Process Improvement : Prioritization and Scientific Approach What is a process? A process is no more than the steps and decisions involved in the way work is accomplished. Everything we do in our lives involves processes and lots of them. Examples: ( writing a work order, conducting a drill, performing a test ) Who owns processes? Everyone has a stake in one or more processes. Groups of individuals usually share in—and “own”—the activities which make up a process. But the one individual
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Impact The Roadmap to Customer Making Customers Feel Six Sigma Quality Globalization and instant access to information, products and services have changed the way our customers conduct business — old business models no longer work. Today’s competitive environment leaves no room for error. We must delight our customers and relentlessly look for new ways to exceed their expectations. This is why Six Sigma Quality has become a part of our culture. What is Six Sigma? First, what it is not
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Impact The Roadmap to Customer Making Customers Feel Six Sigma Quality Globalization and instant access to information, products and services have changed the way our customers conduct business — old business models no longer work. Today’s competitive environment leaves no room for error. We must delight our customers and relentlessly look for new ways to exceed their expectations. This is why Six Sigma Quality has become a part of our culture. What is Six Sigma? First, what it is not
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three-sigma quality level. If projects have an average improvement rate of 50% annually, how many years will it take to achieve Six Sigma quality? 3.4 66,810 1 0.5 3.4 / 66,810 0.5 x ln 3.4 / 66,810 x ln 0.5 x ln 3.4 / 66,810 ln 0.5 14.26 years 14 years, 3 months x Page 51 2.12. Suppose that your business is operating at the 5-sigma quality level. If projects have an average improvement rate of 50% annually, how many years will it take to achieve Six Sigma quality? 5 sigma
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should be able to: 1. Describe and illustrate the five dimensions of service quality. 2. Use the service quality gap model to diagnose quality problems for a service firm. 3. Describe how the SERVQUAL survey instrument is used to measure gaps in a service firm's quality. 4. Illustrate how Taguchi methods and poka-yoke methods are applied to quality design in services. 5. Construct a "house of quality" as part of a quality function deployment project. 6. Construct a statistical process control chart
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performance 3 WHAT IS SIX SIGMA? • Six Sigma - A highly disciplined process that enables organizations deliver nearly perfect products and services. • A philosophy and a goal: as perfect as practically possible. • A methodology and a symbol of quality. 4 WHAT IS SIX SIGMA? • A statistical concept that measures a process in terms of defects – at the six sigma level, there 3.4 defects per million opportunities. But, it is much more! 5 WHY SIX SIGMA ? • a natural evolution in business
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A Detailed Look at Quality and Its Impact on Today’s Environment MGT/449 June 11, 2012 Nikki Henderson Instructor: Ian Finley What is quality? “Quality itself has been defined as fundamentally relational: ‘Quality is the ongoing process of building and sustaining relationships by assessing, anticipating
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merely improving a product's quality, insisting that quality improvement can always go one step further. His notion of company-wide quality control called for continued customer service. This meant that a customer would continue receiving service even after receiving the product. This service would extend across the company itself in all levels of management, and even beyond the company to the everyday lives of those involved. According to Ishikawa, quality improvement is a continuous process, and
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Introduction Quality is a familiar word. However it has a variety of interpretations and uses, and there are many definitions. For example when searched on the internet it produces ISO 8402-1986 standards defining Quality asthe totality of features and characteristics of a product or service that bears its ability to satisfy stated or implied needs." BusinessDictionary.com (2013)Many people today claim they understand what is meant by quality and claim they know quality when they see it. In fact
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Quality Management In chapter one W. Edward Deming is the total quality pioneer that defined quality in his present day, which was over 50 years ago, however, his defining elements are basically the quality foundation that is practiced in today’s environment for quality with most major industry leading companies. Deming’s vision and philosophy along with the fundamental elements of quality that he defined made him a successful quality pioneer in the 1950’s. According to Deming
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