1 / 29

MBA 8452 Systems and Operations Management

MBA 8452 Systems and Operations Management. Quality Management. Introduction to Operations Management/ Operations Strategy. Process Control and Improvement. Process Analysis and Design. Project Management. Planning for Production. Quality Management. Process Analysis.

talasi
Télécharger la présentation

MBA 8452 Systems and Operations Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MBA 8452 Systems and Operations Management Quality Management

  2. Introduction to Operations Management/ Operations Strategy Process Control and Improvement Process Analysis and Design Project Management Planning for Production Quality Management Process Analysis Capacity Management Aggregate Planning Job Design Statistical Process Control Just in Time Scheduling Manufacturing Layout/ Assembly Line Balancing Inventory Control Supply Chain Management Services Waiting Line Analysis

  3. Objective: Quality Management • Be able to Define TQM • Two Types of Quality • What is meant by Customer Driven Definition of Quality? • Explain the Quality Awards/Certifications • Be able to describe the Quality Awards and Certifications • Apply the Quality Problem Solving Tools • Be able to identify and use the problem solving tools for quality management

  4. What Is Quality? • A degree or level of excellence (Oxford American Dictionary) • The totality of features and characteristics that satisfies given needs (ANSI and ASQC “official” definition) • Fitness for use (Joseph Jurn’s definition)

  5. What Is Quality?Design & Conformance Quality • Quality of Design • the degree to which quality characteristics are purposely designed into the product or service • Quality of Conformance • the degree to which the product or service design specifications are met

  6. What Is Quality?Dimensions of Product Quality • Performance (basic operating characteristics) • Features (extra items added) • Reliability (likelihood that product will perform normally over time) • Conformance (meeting pre-specified standards) • Durability (useful life span) • Serviceability (ease of repair) • Aesthetics (sensory characteristics) • Perception (perceived quality)

  7. What Is Quality?Dimensions of Service Quality • Time & Timeliness (waiting time, on time service) • Completeness (customer gets all they asked for) • Courtesy (treatment by employees) • Consistency (same level of service for all) • Accessibility (ease of obtaining service) • Accuracy (performed right every time) • Responsiveness (reactions to unusual situations)

  8. Cost of Quality • Cost of achieving good quality • Prevention (quality planning and training, identify and removing poor quality source) • Appraisal (inspection, testing) • Cost of poor quality • Internal failure costs (scrap, rework, repair) • External failure costs (returned products, warranty charges, complaints, liability)

  9. Total Quality Management (TQM) • Management of the entire organization so that it excels on all dimensions of products and services that are important to the customer

  10. Total Quality Management Elements 1. Customer-driven quality 2. Top management leadership 3. Quality as a strategic issue 4. All employees responsible for quality 5. Continuous improvement (CI) 6. Shared problem solving 7. Statistical quality control (SQC) 8. Training & education for all employees

  11. Total Quality ManagementDeming’s 14 Points • Create a constancyofpurpose toward improvement of product and service with a plan to be competitive, stay in business, and provide jobs. • Adopt the new philosophy of preventing poor-quality products instead of acceptable levels of poor quality. • Cease dependence on mass inspection to achieve quality, instead using statistical evidence that quality is being built into the product. • Select a few suppliers or vendors based on quality commitment rather than competitive prices. • Constantly improve the system of production and service, thus increasing productivity and reducing costs. • Institute modern methods of training, including statistical techniques and thinking. • Instill leadership among supervisors to help workers perform better.

  12. Total Quality ManagementDeming’s 14 Points • Driving out fear from the workforce by encouraging employee involvement so that everyone may work effectively for the company. • Break down barriers between departments, and promote teamwork. • Eliminate slogans and numerical targets that urge workers to achieve higher performance levels without first showing them how to do it. • Eliminate numerical quotas that employees attempt to meet at any cost without regard for quality. • Promote worker pride by improving supervision and the production process so that workers can perform to their capabilities. • Institute vigorous education and training programs in methods of quality improvement throughout the organization, from top management down, so that continuous improvement can occur. • Develop a commitment from top management to implement the previous thirteen points.

  13. Plan Do Act Check Continuous Improvement:P-D-C-A Cycle (Deming Wheel) Identify problem and develop plan for improvement Institutionalize improvement Implement plan on test basis Assess the plan: Is the plan working?

  14. Continuous Improvement:Benchmarking • Process of measuring and improving a firm’s performance by learning from the best practices • identify processes needing improvement • identify the best practices or leaders • contact, visit, and study the benchmark organization • analyze data • take action

  15. Continuous Improvement:Seven Quality Control Tools 1. Pareto analysis 2. Process flowcharts 3. Check sheets 4. Histograms 5. Scatter diagrams 6. Control charts 7. Cause & effect diagrams

  16. 70 (64) 60 50 40 Percent from each cause 30 20 (13) (10) 10 (6) (3) (2) (2) 0 Poor Design Defective parts Operator errors Machine calibrations Defective materials Surface abrasions Wrong dimensions Causes of poor quality Pareto Analysis 80% of the problems can often be attributed to 20% of the causes.

  17. Process Flowcharts Identify the potential fail points

  18. COMPONENTS REPLACED BY LAB TIME PERIOD: 2/5/01 - 2/9/01 REPAIR TECHNICIAN: Bob Smith TV SET MODEL 1013 Integrated Circuits|||| Capacitors |||| |||| |||| |||| |||| || Resistors || Transformers|||| Commands CRT | Check Sheet

  19. 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Histogram Frequency Number of defects

  20. Scatter Diagram Number of Defects Hours of Training

  21. Control Chart 24 21 18 15 Number of defects 12 9 6 3 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 Sample number

  22. Measurement Human Machines Out of adjustment Poor supervision Faulty testing equipment Lack of concentration Tooling problems Incorrect specifications Improper methods Old / worn Inadequate training Quality Problem Inaccurate temperature control Poor process design Defective from vendor Ineffective quality management Not to specifications Dust and Dirt Material- handling problems Deficiencies in product design Environment Materials Process Cause & Effect Diagram (Fishbone Diagram)

  23. Quality Awards • The Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award (USA, since 1987) • www.quality.nist.gov • The Deming Prize (Japan, since 1951) • www.deming.org

  24. Malcolm Baldrige Quality Award: Criteria (2000) 1.0 Leadership (125 points) 2.0 Strategic Planning (85 points) 3.0 Customer and Market Focus (85 points) 4.0 Information and Analysis (85 points) 5.0 Human Resource Focus (85 Points) 6.0 Process Management (85 points) 7.0 Business Results (450 points)

  25. Categories for the Baldrige Award • Manufacturing companies or subsidiaries • Service companies or subsidiaries • Small businesses (less than 500 employees) • Health care organizations • Educational institutions

  26. ISO 9000 • A set of international quality standards and guidelines agreed upon by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) • Adopted in 1987 • Recognized by more than 100 countries • ISO 9000 Certification for competitive advantage

  27. ISO 9000 Series • 9001 • Model for Quality Assurance in Design, Production, Installation, and Servicing. • 9002 • Model for Quality Assurance in Production and Installation • 9003 • Model for Quality Assurance in Final Inspection Test

  28. ISO 9000 SeriesApplication Areas Production Servicing Procurement Design/ Development Installation ISO9003 ISO9002 ISO9001

  29. ISO 9000 Certification • required by many foreign firms • enhance global competitiveness • three Forms of Certification • First party: firm audits itself • Second party: customer audits supplier • Third party: audited by "qualified" agencies (ANSI, ASQC, RAB)

More Related