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ASQ – What’s In It For Me (Us)?

ASQ – What’s In It For Me (Us)?. ASQ Minnesota Section 1203 Gary Floss ASQ VP, Board of Directors December 9, 2003. Topics to Cover. ASQ - Who Are We? Our Challenges Voice of the Stakeholder. ASQ - - Who are we?. History.

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ASQ – What’s In It For Me (Us)?

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  1. ASQ – What’s In It For Me (Us)? ASQ Minnesota Section 1203 Gary Floss ASQ VP, Board of Directors December 9, 2003

  2. Topics to Cover • ASQ - Who Are We? • Our Challenges • Voice of the Stakeholder

  3. ASQ - - Who are we?

  4. History • Interest in quality control spurred by U.S. entry to World War II and growth in manufacturing to supply war materials • Following government-sponsored quality courses, local organizations formed to share knowledge

  5. History • Founded in 1946, ASQ merged 17 regional quality societies • Regarded as the premiere resource for quality information for more than 50 years • Virtually every significant initiative of U.S. quality movement can be traced to ASQ or its members

  6. Vision By making quality a global priority, an organizational imperative, and a personal ethic, ASQ becomes the community for everyone who seeks quality technology, concepts, or tools to improve themselves and their world.

  7. Strategic Themes Serve the world Serve the business Serve the person

  8. Our Role in the World • To be stewards of the quality profession by providing member value. • To be stewards of the quality movement by providing increased society value from ASQ activities.

  9. Areas of Focus • Manufacturing • Service • Health Care • Education • Global

  10. Honorary Fellows Senior Student Individual Sustaining _______________ Total Membership 7 589 5,288 3,187 97,217 833 ______________ 107,121 Membership (as of 6/30/03) As of 6/30/02 114,476 3/31/03 104,023

  11. Manufacturing Service Health Care Government Education Other 37.3% 31.4% 1.5% 3.0% 7.5% 19.3% Members by Industry 31.3%

  12. Geographic Networking Groups • Approximately 250 local chapters throughout North America (Sections) • International Chapter for members outside North America

  13. http://www.mnasq.org ASQ Regions Minnesota Section - 1203

  14. Community Quality Councils Committee Customer-Supplier Human Development and Leadership Inspection Measurement Quality Quality Audit Quality Management Reliability Service Quality Product Safety and Liability Prevention Statistics Function-Related Networking Groups

  15. Automotive Aviation, Space, and Defense Biomedical Chemical and Process Industries Design and Construction Education Electronics and Communications Energy and Environmental Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Government Health Care Software Textile and Needle Trades Industry-Related Networking Groups

  16. Products and Services • Quality Progress magazine • Certification • Publications • Education • Standards • Customer Satisfaction Index • Baldrige Award • Alliance for Quality Learning • QuEST Forum • Journals • Quality Information Center • ASQ Six Sigma Forum • Quality Marketplace

  17. Our Challenges?

  18. ASQ Futures Study – 2002Key Forces • Quality must deliver bottom line results. • Management systems will increasingly absorb the quality function. • Quality will be everyone’s job. • The economic case for a broader application of quality will need to be proven.

  19. ASQ Futures Study – 2002Key Forces • Global demands for products and services will create a global work force. • Trust in business leaders and in organizations will decline. • Customer expectations will rise.

  20. The Future - ASQ ASQ actions to be: • Customer-sensitive, market-driven • Responsive, with sense of urgency • Agile, flexible, adaptable in delivering products and services to market • Diverse in membership and thinking • Relevant, significant, and accountable to members • Altruistic, public minded, and ethical

  21. Strategic Themes • Priority 1 – Support the quality profession in its efforts to grow in value in the workplace and community. • Priority 2 – Assure workplace value through the skills and tools we offer.

  22. Strategic Themes • Priority 3 - Prove the economic case for quality. • Priority 4 - Assure that a vital, growing Body of Knowledge is accessible to everyone. • Priority 5-Re-create ASQ to become a community of choice.

  23. Strategic Themes • Priority 6 – Make sure the world knows the importance and value of quality. • Priority 7 – Support people who believe that quality can make a difference. • Priority 8 – Grow and use the impact of quality in every segment of the economy.

  24. Branding and Image

  25. New Member Model • one of the ways that ASQ is seeking to meet the challenges of the future

  26. Key Concepts • Multiple avenues of access • Varying degrees of involvement determined by individuals • Multiple relationship options • Establish member and customer communities

  27. basic/web local volunteer networking nat’l volunteer shape quality local/industry career growth grow business exec peers basic/free info books methods/tools sharing advocate 2nd level/web? courses standards implementing instructing consumer individual experience premier webinars self-directed knowledge/learning classroom exec/leadership organizational/company experience books online training conferences certification ASQ Experience—Continuum

  28. Quality Body of Knowledge • another way of meeting the challenges of the future

  29. This is the stuff we’re made of • Theories and concepts • Technologies to implement • Tools to apply to real world

  30. Q-BoK is not defined • We talk about it, but can’t touch it • Parts are captured in our certification test specifications and supporting Handbooks

  31. Q-BoK will take many forms • Outlines, “encyclopedia” articles, books, courses, conference presentations • Virtual and tangible • Variable costs to access (free to $$$$$)

  32. The Voice of the Stakeholder

  33. The Voice of Stakeholders • Quality profession feels undervalued & unappreciated - - Six Sigma undermines value of traditional certifications • Provide & prove value to company stakeholders, especially leaders - - COQ, economic case, value beyond dollars • Bring Quality to the executive table - - easily understood, business language • Members want faster change - - too slow to adapt, member units are significant resources

  34. The Voice of Stakeholders • Accessible Quality info & education for everyone - - useful in their context, free or low cost • Infuse Quality into the educational system - - K-12 and higher education • Reach outside ASQ to create more awareness - - consumers, non-traditional, brand, beyond compliance • Members’ interests reach beyond “what’s in it for me” - - support outreach efforts, keep Quality on national and business “agendas” • Members connect with Quality at a deep personal level - - beyond just their work, make world a better place

  35. Priority Strategic Themes Support Profession Skills & Tools Economic Case Accessible BoK Community of Choice Advocacy Make a Difference Grow Use of Quality Stakeholder Themes Feel Undervalued Prove Value Quality to Executive Table Faster Change Accessible Info/Education Teach Quality Early Awareness outside ASQ Outreach Make World a Better Place ASQ’s Strategic Priorities Are Well Aligned With Voice of Stakeholders

  36. What Does Our Section Think? What are the most important questions we should be exploring together about the future of Quality and ASQ?

  37. One Thing is For Sure! • As quality professionals, we cannot consider ourselves “finished products.”

  38. A Mantra: make the world a better place through quality!

  39. Thank you

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