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Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
Lesson
# 13
TOTAL
QUALITY MANAGEMENT
THEORIES
EDWARD
DEMING'S SYSTEM OF PROFOUND
KNOWLEDGE
Theory
of Knowledge
The
third part of Profound
Knowledge is the theory of knowledge
a branch of philosophy and
management
concerned with the nature and scope of
knowledge, its presuppositions and bases,
and the
general
reliability of claims to
knowledge.
Deming
emphasizes that there is no knowledge
without theory and that experience
alone does not
establish
a theory. To copy an example of
success without understanding it
with the aid of theory
may
lead
to disaster. Experience only describes;
it cannot be tested or validated. Theory
establishes a cause-
and-effect
relationship that can be
used for prediction. Theory
leads to questioning and can be
tested and
validated
it explains why. Many consultant
methods that have sustained
success are grounded
in
theory.
Managers have responsibility to learn and
apply theory.
Psychology
Psychology
helps us to understand people, interactions between
people and circumstances,
interactions
between
leaders and employees, and any system of
management. People differ from one
another. A
leader
must be aware of these
differences and use them to
optimize everybody's abilities
and
inclinations.
Many
managers operate under the supposition
that all people are
alike and treat them as
interchangeable
components
of a process. However, people
learn in different ways and at different
speeds and perform at
different
levels. Leaders have an obligation to
make changes in the system of
management that will
bring
improvement. People have an innate need
for relationships with other
people and for
self-esteem
and
respect. Circumstances provide
some people with dignity
and self-esteem and deny them to
other
people.
People inherit the right to enjoy
work. Psychology helps us to nurture and
preserve people's
positive
innate attributes.
Perspectives
on Profound Knowledge
Little
in Deming's system of Profound
Knowledge is original. The
concept of common and special
causes
of variation was developed by
Walter Shewhart in the 1920s; behavioral theories to
which
Deming
subscribes were developed in the 1960s;
systems theory was refined
by management scientists
from
the 1950s through the 1970s; and
scientists in all fields have
long understood the relationships
among
prediction, observation, and theory.
Deming's contribution was in
tying together some
basic
concepts.
He recognized the synergy among these diverse
subjects and developed them into a
theory of
management.
Peter
Scholtes, a noted consultant, makes
some salient observations about the
failure to understand the
components
of Profound Knowledge:
1.
When
people don't understand
systems;
·
They
see events as individuals
incidents rather than the net result of
many interactions and
interdependent
forces;
·
They
see the symptoms but not the
deep causes of
problems;
·
They
don't understand how an intervention in
one part of [an organizational]
can cause
havoc
in another place or at another time;
·
They
blame individuals for problems even when
those individuals have little or no
ability to
control
the events around them; and
46
Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
2.
When
people don't understand
variation;
·
They
don't see trends that
are occurring;
·
They
see trends where there are
none;
·
They
don't know when expectations
are realistic;
·
They
don't understand past performance so they
can't predict future
performance;
·
They
don't know the difference between
prediction, forecasting, and
guesswork;
·
They
give others credit or blame
when those people are
simply either lucky or
unlucky.
This
usually occurs because
people tend to attribute
everything to human effort,
heroics,
frailty,
error, or deliberate sabotage, no matter
what the systemic cause;
and
·
They
are less likely to
distinguish between fact and
opinion.
3.
When
people don't understand
psychology;
·
They
don't understand motivation or why
people do what they
do;
·
They
resort to carrots and sticks and other
forms of induced motivation
that have no
positive
effect and impair the relationship
between the motivator and the one
being
motivated;
·
They
don't understand the process of change
and the resistance to it;
·
The
revert to coercive and paternalistic
approaches when dealing with
people; and
·
They
create cynicism, demoralization,
de-motivation, guilt, resentment,
burnout, craziness,
and
turnover.
4.
When
people don't understand the
theory of knowledge;
·
They
don't know how to plan and
accomplish learning and
improvement;
·
They
don't understand the difference between
improvement and change; and
·
Problems
will remain unsolved, despite
their best efforts.
Deming's
Philosophy & 14 Points for
Management
The
14 Points for Management, listed
below in table have been the subject of
considerable controversy
and
debate. They have their
basis in System of Profound
Knowledge. Many companies have
studied and
applied
them to their organizations with
success.
1.
Create
and publish to all employees a statement
of the aims and purposes of the company
of
other
organization. The management
must demonstrate constantly
their commitment to
this
statement.
2.
Learn
the new philosophy, top
management and everybody.
3.
Understand
the purpose of inspection, for
improvement of processes and reduction of
cost.
4.
End
the practice of awarding business on the
basis of price tag
alone.
5.
Improve
constantly and forever the system of
production and service.
6.
Institute
training.
7.
Teach
and instituted leadership
8.
Drive
out fear. Create trust.
Create a climate for
innovation.
9.
Optimize
toward the aims and purposes of the
company the efforts of teams, groups,
staff areas.
10.
Eliminate
exhortations for the
workforce.
11.
(a)
Eliminate
numerical quotas for
production. Instead, learn and
institute methods for
improvement.
(b)
Eliminate
MBO (Management by Objective). Instead,
learn the capabilities of
processes
and
how to improve them.
12.
Remove
barriers that rob people of
pride of workmanship.
13.
Encourage
education and self-improvement for
everyone.
14.
Take
action to accomplish the
transformation.
47
Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
Detail
Explanation of Deming's Fourteen
Points of TQM
1.
Management
Commitment
Businesses should not exist
simply for profit; their
true purpose
should
be to serve their customers and
employees. To do this, they must
take a long-term view
and
invest in innovation, training, and
research. Thus, an organization needs a
clear mission and
statement
of purpose.
2.
Learn
the New Philosophy
Western management has been
built on the Taylor system,
which
has
led to numbers-driven production,
quotas, and adversarial work
relationships. Old
methods
of
management create mistrust, fear,
and anxiety with a focus on
"Satisfying" rather than on
"optimizing."
Eliminating defects is not
good enough. Defect-free
production is taken
for
granted
in Japan. Achieving competitive
success in today's global economy
requires a
customer-driven
approach based on mutual cooperation
between labor and management and a
never-ending
cycle of improvement. Everyone,
from the boardroom to the stockroom,
must
learn
the new philosophy.
3.
Understand
Inspection
Routine inspection acknowledges defects
but does not add value
to
the
product. Instead, it encourages
defects because "someone else"
catches and fixes the
problems.
This procedure increases costs and
decreases productivity. Workers
must take
responsibility
for their own work and be
able to take appropriate
action to assure good
quality.
Manager
need to understand how variation affects
their processes and to take
steps to reduce the
causes
of variation. Inspection should be
used as information-gathering tools
for improvement,
not
as an end in itself.
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