1 / 21

Production Operations Management

Production Operations Management. Quality Management U. Akinc. Quality Management. Quality is defined as “fitness” for intended use (Joseph Juran) Dimensions: Technological Psychological Time Oriented Contractual Ethical. Six Sigma.

anson
Télécharger la présentation

Production 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. Production Operations Management Quality Management U. Akinc Bus 241

  2. Quality Management Quality is defined as “fitness” for intended use (Joseph Juran) Dimensions: Technological Psychological Time Oriented Contractual Ethical Bus 241

  3. Six Sigma The Six Sigma's Breakthrough Strategy is a disciplined method of using extremely rigorous data-gathering and statistical analysis to pinpoint sources of errors and ways of eliminating them See Six Sigma and General Electric Bus 241

  4. TQM Total Quality Management: The management of quality throughout the organization.. at all levels and across all functions TQM is both a comprehensive management philosophy and a collection of tools and approaches for its implementation… Bus 241

  5. TQM Principles • Customer Defines Quality • Top management’s leadership is essential • Quality is a strategic issue • Quality is responsibility of all employees • All functions must focus on cont. impr. • Quality problems are solved via cooperation • Use of statistical and other tools • Training and education is critical Bus 241

  6. Specific TQM Approaches • Continuous Improvement (Kaizen) Piecemeal improvement of existing processes Important components: • Process Selection • Process Study • Training, Empowerment • Leadership • Quality circles is a common way of implementation What to focus on? What tasks, sub-processes? In tools and methods of improvement Encouragement, reward system Bus 241

  7. Specific TQM Approaches • Business processes re-engineering Fundamental rethinking and redesign of business processes that deliver quality. • Focus on outcome not on existing tasks • Understand the current process • Remove complexity • Innovation is central • Benchmarking Think critically about the process Quantum leap Learn from others Bus 241

  8. Edwards Deming’s Chain Reaction • Improve Quality • Cost Decreases • Productivity Improves • Increase or maintain market share • Stay in Business • Provide jobs and more jobs Bus 241

  9. Deming’s 14 Points • 1. Management Commitment • 2. Learn the New Philosophy • 3. Understand Inspection • 4. End Price Tag Decisions • 5. Improve Constantly • 6. Institute Training • 7. Institute Leadership Be Credible Everybody Price is not the sole criterion Bus 241

  10. Deming’s 14 Points (Cont’d) • 8. Drive Out Fear • 9. Optimize Team Efforts • 10. Eliminate Exhortations • 11. Eliminate Quotas (MBO) • 12. Remove Barriers to Pride in Workmanship • 13. Institute Education • 14. Take Action Create trust, a climate for innovation Not Targets but direction For everyone Bus 241

  11. Management of Quality • Quality of Design:Resolution of the many trade offs among dimensions of quality • Quality of Conformance:Degree to which design specs are met • Time Oriented Dimensions • Availability • Reliability • Maintainability • Field Service:Repair, Replacement, Service Bus 241

  12. Quality Management model Bus 241

  13. A Quality management Paradigm • Define Quality Attributes • Develop Measuring Scales • Set Quality Standards • Establish an Inspection Plan • Monitor, Discover and Correct Causes of Poor Quality Bus 241

  14. Quality Policy • Design Quality Perceived Value and Cost Level of Quality Bus 241

  15. Quality Policy (Juran) • Conformance Quality • Costs: • Avoidable • Unavoidable 0% 100% Level of Conformance Bus 241

  16. Quality Policy (Crosby) • Conformance Quality • Costs: • Avoidable • Unavoidable 0% 100% Level of Conformance Bus 241

  17. Quality Control Managing Quality of Conformance Quality Control System • A. Inspection points • Receiving Inspection • Process Control • Final Inspection Bus 241

  18. Quality Control (cont’d) • B. Type of Measurements • Measurement by Attributes • Measurement by Variables • C. Amount of Inspection • 100% Inspection • Sampling inspection • D. Agent of Inspection • QC Department • Operator Bus 241

  19. Quality Control StatisticalQuality Control Process Control Acceptance Sampling Attributes Variables Variables Attributes Bus 241

  20. Statistical Process Control (SPC) • Assignable Causes of Variation • Un-assignable Causes of Variation A process is considered in control when it only exhibits variation due to un-assignable causes. When the variation exceeds pre-established limits, suspicion arises that there is an assignable (correctable) cause and hence the process is deemed out of control. Bus 241

  21. Control Charts • X-Bar Charts – Controlling the Central value • R Charts– Controlling the spread of the values • P- Charts – Controlling the proportion defective • C- Charts – Controlling the number of defects x x UCL x x x x Mean x x x x x LCL Bus 241

More Related