford Motor Company, Bridgestone, just to name a few in accessing high quality products at much lower costs. He has written award-winning books, in particularly, his book, "What is Total Quality Control?," are among one of his most popular. In addition, he has won various awards for his writings/works on quality control which include the Deming Prize and the Grant award. Ishikawa was born in Tokyo, Japan, in 1915 and he graduated from the Univesity of Tokyo in 1939, majoring in engineering with an emphasis in applied chemistry. He also went on to teach at the University of Tokyo, where he advanced in earning his doctorate degree in engineering. Ishikawa is mostly known as being the creator of something known as the "Quality Circle Movement" in Japan. He is also known for his "Ishikawa diagram," which is currently and also known as "fishbone diagram" or "cause and effect diagram." These diagrams play a significant role in Quality Circles as they are used as tool in problem-solving. Additionally, as the leader of "Total Quality Control" movement, he focused techniques on statistical qualit control through the use of Pareto/Control charts. Generally speaking, Ishikawa believed that quality improvement is/was a primary way...
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...Guru’s Approach to Quality: • Deming’s Approach o Exceeding customer expectations. o Focus on continuous improvements in products and services quality by reducing variability and it is driven by the leadership of the top management. o Deming’s 14 points for management for quality improvement program. • Juran’s Approach o Quality is “fitness for use” and therefore it is judge by the customer. o Quality should be viewed from both internal and external perspectives. o Product conformance to requirements results in customer satisfaction. o Juran advocate ten steps to quality improvement. • Crosby Approach o Quality is free. o Quality means conformance to requirement. o Zero Defect is the only performance standard. o Crosby proposed 14 steps for the quality improvement process. • Feigenbaum’s Approach o Product/service quality is dynamic in nature because customers’ expectations are subject to change. o Total quality management covers the full scope of the product and service life cycle. • Gorocock’s Approach o Quality of a product is the degree of conformance of all the relevant features and characteristics of the product to all of the aspect of a customer’s need (value-led). o Zero defects and no longer period for reflection or review at the end of the program. • Taguchi’s Approach o “Loss imparted to the society from the time a product is shipped”. Economic value of being on target and reducing variation. • Ishikawa’s Approach o Quality control extends beyond...
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...1A. TQM Total quality management (TQM) is an improvement program which provides tools and techniques for continuous improvement based on facts and analysis; and if properly implemented, it avoids counterproductive organizational infighting. The most popular approach to continuous improvement is known as total quality management (TQM). There are two major characteristics of total quality management (TQM) a focus on serving customers and systemic problem solving teams made up of front line workers. Benefits Total Quality Management: * Strengthened competitive position * Adaptability to changing or emerging market conditions and to environmental and other government regulations * Higher productivity * Enhanced market image * Elimination of defects and waste * Reduced costs and better cost management * Higher profitability * Improved customer focus and satisfaction * Increased customer loyalty and retention * Increased job security * Improved employee morale * Enhanced shareholder and stakeholder value * Improved and innovative processes Advantages of Total Quality Management: * Improves reputation- faults and problems are spotted and sorted quicker * Higher employee morale– workers motivated by extra responsibility, team work and involvement in decisions of TQM * Lower costs – Decrease waste as fewer defective products and no need for separate * Quality Control inspectors (Quay,2012) Lean Manufacturing ...
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...contribution to Quality Management? Armand V. Feigenbaum is the originator of the total quality movement. **He defined quality based on customer’s actual experience with the product or service. His landmark text, Total Quality Control, has significantly influenced industrial practices. He predicted that quality would become a significant customer-satisfaction issue, even to the point of surpassing price in importance in the decision-making process. **As he predicted, consumers have come to expect quality as an essential dimension of the product or service they are purchasing. (Dominguez) His definition of quality is broad-reaching. ** it stresses that quality is a customer determination; that is , only a customer can decide if and how well a product or service meets his or her needs, requirements, and expectations. “…a customer determinations which is based on the customer’s actual experience with the product or service, measured against his or her requirements—stated or unstated, conscious or merely sensed, technically operational or entirely subjective—always representing a moving target in a competitive market. “ Slide 3 to 4 (Amor) Feigenbaum’s 19 steps 1. 2. Total quality control is defined as a system of improvement. 3. Big Q quality is more important than a little q. 4. Control is a management tool with four steps. 5. Quality control requires integration of uncoordinated activities. 6. Quality increases profits...
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...hurry order. There is third order called hurry order. When it happens, the process need to stop for rush special due, and the standard and special products will be delay to get to customers. If there are two lines, the special order’s influence will be down. The standard products and the special products can run in one line. 2. The JIT philosophy is that getting the right quantity of goods at the right place at the right time. It’s based on the simplicity and emphasis on quality. But in the Katz Carpeting company, the inventories of the carpets were high. They produced a lot what they already had , yet not enough of what was needed. They can’t get the right quantity of goods. 3. The following is the steps to implement the JIT system. First, they should make quality improvements. Their quality was becoming a problem, with customers frequently returning carpets for rips or incorrect dyed colors. They need to solve these problems, because the quality is pervasive and all the JIT objectives are dependent on quality improvement. Recognizing the workplace is the next step. This means proper facility layout, cleaning and organizing the work environment, designating storage spaces for...
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...VALUES IN AN ADVANCED PERSPECTIVE OF TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT Author: Salvatore Moccia Universidad de Valencia Abstract Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyze the relation between personal values and the principles of Total Quality Management and thus to propose a tentative framework of relationships. Design/methodology/approach: The paper is conceptual. It reviews some lists of values present in literature, and summarizes them in a more comprehensive list. Then it follows the definitions of these values according to some philosophical models, and the analysis of their implications in the business life in general. Thus, tries to explain the relation between them and the principles of TQM, passing through the two mediating variables passion and trust. Findings: A model of quality management based on personal values is proposed. Research limitations: The lack of empirical data that can validate the model, and the lack of specific hypothesis of investigation. Practical Implications (if possible): Considering the emphasis placed on personal values, the model can have some practical implications in the field of recruitment, promotion, and leadership. Originality/value: The model fills the gap between personal values and the principles of Total Quality Management, being the first attempt to present a comprehensive model of interactions. A novel framework that can provide a basis for further research into the profound nature of quality management has been proposed. Furthermore...
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