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Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
Lesson
# 01
OVERVIEW
OF QUALITY MANAGEMENT
PROFESSIONAL
MANAGERIAL ERA (1950)
In
our present age of market
driven capitalism and futuristic
knowledge driven economic markets,
the
decision
are made and the trends
are set by the professional
managers. Unlike their
predecessors, the
captains
of today's business do not
own their own companies.
They must know the whole
business but
have
control over only one small
part. They must be product
oriented, process conscious,
financially
responsible,
and public spirited. They
must be all things to all
people, yet still function
as only one cog
in
the wheel.
If
the history of management tells us
anything, it is that, no matter what
happens; peace or
war,
prosperity
or famine, this world will
always be in need of good
managers . . . the kind who
can get
society
from "where it is" to "where
it wants to be." Can you be
one?
What
is an Organization?
"An
entity where two or more
persons work together to
achieve a goal or a common
purpose is
called
Organization."
There
are so many organizations
around us. Daily we visit
and see many organizations.
Hospitals,
Colleges,
Factories, Farms and Government
offices. Mosque/Church is also an
example of an
organization.
People go there and say prayers. Activities of
praying are to achieve a certain
goal.
Similarly,
any unit in which two or
more persons are working
together for some purpose is
called an
organization.
Unit
of Organization:
·
People
·
Purpose
·
Process
·
POLCA
If
there is an organization, then there must
be some people. They work as
whole for a common purpose,
so
there must be a defined purpose. If an
organization doesn't have any
purpose, it will not survive
for
long
run. To achieve the purposes by using
people, the processes are
needed. Without any process,
you
cannot
achieve any type of purpose or
goal. If we see in our daily
life, we have some goals.
For
achieving
these goals, we use some
processes. So that process is
also obvious and important
for an
organization.
The last important thing for
any organization is that it requires
main pillars of
management
i.e.
POLCA:
·
Planning
·
Organizing
·
Leading
·
Controlling
A
manager must perform all
theses management functions
with Assurance!
Quality
Focus Approach to
Management
"There
are really only three types of
people: those who make
things happen, those who watch
things
happen,
and those who say, `What
happened?"
1
Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
The
total quality concept as an approach to
doing business began to gain
wide acceptance in the west
in
the
late 1980s and early 1990s.
However, individual elements of the
concept such as the use
of
statistical
data, teamwork, continual improvement,
customer satisfaction, and employee
involvement
have
been used by visionary
organizations for years. It is the
pulling together and coordinated
use of
these
and other previously disparate elements
that gave birth to the comprehensive
concept known as
total
quality.
Why
Focus on Quality?
To
understand total quality, one must
first understand quality. Customers of
businesses will
define
quality
very clearly using
specifications, standards, and other
measures. This makes the
point that
quality
can be defined and measured.
Although few consumers could
define quality if asked, all
know it
when
they see it. This
makes the critical point
that quality is in the eye of the
beholder. With the
total
quality
approach, customers ultimately define
quality.
People
deal with the issue of
quality continually in their
daily lives. We concern ourselves
with quality
when
grocery shopping, eating in a restaurant,
and making a major purchase
such as an automobile, a
home,
a television, or a personal computer. Perceived
quality is a major factor by
which people make
distinctions
in the market place. Whether we
articulate them openly or keep them in the back of
our
minds.
We all apply a number of criteria
when making a purchase. The
extent to which a
purchase
meets
these criteria determines its
quality in our eyes.
One
way to understand quality as a
consumer-driven concept is to consider the
example of eating at a
restaurant.
How will you judge the
quality of the restaurant? Most
people apply such criteria
as the
following:
♦
Service
♦
Response
time
♦
Food
preparation
♦
Environment/atmosphere
♦
Price
♦
Selection
The
example gets at one aspect of
quality the results aspect.
Does the product or service meet or
exceed
customer
expectations? This is a critical aspect
of quality, but it is not the
only one. Total quality is
a
much
broader concept that encompasses
not just the results aspect
but also the quality f
people and the
quality
of processes.
How
Is Total Quality Different?
What
distinguishes the total quality approach
from traditional ways of doing
business can be found
in
how
it is achieved. The distinctive
characteristics of total quality
are these: customer focus
(internal and
external),
obsession with quality, use
of the scientific approach indecision
making and problem
solving,
long-term
commitment, teamwork, employee
involvement and empowerment, continual
process
improvement,
bottom-up education and training,
freedom through control, and
unity of purpose, all
deliberately
aimed at supporting the organizational
strategy. Each of these
characteristics is explained
later
in this chapter.
The
Historic Development of Total
Quality
The
total quality movement had its roots in
the time and motion studies conducted by
Frederick Taylor
in
the 1920s. Taylor is now
known as "the father of
scientific management."
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Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
The
most fundamental aspect of
scientific management was the separation
of planning and execution.
Although
the division of labor spawned
tremendous leaps forward in
productivity, it virtually
eliminated
the
old concept of craftsmanship in which one
highly skilled individual
performed all the tasks
required
to
produce a quality product. In a sense, a
craftsman was CEO, production
worker, and quality
controller
all rolled into one person.
Taylor's scientific management
did away with this by
making
planning
the job of management and production the
job f labor. To keep quality
from falling through
the
cracks,
it was necessary to create a
separate quality department. Such
departments had shaky
beginnings,
and just who was responsible
for quality became a clouded
issue.
As
the volume and complexity of
manufacturing grew, quality
became an increasingly difficult
issue.
Volume
and complexity together gave birth to
quality engineering in the 1920s and
reliability
engineering
in the 1950s. Quality engineering, in
turn, resulted in the use of statistical
methods in the
control
of quality, which eventually
led to the concepts of control
charts and statistical process
control,
which
are now fundamental aspects
of the total quality approach.
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