Management
Management
Management
Course Description:
This course aims to enable the students to recognize and assess quality
management process in a hospitality and tourism related organization and to
evaluate departmental processes and planning strategies.
Course Guide:
Course Requirements:
Students are expected to submit the following requirements or outputs during
major exam.
5 Concept of Productivity
6 Quality Service Organization Chapter Exercises
7 Deming Chain Reaction Final Examinations
8 Principles, practices and Techniques of
Quality Management
Chapter 1: Historical Development of Total Quality Management
Introduction
This chapter will help student appreciate the historical development of TQM
by understanding how the first initiators mind set in implementing quality
management in their respective fields.
Learning objectives:
At the end of this Chapter the student is expected be to:
Explain the historical concept of TQM
Discuss concept of quality
Identify the Proponents of quality management
Quality and reliability of Japanese cars and televisions, in relation to similar American
products, is superior. When buying a new product consumers change their criteria of
choice: retail price plus maintenance price becomes crucial. The poor performance of
American products is initially justified as a result of external factors (Japanese
culture, trade unions, employment). Following the excellent performance of a
Japanese firm in America employing Americans, which achieves like results in quality
as in Japan, these arguments are refuted. This experience shocks American
management, especially in the automobile industry. Programs of change are initiated
to fundamentally alter work methods and the role of the employee in the firm.
Hierarchy levels are reduced from 7 to 3. Development periods shortened from 5 to 3
years. Enhancement programs introduced for all activities.
Chapter Exercises
Lesson Assessment 1. Answer the following questions
1. Why was TQM created?
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1. Watch the movie “The founder” a story about Rey Crook and the
McDonald Brothers, the journey of the biggest fast food chain in the
world, McDonald’s.
“Cost is more important than quality but quality is the best way to reduce cost” -
Ginichi taguchi
Introduction
This chapter presents introduce the definitions and concept of total quality
management.
Learning Outcomes:
At the end of this module the student will be able to:
Define the meaning of TQM
Identify the aspects of quality
The word quality is derived from Latin (qualitas) and means the characteristic,
property or attribute of a person or thing: trait, character, feature. The word total is
also of Latin origin (totus) and means constituting or comprising the whole: entire,
absolute, sum, aggregate, gross. The word manager is an English word meaning a
person who manages: administrator, executive, superintendent, supervisor, boss,
entrepreneur.
Quality today is defined from two aspects : the production and service aspect and
the consumer aspect.
Production service aspect quality is defined as a specification of properties or
characteristics which the product or service has to satisfy as a standard.
Standardization is a regulated quality. From this it follows that the intent of quality is
the level attainable representing the highest standards, or conformance to
specification. This definition of quality dominated the industrial revolution and is
typical for mass production.
Definition of quality today is from the aspect of the buyer, consumer, client, guest,
generally speaking, the user of the product and service. As a result of market
development and marketing.
Quality is best illustrated by the slogan Your Wishes Are Already Satisfied.
Customers' needs, expectations and requirements should, therefore, be foreseen,
specified and satisfied as quality is customer defined. Quality is an on-going process.
Customer requirements are constantly undergoing change. They are becoming
increasingly demanding.
The system TQM is totally market orientated -- customer driven. In a total quality
system the customer is king. The process begins with the customer (what the
customer wishes) and ends with the customer (a satisfied customer). Every
participant in creating quality is important: every employee works, makes decisions
and is responsible for his task.
Ishikawa, has given a very full definition for the concept quality. In the narrowest
sense quality means: quality of product, and in the widest: quality of work, service,
information, processes, departments, human resources (workers, engineers,
managers), systems, firms, objectives, etc.
Quality costs, costs of gaining and retaining quality can be divided into internal and
external costs.
Internal costs: marketing costs, planning costs, product and service design costs,
planning and specification (standards) costs, follow up research costs for mistakes
and lapses, material control, production and service costs, quality improvement
costs, training and education costs (program for achieving quality), mistakes' and
lapses' costs (waste, repair and lost time), and other miscellaneous costs.
Quality is culture. Quality is a process which has the ability to shape the future. The
need for learning is an innate quality of people they are curious.
“Classical systems tend to wear away and destroy their motivation at school and at
work only the best are awarded. Consequently, a large, disproportionate number of
people who would otherwise participate in creative work are eliminated. The present
management system destroys people. Future management systems will not be
hierarchic — one person thinks, others work, instead they will be based on equality,
homogeneity and motivation — everybody thinks, everybody works. The more people
think and work, the more people know and are able to perform better.”
Quality has to be rewarded. The highest award for quality is the Malcolm
Baldridge National Quality Award established in 1988 following a bill introduced in
1986, named after the USA Secretary of Commerce, Malcolm Baldridge (1981-1987)
who constantly improved the efficiency and effectiveness of the American
government. The award is designated to foster and continually improve quality of
product and of service. It is awarded every year for three categories of enterprises:
marketing companies, service organisations and small firms, and aided by the
American Society for Quality Control.
“Awards are given on the basis of appraisal of the following management elements in
a company: information and analysis, strategic quality planning, development of
management and human resources, management of quality processes and operative
results, customer commitment and requirement fulfilment (each element is
individually assessed). These given elements of quality form the basis of TQM.”
The first hotel company to receive the American award for quality -- Malcolm
Baldridge Quality Award, based on results achieved through a three year
implementation of a TQM process was the Ritz Carlton Hotel Company.
Chapter Exercises
Lesson Assessment. Answer the following questions
1.As a future practitioner of tourism and hospitality industry how will you
define TQM?
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2. Define the following terms substantially.
Quality________________________________________________________
Standardization_________________________________________________
Management___________________________________________________
Cycle of quality__________________________________________________
Quality cost ____________________________________________________
3.Explain the importance of giving awards to companies that achieves quality.
Give at least 5 award giving body that awards company with that provides
quality service.
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1._______________________________2.____________________________
3._______________________________4._________________________
5.___________________________________
tube)
Introduction
Learning Outcomes:
At the end of this module the student will be able to:
Define TQM in hospitality industry.
Understand the concept of tourism and hospitality service.
Identify the tourism and hospitality products.
1. Two main elements: (a) movement, which refers to the journey (travel) to and from
a destination (the dynamic element of tourism); and (b) the overnight stay outside the
permanent residence in various destinations (the static element of tourism)
3. Destinations are visited for purposes other than taking up permanent residence or
employment
4. The activities tourists engage in during their journey, and the stay outside the
normal place of residence and work, are distinct from those of the local residents and
working populations of the places visited
(1) tourists,
(2) businesses providing goods and services that the tourist market demands,
transportation,
accommodation,
attractions,
amenities,
catering,
entertainment,
eating and drinking establishments,
shops,
activity facilities (leisure and recreation),.
3. accommodation;
4. attractions, which may be site attractions (e.g., scenic, historical, natural wonders)
or event attractions (e.g., exhibitions, sporting events, congresses); and
5. activities (e.g., outdoor and indoor recreation activities).
financial,
medical,
insurance,
retailing,
wholesaling (travel agent, tour operator),
cleaning,
printing,
telecommunication,
good water,
sewerage,
electricity.
Chapter Exercise
Introduction
Learning Outcomes:
At the end of this module the student will be able to:
Explain various connotation of the term, quality;
Discuss ways and means on how these ideas about quality can be used in
the following situations:
a) To prevent accidents or losses in a hotel industry; and.
b) To gain profit or customer satisfaction.
Lesson 1: Quality from the Perspective of Selected Managers
Quality has a lot of connotations partly because “people view quality
subjectively and in relation to offering criteria based on their individual roles in the
production-marketing value chain.” In one study that asked managers of 86 firms in
the eastern United States, they came up with different responses:
1. Perfection
Hotel executives at the Reuters Global Luxury and Fashion Summit
are “shifting away from fancy freebies like lotion and soap and toward expert
service that reflects a real understanding of the guest’s preferences.
For instance, Hyatt’s Andaz invites guests in a relaxed way to sit down
and are offered a complimentary glass of wine or a cup of coffee. The host
then completes the check-in on a tablet computer. When you’re finished
sipping and signing, the host escorts you to your guestroom. Jeff Bezos of
Amazon aptly said, “If you do build a great experience, customers tell each
other about that. Word of mouth is very useful.”
2. Consistency
Consistency means repeatable. A successful hotel general manager
needs to be confident that in any given situation, the hotel staff knows how to
respond and act appropriately. Whether it’s in the morning or afternoon or
evening or whether it’s a weekend or a weekday, rain or shine, and
regardless of whom happens to be working that day (Francine Haliva).
Toyota identified the following seven types of waste as the more important
ones:
a. Waste from overproduction
b. Waste of waiting time
c. Transportation waste
d. Processing waste
e. Inventory waste
f. Waste of motion
g. Waste from product defects
4. Speed of Delivery
“The 30 minutes or it’s free” rule of Domino Pizza
Domestic deliveries for FedEx wherein you can drop them off in the evening
and have them delivered as early as 8am in some areas.
Internet speed refers to the speed which data or content travels from the
WWW to your home computer, tablet, or smartphone. The speed of this data is
measured in megabits per second (Mbps). One megabit is equal to 1,024 kilobits.
High-speed internet connection known as broadband (broad bandwidth) is
defined by download speeds or at least 200 Kbps.
Download speed refers to the rate that digital data is transferred from the
internet to your computer.
Upload speed is the rate that online data is transferred from your computer to
the internet.
Company’s operate in fast-moving, cyclical markets.
5. Compliance with policies and procedures
Read code of business conduct and ethics of the Radisson Hotel Group.
6. Providing a good, usable product
Margot Whitney (2018) is her article, 10 Smart Hotel Marketing Strategies to
Increase Bookings shared the following:
a. Be easy searchable online
b. Remarket, remarket, remarket (The abandonment rate for booking hotels
online is 75%)
c. Ensure you’re targeting the right audience
d. Allocate more marketing budgeting during peak booking season
e. Provide incentives to get people interested
f. Build local partnerships
g. Don’t just market the hotel, market the location
h. Ensure your website is both simple and breathtaking
i. Go above and beyond in customer service before, during and after their
stay
j. Build a customer loyalty program
Case in point is Nordstrom. The big idea: Be ready to say “yes” to your
customers, regardless of the request. With this approach, not only will you care
for your customers. They’ll care for you as well. Also, Danny Meyer, a successful
New York restaurateur selects new employees based on what he calls the
“hospitality quotient.” He advocated the principle of “making your customers feel
special – never gets old.”
“Our new guest clerk lent his cuff links to a guest for a crucial meeting.
Instantly, we knew we hired the right guy,” goes the ads of Marriott Hotel.
Chapter Assessment (read the following case study and answer the guide
questions)
Case 1
The Ritz Carlton Hotel Company, LLC is one service company with an
exemplary focus on tis people. They train employees to know what they are
supposed to do. How well they are doing, and have the authority to make changes as
a necessary. For example, the role of the housekeeper is not simply to make beds,
but to create a memorable experience for the customer. Each hotel has a director of
human resources and a training manager, who are assisted by the hotel’s quality
leader. Each work area has a department trainer who is responsible for training and
certifying new employees in his or her unit. New employees receive two-days’
orientation in which senior executives personally demonstrate Ritz-Carlton methods
and instill Ritz-Carlton values. Three weeks later, managers monitor the
effectiveness of the instruction and then conducts a follow-up training session. Later,
they must pass written and skill-demonstration tests in order to become certified in
their work areas. Every day, in each work area, each shift supervisor conducts a
quality line-up meeting and briefing session. The workforce, receives continuous
teaching and coaching to refresh skills and improve performance, reinforce the
purpose of the job, and to provide recognition for achievements. Though these and
other mechanisms, workers receive more than 100 hours of quality education aimed
at fostering a commitment to premium service, solving problems, setting goals, and
generating new ideas. Workers are empowered to enlist the aid of others to resolve a
problem swiftly, to spend up to $2,000 to satisfy a guest, to decide the business
terms of a sale, to be involved in setting plans for their particular work area, and to
speak with anyone in the company regarding any problem. The Ritz-Carlton has
improved the turnover of the workforce steadily to well below industry average.
Guide Questions:
1. Cite at least five practices of Ritz-Carlton Hotel that you think makes them
stand out.
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2. Give two examples wherein an employee may spend $2,000 just to please or
satisfy a guest of Ritz-Carlton.
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Case 2
Getting to Know Herb Kelleher of Southwest Airlines (Katrina Booker, “Can
Anyone Replace Herb? Fortune April 17, 2000)
The skies are not always friendly, but they do seem to smile for one airline.
Southwest Airlines has continued flying high while other airlines have struggled to
stay aloft. It’s the only U.S. airline that has remained profitable every year since
1973, and it now ranks as the fourth largest in the nation. Analysis credit much of this
achievement to the engaging management style of the company’s unconventional
chairman, Herb Kelleher who was named 1999 CEO of the Year by Chief Executive
magazine. Under his coaching, Southwest has been consistent winner of the service
triple crown – highest customer satisfaction, most on-time flights, and baggage
handling. Kelleher’s employees are far more productive than employees of
competing airlines. Per worker Southwest flies more planes and serves more
passengers than any other airline. Southwest also pitch in wherever needed. Pilots
might work the boarding gate if things back up; ticket agents might haul luggage to
get the plane out on time. When fuel prices accelerated during the Gulf War,
employees even began a voluntary payroll deduction program to defray costs.
Southwest workers (approximately 90 percent of whom are union members) are paid
competitively.
How does Kelleher do it? For starters, he actively avoids hierarchy. He has
managers spend time in the trenches once a month, he de-emphasizes the
importance of rules relative to good judgment, and he promotes the company as a
“family”. The result is the promotion of creativity and employee which ultimately leads
to greater productivity and job satisfaction.
Many analysts believe that the corporate culture is so finely ingrained at
Southwest that the airline will continue its success. According to Kelleher, that culture
“is the hardest thing for competitors to imitate. You can get an airplane. You can get
ticket-counter space, you can get baggage conveyors. But it is our esprit de corps –
the culture, the spirit – that is truly our most valuable competitive asset.”
Guide Questions
1. Imagine employees of Southwest Airlines volunteered a payroll deduction
during the height Gulf War just to defray the cost of fuel. For instance, you are
the manager of a hotel and you are having problems with your payroll due to
lack of clients checking in due to novel corona virus scare. How would you
motivate your employees for them to concede for a payroll deduction
scheme? What mechanisms should you make so that your employees will
agree to such temporary arrangement?
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Case 3
Getting to Know Jack Greenberg of McDonald’s (Marilyn Much, “McDonald’s
Ventures from Arches, Asks, “You Want Salsa with That?” Investor’s business
Daily, May 10, 2000)
Jack M. Greenberg was an accountant at Ernst & young before he came to
McDonald’s to be its chief executive. His accounting background prepared him for
the task of analyzing the McDonald’s product mix ( a combination of hamburgers,
chicken sandwiches, salad, desserts, and the like). He found that some stores growth
was only 1 percent versus 4 percent average of competitors such as Burger King and
Wendy’s. he determined through consumer research that the McDonald’s menu was
stale. The last successful new product was Chicken McNuggets in 1983. Other new
products, such as the McDLT, the McLean, and the Arch Deluxe, had failed to win
customer acceptance. McDonald’s had to focus on new product development. That
process begins with listening to consumers to determine exactly what they want.
What Greenberg decided, based on discussions with McDonald’s customers,
was to change from the old way McDonald’s prepared food to a more modern
custom-designed format called “Made for You.” Instead of preparing a sandwich
ahead of time, wrapping it, and placing it under a heat lamp to stay warm,
McDonald’s stores would put in machinery that would toast buns in 11 seconds and
custom-make sandwiches in just one minute.
A tossed-salad line, Mc Salad shakers, and a fruit-and-yogurt parfaits were
also tested. Greenberg always has his eyes on additional lines like pizza, cold
sandwiches, and more. The latest offering is the new tastes menu with 40 items. He
has to keep ahead of the competitors or risk losing market share. Already Burger
King is planning to install equipment that will heat a bun in eight seconds – a three-
second difference from McDonald’s that will add up over time.
One way McDonald’s hopes to stay ahead of the competition and keep
responding to consumer interests is by opening non-hamburger eateries to appeal to
new markets. The new outlets have names like Chipotle Mexican Grill, Donato’s
Pizza, and Aroma Café. Greenberg says that it’s a good idea to looks outside the
arches for new concepts since the company is close to saturating the U.S. market
with its burger restaurants.
Guide Questions
1. Explain briefly the function of consumer research. When is the appropriate
time to conduct consumer research? Could new product development be part
of consumer research? Defend your answer.
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2. What are the advantages and disadvantages of opening other line of
business aside from your main line of business?
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Case 4
John F. Welch of General Electric (“Charging Ahead: To Keep GE’s Profits
Rising, Welch Pushes Quality Control Plan,” The Wall Street Journal, January
22, 1997)
John F. Welch, retiring chairman of General Electric Co., describes how he
drives his quality program into GE’s far-flung plants: “You can’t behave in a calm,
rational manner. You’ve got to be out there on the lunatic fringe. You have to tell your
people that quality is critical to survival, you have to demand everybody gets trained,
you have to cheerlead, you have to have incentive bonuses, you have to say, “We
must do this.”
GE’s quality program was borrowed from Motorola, Inc. Six Sigma quality is
disciplined method of eliminating virtually all defects from every one of the company’s
products, processes, and transactions. GE has spent over half a billion dollars
training most of its professional workforce in the concepts. Virtually every
professional in the company is now a “Green Belt,” which requires three weeks of
training and a complete Six Stigma project. To get the coveted “black Belt” requires a
minimum four months of training in statistical and other quality-enhancing measures.
The black belts then roam Ge plants full-time to set up quality improvements projects.
The company has trained over 10,000 black belts. In all, GE has invested hundreds
of millions of dollars in training, in specific projects and in computer systems to
analyze and run the quality control program.
The program is producing a variety of benefits, Mr. Welch says, “You
customers are happy with you, you are not firefighting, you are not running a reactive
mode.”
Questions
1. What characteristics or attributes of a leader does John F. Welch tries to
emphasize?
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2. What is Six Sigma quality?
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3. Cite at least 3 quality improvements projects would you recommend to a
hotel manager to improve its services?
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Assignment
1. As a manager of a hotel, how will you resolve the following incidents?
Expound your answer.
a. An anonymous caller informed you through your cell phone that a bomb
will explode in 30 minutes in one of the rooms in your hotel.
b. One of your guests took another guest in your hotel as hostage and
threatened to kill the person if his demands are not met.
c. Some of your guests complained severe abdominal pains, vomiting and
nausea and were rushed to the hospital hours after they dined in your
hotel restaurant.
d. You noticed that a celebrity guest is wearing Google glass and were
storing images of your hotel.
e. A guest who travelled to Wuhan City in the Hubie Province of china wants
to check-in in your hotel upon arrival from Macao. While about to enter the
door of your hotel, the guest was coughing, sneezing and trembling and
you immediately suspected that he could have been possibly infected with
the COVID 19 virus.
f. A guest complained to the hotel Manager that he could hardly sleep at
night, hence, he kept on walking around the lobby.
g. An earthquake with a magnitude 6.5 was felt in your hotel building. A
series of aftershocks were then recorded that prompted your guests to
panic and some were already restless due to fear that the building might
collapse.
h. Pres. Duterte announced that he wanted to close down Boracay for six
months for rehabilitation. As a Manager, you are having problems since
your hotel in Boracay had already confirmed online bookings and received
payments from guests abroad a month prior to the order and were
scheduled to arrive anytime during the week and will certainly be affected
with the directive.
i. A former employee of your hotel barged in at past midnight and then went
to the hotel casino where he fired several gunshots to your guests.
j. A wife claimed that her husband checked-in at your hotel with his
mistress. She went to file a complaint at your office and insisted that she
be allowed to confront her husband in his hotel room.
2. Who is W. Edwards Deming?
Philosophical Elements
1. Customer-driven quality or customer focus
Organizations depend on their customers and therefore should understand
current and future customer needs, should meet customer requirements, and
strive to exceed customer expectations.
2. Leadership
Leaders do the right thing. Managers do the things right. Leaders establish
unity of purpose and direction of the organization. Leaders deal with change.
Managers deal with complexity. Leaders should create and maintain the
internal environment in which people can become fully involved in achieving
the organization’s objects.
3. Continuous improvement
Continua; improvement of the organizations overall performance should be a
permanent objective of the organization.
4. Employee participation and development
5. Quick response
6. Design quality and prevention
7. Management by fact
8. Partnership development
9. Corporate responsibility and citizenship
Generic tools
1. Statistical Process control (SPC) Tools
a. Process flowcharts
b. Check sheets
c. Pareto analysis and histogram
d. Cause and effect (or fishbone) diagrams
e. Run charts
f. Scatter diagrams
g. Control charts
2. Quality function deployment
Tool of the Quality Control Department
1. Statistical Quality control (SQC) Methods
a. Sampling plans
b. Process capability
c. Taguchi methods
Total quality management is the process of managing the entire organization so
that it excels on all dimensions of products and services that are important to the
customer.
“You must have heard of 7-star hotels that demo\\note opulence and
deliver outstanding experiences in hospitality,” wrote Ritika Jean. Take
for instance, the Emirates Palace, Abu Dhabi, UAE. With its private
beach, the hotel defines Arabian fantasy. According to Juan, many of
the suites, furnished in gold and marble, are luxurious enough to he
favored by Emirati royalty and dignitaries.
The second in the list is Burj Al Arab, Dubai. This landmark structure
stand on a man-made island, 280 meters away from Jumeriah Beach
and is designed to look like a sail. It contains 202 suites, the most
expensive of which the royal two-bedroom suite, which costs nearly
$27,000 per night and comes with an uber sleep technology bed,
elevator, cinema room, library, discreet check-in, butler service, Rolls
Royce chauffeurs, and views of the Arabian Gulf. Repeatedly voted as
the world’s most luxurious hotel, each suite comes with 24-carat gold
iPads, Egyptian linens, designer toiletries and whirlpool baths.
Others in the list includes Town House Galleria, Milan, Laucala Island,
Fiji, The Mark Hotel, New York City with its priciest suite at $86,000 a
night, Hotel Plaza Athenee, Paris, Hotel President Wilson, Geneva,
Rancho Valencia Resort and Spa, California, The Westin Excelsior,
Rome, The Plaza, New York City, The Bouders, Arizona, CuisinArt
Golf Resort and Spa, Anguilla and Marquis Los Cabos, Los Cabos.
2. Product Perspective
Quality is related to the quantity of some product attribute. This
assessment implies that larger numbers of product attributes are
equivalent to higher quality, so designers often try to incorporate more
features into products, whether the customers want them or not.
3. User Perspective
Individuals have different wants and needs and, hence, different
expectations of product. This leads to a user-based definition of
quality - fitness for intended use, or how well the product
performs its intended function.
Think of the deaths in Laguna and Quezon in December 2019
allegedly caused by Lambanog or coconut wine and milk tea
poisoning in Sampaloc, Manila
4. Value Perspective
Quality is based on value, that is, the relationship of product
benefits to price. Consumers no longer buy solely on the basis of
price. They compare the quality of the total package of goods and
services that a business offers – sometimes called consumer benefit
package – with price and competitive offerings. The customer benefit
package includes the physical product and its quality dimensions like
presale support, such as ease of ordering; rapid, on-time, and
accurate delivery; and post-sale support, such as field service,
warranties, and technical support.
5. Manufacturing Perspective
Simply put, it suggests conformance of specifications.
Specifications are targets and tolerances determined by designers of
goods and services. Targets, are called nominal specifications, are the
ideal values of which production is to strive. Tolerances or allowable
variation are necessary because it is impossible to meet targets all of
the time. In manufacturing, for example, a part dimension might be
specified as “0.236 plus or minus 0.003 cm.” these measurements
would mean that the target, or ideal value, is 0.236 centimeters, and
that the allowable variation is 0.003 centimeters from the target. Thus,
any dimension in the range 0.233 to 0.239 centimeters would conform
to specifications. Likewise, in services, “on-time arrival” for an airplane
is typically defined as being within 15 minutes of the scheduled arrival
time. The target I the scheduled time of arrival, and the tolerance is
specified to be 15 minutes.
6. Customer Perspective
The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and the American
Society for Quality (ASQ) standardized official definition of quality
terminology in 1978. They defined quality as the totality of features
and characteristics of a product or service that bears on its
ability to satisfy given needs. By the end of the 1980s, many
organizations had begun using simpler, yet powerful, customer-based
definition of quality that remains popular today: meeting or exceeding
customer expectations.
Maintain control. Kroc created a culture based on control rather than creativity.
Franchise holders were not expected to think of things by themselves. They were told
what to deliver. In many ways the problems now faced by McDonald’s were tackled
by many other brands some years ago. McDonald’s, for example, is heavily
centralized. Its cade of middle and senior manager tends to have come up through
the ranks. Different voices have been notable in their absence. It has also generally
ignored segmenting its markets. “The old model of just telling people what to do was
exactly the right model for a long, long time,” says currents CEO, Jack Greenberg.
“Now we need a different approach to managing that pays more attention to different
market segments.”
The other vital missing ingredient is innovation. McDonald’s have proved an
unimaginative and generally unsuccessful innovator. ”We have been taking much too
long to develop an idea and get it to the market, then too long to decide whether
much too long to do it or not,” admits Greenberg. While Greenberg accepts that it
must change, whether such a huge organization with such a strong culture can to so
remains open to question.
See the opportunity. Kroc’s genius was seeing the opportunity, in deciding to seize
it, and then in deciding to franchise the concept around the world. After all, the
McDonald brothers had the concept, but had it taken nowhere.
Assignment
1. Write a 1-page reaction for Case 5- Bright Ideas
2. What are the implications of the following events to any of the 6 perspectives
of quality?
a) The Supersonic Jet Concorde or the Iridium satellite phone developed by
Motorola
b) The image that Shangri-La hotel in Ayala, Makati wants to project
c) Your observations about some of the restaurants at your home town or
City
d) Baking a cake or preparing the frosting of a cake or cupcake
3. Read the following internet articles and make a 1-page reaction paper
(Choose 3 from the 8 articles):
a) “5 Wow Customer Service Stories from 5-Star Hotels: Examples Any
Business Can Learn from” by Micah Hazards in Casinos both by Andrew
Winston
b) “What Happens if you are Injured in an Airbnb Rental” and “Don’t Gamble
with your Health: Injury Hazards in Casinos by both Andrew Winston
c) “How to Train Your Hotel to Attend to Guests?” by Riddhi Maniar
d) “Hotels Reacts as Coronavirus Spreads” by Gregg Wallis
e) “The Case for IMF Chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn Being Setup” by Robert
Wenzel
f) “Hotels Guests’ Most Common Complaints & how to Prevent It” by
Victoria Lim
g) “Common Problems for Hotel Guests & What to Do” by Michael Hodson
h) “How to Complain Effectively at a Hotel” by Charlyn Keating
Chapter 5: The Concept of Productivity
Introduction
Quality management is the act of overseeing all activities and tasks that must
be accomplished to maintain a desired level of excellence. This includes the
determination of a quality policy, creating and implementing quality planning and
assurance, and quality control and quality improvement. Which aims to produce and
provide quality service and product.
Learning Outcomes:
At the end of this module the student will be able to:
= output / capital or
= output / materials or
= output / energy
In 2009, Toyota motor Company which overtook General Motors the year
before, had a series of “unintended acceleration” incidents, including one
“involving a Lexus ES 350 which led to $2 billion in recalls to replace floor
mats and gas pedal assemblies. Other defects involving antilock braking
systems, the wire cables holding spare tires, and vehicle software were soon
uncovered, resulting in additional recalls and even suspended sales of eight
popular models.”
Undoubtedly, the most productive and successful companies focus of
increasing a market by staying ahead of the customer and coming up with brand-new
product innovations that will inspire his imagination, rather than by battling for market
share in an already crowded arena.
Peter Drucker, the management expert who followed Deming to Japan in the
1950s said: “Japanese managers do not start out with a desired profit, that is, with a
financial objective in mind. Rather they start out with business objectives and
especially market objectives… the purpose of a business is to create a customer and
to satisfy a customer.”
A product should cater to 3 factors – business, technology and functionality.
A good example of this is the demand for N95 masks and alcohol at the
height of NCoVi outbreak.
Cook
Customer places
Assemble
order
Finished
Goods
Deliver
Raw
material
Work –in-
Process
Assemble Deliver
Wendy’s
Customer
places order
Raw
material
Cook Assemble Deliver
Chili
Chapter Exercise
1. A furniture manufacturing company has provided the following data.
Compare the labor, raw materials and supplies, and total productivity of
1999 and 2000.
1999 2000
Output: Sales value of production Php 22,000 Php 35,000
Input: Labor 10,000 15,000
Raw materials and supplies 8,000 12,500
Capital equipment depreciation 700 1,200
Other 2,200 4,800
Requirement: Compute for a) Partial productivities for labor and raw materials and
supplies for 1999 and 2000 and b) total productivity
1.Can a restaurant be fast, dependable, and flexible, produce high-quality
products, and still provide poor service from a customer’s perspective?
2.In terms of product development and value package (also called total product
offer which consists of everything that consumers evaluate when deciding
whether to buy something), what can you sat about McDonald’s hamburgers
using the following dimensions:
1. Price
2. Package
3. Store surroundings (atmospheric)
4. Image created by advertising
5. Guarantee
6. Reputation of the producer
7. Brand name and brand equity (brand equity is the combination of factors
such as awareness, loyalty, perceived quality, images, and emotion
people associate with a given brand name)
8. Service
9. Buyer’s past experience
10. Speed of delivery
11. Accessibility of marketer (e.g. on the internet or through their hotline
numbers
12. Product differentiation (the creation of real or perceived product
differences
3. Explain the difference between a) McDonald’s old and new process; and b) that of
Wendy’s
Chapter 6: Quality in Service Organizations
“If you can’t describe what you’re doing as a process, you don’t know what you’re
doing,” Deming.
Introduction
Quality service is created and provided through deferent skill set of individuals
that form the organizational structure of an organization. This chapter provide
insights of quality service in organization by presenting the different contribution of
quality gurus.
Learning Outcomes:
At the end of this module the student will be able to:
Describe quality dimensions of goods and services.
Explain the Kano model of customer requirements.
Cite the contribution of come quality gurus.
3. The output of many service systems is intangible hence service quality can
only be assessed against customer’s subjective, nebulous expectations, and
past experiences.
Quality Dimensions of Goods and Services
David A. Garvin suggested that products have multiple dimensions of quality:
1. Performance. A product’s primary operating characteristics. Using an
automobile as an example, characteristics would include such things as
acceleration, braking distance, steering, and handling.
2. Features. The “bells and whistles” of a product. A car may have power
options, a CD player, iPod connections, satellite radio, and antilock brakes.
3. Reliability. The probability of a product’s surviving over a specified period of
time under stated conditions of use. A hot and cold shower in a hotel room for
instance.
4. Conformance. The degree to which physical and performance characteristics
of a product match pre-established standards. The ability of a hotel building to
withstand a tremor of 7.0 earthquake since it conformed to building code and
fire safety requirements.
5. Durability. The amount of use one gets from a product before it physically
deteriorates or until replacement is preferable. Examples of this would
elevators and escalators in hotels and the long wear of upholstery fabrics,,
say in hotel beds.
6. Serviceability. The speed, courtesy, and competence of repair work. For
instance, the internet connection or the TV remote control in your room
apparently does not seem to work and you called the front desk and a hotel
staff is sent immediately to help you connect to the internet or watch TV.
7. Aesthetics. How a product looks, feels, sounds, tastes, or smells. The hotel’s
pastry shop displays cakes and confectionaries that prompts you to buy the
product.
Chapter Exercises 6
Assignment
“An tawo nga dilkalidad, may tuhay nga abilidad nga may kalidad” JDP
Introduction
Learning Outcomes:
At the end of this module the student will be able to:
1. Describe the importance of the Deming chain reaction.
2. Enumerate and briefly describe the Deming’s 14 points
3. Name other quality philosophers and their contributions
Improve quality
Productivity improves
Productivity improves
Federal Express: “Our vision is to change the way we all connect other in the
Mew Network Economy.”
We are responsible to our employees, the men and women who work with us
throughout the world everyone must be considered as an individual. We must
respect their dignity and recognize their merit. They must have a sense of
security in their jobs. Compensation must feel free to make suggestions and
complaints. There must be equal opportunity for employment, development
and advancement for those qualified. We must provide competent
management, and their actions must be just and ethical.
We are responsible to the communities in which we live and work and to the
world community as well. We must be good citizens – support good works
and charities and bear our fair share taxes. We must encourage civic
improvements and better health and education. We must maintain in good
order the property we are privileged to use, protecting the environment and
natural resources.
Disneyland: “Bally shoes set you apart. They are the perfect shoe to
complement your lifestyle. Bally shoes project an image European style and
elegance that ensures one is not just dressed, but well-dressed.”
The Deming Cycle which is also widely known as the PDCA or PDSA
cycle, for “plan, do, check or study, act and analyze,” works something
like this:
a. Plan the product with the help of consumer research. And design it.
b. Make the product and analyze it.
c. Market the product.
d. Test how the quality, price and features of the item are received by
consumers, both those who buy the product and those who choose not to
buy it.
Act
1. Select the best change or solution.
2. Develop an implementation plan: what needs to be done, who should be
involved and when the plan should be accomplished.
3. Standardize the solution, for example, by writing new standard operating
procedures.
4. Establish a process to monitor and control process performance.
1
Start
PLAN
Review the
current situation
Describe the
DO
process
Explore cause
theories
CHECK
Collect and
analyze data
“If you can’t describe what you’re doing as a process, you don’t know what
you’re doing,” observed Deming.
“Continuous improvement is not about the things you do well – that’s work.
Continuous improvement is about removing the things that get in the way you work.
The headaches, the things that slow you down, that’s what continuous improvement
is all about,” adds Bruce Hamilton.
7. Institute leadership
Uduk (2015) wrote that no firm can succeed without a good leader.
David Ogilvy viewed the leader’s primary role as “providing an environment in
which creative people can do useful work.” Max Dupree in his book on
leadership said that the function of the leader is “to give others the space to
be what they can be.” He also said that “the first responsibility of the leader is
to define reality, while the last is to say thank you.” Warren Bennis has said
that what is pivotal for the leader is “to have an overreacting vision, to set an
example of passion, curiosity, integrity, and daring for the others in the
organization.”
Kaoru Ishikawa
Dr. Ishikawa influenced the development of a participative, bottom-up view of
quality, which became the trademark of the Japanese approach to quality
management.
Some key elements of his philosophy are as follows:
Assignment
1. Prepare a one-page vision and mission statement for your prospective
hotel that you would put up someday.
2. List five potentially vulnerable areas of a firm without a stated company
mission.
3. Assume that you want to open a coffee shop in your home town or city
List down the processes that you will undertake following the Deming
Cycle.
Chapter 8: Principle, Practices and Techniques of Quality Management
Introduction
The concept of Total Quality Management can be found right in its name: The
word “total” implies that all employees in the organization, from development to
production to fulfilment, are obligated to improve operations. And “management”
insinuates that this methodology should be a focused effort. Leadership should
provide funding, training, staffing, and clearly defined goals to actively manage
product and service quality on an ongoing basis.
Learning Outcomes:
At the end of this module the student will be able to:
EXPECTED SERVICE
Dimension 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Tangibles
1. They should have up-to-date
equipment.
2. Their physical facilities should
be visually appealing
3. Their employees should be well
dressed and appear neat
4. The appearance of the physical
facilities of these firms should
be in keeping with the type of
services provided.
Reliability
5. When these firms promise to do
something by a certain time,
they should do so.
6. When customers have
problems, these firms should be
sympathetic and reassuring.
7. These firms should dependable.
8. They shoulf provide their
services at the time they
promised to do so.
9. They should keep their records
accurately.
Responsiveness
10. They shouldn’t be expected to
tell customers exactly when
services will be performed.
11. It is not realistic for customers to
expect prompt service from
employees of these firms.
12. Their employees don’t always
have to be willing to help
customers.
13. It is okay if they are too busy to
respond to customer requests
promptly
Assurance
14. Customers should be able to
trust employees of these firms.
15. Customers should be able to
feel safe in their transactions
with these firms employees.
16. Their employees should be
polite.
17. Their employees should get
adequate support from these
firms to do their jobs well.
Empathy
18. These firms should not be
expected to give customers
individual attention.
19. Employees of these firms
cannot be expected to give
customers personal attention.
20. It is unrealistic to expect
employees to know what the
needs of their customers are.
21. It is unrealistic to expect these
firms to have their customers’
best interest at heart.
22. They shouldn’t be expected to
have operating hours
convenient to all their
customers.
Sub-Total
GRAND TOTAL
Directions: The following set of statements relate to your feelings about XYZ. For
each statement, please show the extent to which you believe XYZ has the feature
described by the statement. Once again, circling, a 7 means that you strongly agree
that XYZ has that feature, and circling a 1 means that you strongly disagree. You
may circle any of the numbers in the middle that show how strong your feelings are.
There are no right or wrong answers – all we are interested in is a number that best
shows your perceptions about XYZ.
Chapter Assessment
1. Classify the following customers’ requirements using the five key dimensions
of service quality – reliability, assurance, tangibles, empathy, or
responsiveness. (Adapted from Kioumars Paryani, Ali Masoudi, and Elizabeth
A. Cudney, “QFD Application in the Hospitality Industry: A Hotel Case Study,
“Quality Management Journal 17, No. 1 (2010) pp. 7-28, as cited by Evans
and Lindsay (2014).
a. _____ Hotel equipment is always functioning.
b. _____ Hotel Staff is knowledgeable to answer guest’s questions
c. _____ Hotel has comfortable beds, furniture, and fittings
d. _____ Guests feel safe as services are delivered to their rooms
e. _____ Hotel services are provided as promised
f. _____ Hotel has well-dressed staff
g. _____ Hotel staff is always willing to help guests
h. _____ Hotel Furnishings appear to be clean and shiny
i. _____ Guests receive individual attention
j. _____ Guests feel that Hotel Services are provided at a competitive and
affordable price