of contents List of figures………………………………………………………….iii 1. Introduction………………………………………………………1 2. The Foundations of TQM………………………………………..2 1. Quality……………………………………………………2 2. Evolution of TQM……………………………………….2 3. Relevance and practice of TQM…………………………………3 4. Costs of quality………………………………………………….6 5. Quality standard and Awards……………………………………7 6. Implementation of TQM………………………………………...8 1. Key elements of TQM……………………………………9 2. Implementation issues……………………………………12
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Total Quality Management Introduced in the 1950s and made more popular in the 1980s Total Quality Management is a very radical management style. A strong Total Quality Management plan relies on internal as well as external team building. A mistake to avoid before the implementation of a Total Quality Management strategy is an inaccurate analysis of the precondition and current state of an organization. Leadership styles and the organizations culture need to work well together. If they do not‚ this
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ECONOMIC CASE FOR QUALITY What Do CEOs Think About Quality? by Greg Weiler‚ ASQ project leader I n today’s highly competitive global marketplace‚ quality practitioners must justify the cost of quality. Making the economic case for quality by creating materials quality professionals can use to specifically demonstrate that quality pays rather than costs has accordingly become a priority for ASQ. In 50 Words Or Less • ASQ plans to help quality professionals make the economic
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Total quality management- a way of managing an organization with the objective of carrying out right jobs. The first time and every time. “ a management approach of an organization‚ centered on quality‚ based on the participation of all its members and aiming at long term success through customers satisfaction and benefits to the members of the organization and to the society. Thumb rule=85/15 rule – the root causes of 85 % of the problems in the organization are due to faulty systems and 15 %
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1 1. “Quality is a dynamic state associated with products‚ services‚ people‚ processes‚ and environments that meet or exceeds expectations and help produce superior value. (Goetsch & Davi‚ 2013) 2. The total quality approach is as follows: “Total quality consists of the continual improvement of people‚ processes‚ products (including services)‚ and environments. With total quality anything and everything that affects quality is a target for continual improvement. When the total quality concept
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TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT Lecture I History of Quality During the early days of manufacturing‚ an operative’s work was inspected and a decision made whether to accept or reject it. As businesses became larger‚ so too did this role and full time inspection jobs were created. Accompanying the creation of inspection functions‚ other problems arose: • More technical problems occurred‚ requiring specialized skills‚ often not possessed by production workers • The inspectors lacked training • Inspectors
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TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT OBJECTIVES The key objective of this course is to acquaint the students with the conceptualization of Total Quality (TQ) from design assurance to processes’ assurance to service assurance. Additional objective is to give focus on Quality Management Systems (QMS) like 1SO-9001 and environment and safety systems (ISO-14001 and ISO 18001).The course would also aim to closely link management
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Total Quality Management Total Quality Management is a management approach that originated in the 1950 ’s and has steadily become more popular since the early 1980 ’s. Total Quality is a description of the culture‚ attitude and organization of a company that strives to provide customers with products and services that satisfy their needs. The culture requires quality in all aspects of the company ’s operations‚ with processes being done right the first time and defects and waste eradicated from
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Quality management and international standards Quality is the ability of a product or service to meet customer needs and exceed them. Implications of quality In addition to being a critical element in operations‚ quality has other implication: Company reputation – an organization can expect its reputation for quality – be it good or bad – to follow it. You are known by the company you keep! This statement does not only apply to individuals but organizations as well. Quality will show up in perception
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There are eight such dimensions of quality. These are: 1. Performance: It involves the various operating characteristics of the product. For a television set‚ for example‚ these characteristics will be the quality of the picture‚ sound and longevity of the picture tube. 2. Features: These are characteristics that are supplemental to the basic operating characteristics. In an automobile‚ for example‚ a stereo CD player would be an additional feature. 3. Reliability: Reliability of a product is
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