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Total Quality Manangement

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What Is Total Quality Management

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Total quality management is a management system for a customer focused


organization that involves all employee in continual improvement of all
aspects of the organization.
TQM concepts is an integrative system that use strategy, data, and effective
communication to integrate the quality principles into the culture and
activities of the organization.

Principles Of TQM

1- Be Customer focused:
whatever you do for quality improvement, remember that ONLYcustomers

determine the level of quality, whatever you do to foster quality

improvement, training employees, integrating quality into processes

management, ONLY customers determine whether your efforts were

worthwhile.

2-Insure Total Employee Involvement:

This done after you remove fear from work place, then empower

employee ... you provide the proper environment.

3- Process Centered:

Fundamental part of TQM is to focus on Process thinking.

4- Integrated system:

All employee must know business mission and vision, must monitor the

process. An integrated business system may be modeled byMBNQA or ISO

9000.

5- Strategic and systematic approach:

Strategic plan must integrate quality as core component.

6- Continual Improvement:
Using analytical and creative thinking in finding ways to become more

effective.

7- Fact Based Decision Making:

Decision making must be ONLY on data, not personal thinking or situational.

8- Communication :

Communication strategy, method and timeliness must be well defined.

TQM Implementation Approaches

No one solution is effective for planning and implementing TQM


concepts in all situations.

Following are generic models for implementing total quality management

theory:

1- Train top management on TQM principles.

2- Assess the current : Culture, customer satisfaction, quality management

system.

3- Top management determine the core values and principles to be used

and communicate them.

4- Develop TQM master plan based on steps 1,2,3.

5- Identify and prioritize customer needs and determine products or service

to meet those needs.

6- Determine the critical processes to produce those products or services.

7- Create process improvement teams.

8- Managers should support effort by planning, training, time .... to the

team.

9- Integrate changes for improvement in daily process management and

standardizations take place.


10- Evaluate progress against plan (step 8) and adjust as needed.

11- Constant employee awareness and feedback on status are provided and

a reward/ recognition process is established.

Strategies to develop TQM

1-TQM elements approach:


Take key business process and use TQM Tools to foster improvement.

e.g.: quality circles, statistical process control, taguchi method, quality


function deployment.
2 - The guru approach:
Using the guides of one of the leading quality thinker.
3- Organization model approach:
The organization use Benchmarking or MBNQA as model for excellence.
4- Japanese total quality approach:
Companies want to get deming prize use deming principles.

A FEW WORDS ABOUT

TQM
Total Quality Management is an approach to the art of management that originated in
Japanese industry in the 1950's and has become steadily more popular in the West
since the early 1980's.

Total Quality is a description of the culture, attitude and organization of a company


that aims to provide, and continue to provide, its customers with products and services
that satisfy their needs. The culture requires quality in all aspects of the company's
operations, with things being done right first time, and defects and waste eradicated
from operations.

Many companies have difficulties in implementing TQM. Surveys by consulting firms


have found that only 20-36% of companies that have undertaken TQM have achieved
either significant or even tangible improvements in quality, productivity,
competitiveness or financial return. As a result many people are sceptical about TQM.
However, when you look at successful companies you find a much higher percentage
of successful TQM implementation.

Some useful messages from results of TQM implementations:

• if you want to be a first-rate company, don't focus on the second-rate


companies who can't handle TQM, look at the world-class companies that have
adopted it
• the most effective way to spend TQM introduction funds is by training top
management, people involved in new product development, and people
involved with customers
• it's much easier to introduce EDM/PDM in a company with a TQM culture than
in one without TQM. People in companies that have implemented TQM are
more likely to have the basic understanding necessary for implementing
EDM/PDM. For example, they are more likely to view EDM/PDM as an
information and workflow management system supporting the entire product
life cycle then as a departmental solution for the management of CAD data

Important aspects of TQM include customer-driven quality, top management


leadership and commitment, continuous improvement, fast response, actions based on
facts, employee participation, and a TQM culture.

Customer-driven quality
TQM has a customer-first orientation. The customer, not internal activities and
constraints, comes first. Customer satisfaction is seen as the company's highest
priority. The company believes it will only be successful if customers are satisfied.
The TQM company is sensitive to customer requirements and responds rapidly to
them. In the TQM context, `being sensitive to customer requirements' goes beyond
defect and error reduction, and merely meeting specifications or reducing customer
complaints. The concept of requirements is expanded to take in not only product and
service attributes that meet basic requirements, but also those that enhance and
differentiate them for competitive advantage.

Each part of the company is involved in Total Quality, operating as a customer to


some functions and as a supplier to others. The Engineering Department is a supplier
to downstream functions such as Manufacturing and Field Service, and has to treat
these internal customers with the same sensitivity and responsiveness as it would
external customers.

TQM leadership from top management


TQM is a way of life for a company. It has to be introduced and led by top
management. This is a key point. Attempts to implement TQM often fail because top
management doesn't lead and get committed - instead it delegates and pays lip service.
Commitment and personal involvement is required from top management in creating
and deploying clear quality values and goals consistent with the objectives of the
company, and in creating and deploying well defined systems, methods and
performance measures for achieving those goals. These systems and methods guide all
quality activities and encourage participation by all employees. The development and
use of performance indicators is linked, directly or indirectly, to customer
requirements and satisfaction, and to management and employee remuneration.
Continuous improvement
Continuous improvement of all operations and activities is at the heart of TQM. Once
it is recognized that customer satisfaction can only be obtained by providing a high-
quality product, continuous improvement of the quality of the product is seen as the
only way to maintain a high level of customer satisfaction. As well as recognizing the
link between product quality and customer satisfaction, TQM also recognizes that
product quality is the result of process quality. As a result, there is a focus on
continuous improvement of the company's processes. This will lead to an
improvement in process quality. In turn this will lead to an improvement in product
quality, and to an increase in customer satisfaction. Improvement cycles are
encouraged for all the company's activities such as product development, use of
EDM/PDM, and the way customer relationships are managed. This implies that all
activities include measurement and monitoring of cycle time and responsiveness as a
basis for seeking opportunities for improvement.

Elimination of waste is a major component of the continuous improvement approach.


There is also a strong emphasis on prevention rather than detection, and an emphasis
on quality at the design stage. The customer-driven approach helps to prevent errors
and achieve defect-free production. When problems do occur within the product
development process, they are generally discovered and resolved before they can get
to the next internal customer.

Fast response
To achieve customer satisfaction, the company has to respond rapidly to customer
needs. This implies short product and service introduction cycles. These can be
achieved with customer-driven and process-oriented product development because the
resulting simplicity and efficiency greatly reduce the time involved. Simplicity is
gained through concurrent product and process development. Efficiencies are realized
from the elimination of non-value-adding effort such as re-design. The result is a
dramatic improvement in the elapsed time from product concept to first shipment.

Actions based on facts


The statistical analysis of engineering and manufacturing facts is an important part of
TQM. Facts and analysis provide the basis for planning, review and performance
tracking, improvement of operations, and comparison of performance with
competitors. The TQM approach is based on the use of objective data, and provides a
rational rather than an emotional basis for decision making. The statistical approach to
process management in both engineering and manufacturing recognizes that most
problems are system-related, and are not caused by particular employees. In practice,
data is collected and put in the hands of the people who are in the best position to
analyze it and then take the appropriate action to reduce costs and prevent non-
conformance. Usually these people are not managers but workers in the process. If the
right information is not available, then the analysis, whether it be of shop floor data,
or engineering test results, can't take place, errors can't be identified, and so errors
can't be corrected.

Employee participation
A successful TQM environment requires a committed and well-trained work force
that participates fully in quality improvement activities. Such participation is
reinforced by reward and recognition systems which emphasize the achievement of
quality objectives. On-going education and training of all employees supports the
drive for quality. Employees are encouraged to take more responsibility, communicate
more effectively, act creatively, and innovate. As people behave the way they are
measured and remunerated, TQM links remuneration to customer satisfaction
metrics.

A TQM culture
It's not easy to introduce TQM. An open, cooperative culture has to be created by
management. Employees have to be made to feel that they are responsible for
customer satisfaction. They are not going to feel this if they are excluded from the
development of visions, strategies, and plans. It's important they participate in these
activities. They are unlikely to behave in a responsible way if they see management
behaving irresponsibly - saying one thing and doing the opposite.

Product development in a TQM environment


Product development in a TQM environment is very different to product development
in a non-TQM environment. Without a TQM approach, product development is
usually carried on in a conflictual atmosphere where each department acts
independently. Short-term results drive behavior so scrap, changes, work-arounds,
waste, and rework are normal practice. Management focuses on supervising
individuals, and fire-fighting is necessary and rewarded.

Product development in a TQM environment is customer-driven and focused on


quality. Teams are process-oriented, and interact with their internal customers to
deliver the required results. Management's focus is on controlling the overall process,
and rewarding teamwork.

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