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Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
Lesson
# 30
CREATING
BUSINESS EXCELLENCE
Before
we look at excellence models, let us see
why sometime these initiatives
fail.
There
are many reasons for
Quality Programs failures,
including the following:
·
The
efforts were too narrowly focused, as
with statistical applications on the
shop floor.
·
The
efforts were misfocused, limited to
improving only "quality of
work life" issues
for
employees
rather than also addressing
issues of strategic concern.
·
The
managers relied on traditional
methods and assumptions, ad were not
equipped with the
right
tools, techniques, and theory to improve
quality.
·
The
managers were too focused on
tools and techniques, and did not
understand how to
transform
themselves, their employees, and the
organization.
·
The
managers were too impatient,
with a short-term focus, and unwilling to
stay the course,
overcome
initial barriers, and wait for
long-term gains.
·
The
managers never care for the
culture change in
organization.
Consider
the following ten reasons why TQM
"programs" do not work for
many companies:
1.
TQM
focuses people's attention on
internal processes rather
than on external results An
asset
of TQM is that it gets managers to attend
to internal processes. But
taken to an
extreme,
managers can get too preoccupied
with internal issues such as
the controversial
issue
of performance measurement and ignore
shifting perceptions and preferences
of
customers.
2.
TQM
focuses on minimum standards. Zero
defects and no rework efficiency distract
people
form
adding value and excitement to customers'
lives.
3.
TQM
develops its own cumbersome
bureaucracy. Organizational
charts and reporting
systems
with interlocking committees, councils,
and improvement teams imply a
linear and
predictable
improvement process, rather
than the chaotic and disruptive
rebuilding that is
often
necessary.
4.
TQM
delegates quality to quality "experts"
rather than to "real" people.
Quality
shouldn't
be
delegated, but lived in the strategy of the company
and roles of the managers.
5.
TQM
does not demand radical
organizational reform. Real quality
improvement requires
structural
change (perhaps flattened
structures), and liberation of people
from stifling
control
systems and the tyranny of functionalism
which precludes teamwork.
6.
TQM
does not demand changes in
management compensation. If rewarded on
short-term
financial
gains, managers will not be
likely to attend t quality
measures.
7.
TQM
appeals to faddism, egotism, and quick-fixism.
Although
they will not admit
it, many
managers
have applied for awards,
like the ISO, EQA, Baldrige,
for reasons of personal
aggrandizement
and corporate public relations, or for
quick and painless
profitability. In
reality,
quality requires a never ending
pursuit of improvement.
8.
TQM
drains entrepreneurship and
innovation from corporate
culture. Too
much emphasis
on
standardization and routine precludes the
constant shifting needed t keep up
with
external
changes.
9.
TQM
has no place for love
and passion. Though
this comment seems a bit
precious, it
means
that the analytical, detached,
and sterile programs put in
place to ensure quality
are
often
devoid of the human emotion and soul
that inspire attachment to the company
by
employees
and to the products by customers
Certainly,
no all TQM programs are characterized by
all of these deficiencies.
But many of the TQM
failures
suffer at least a few of
these major problems. The
underlying cause of all
these TQM
deficiencies
is that managers failed to understand the
concept of quality. Some
managers define
quality
too
narrowly as "meeting specifications."
Others do not define quality
at all, but rely on the
claim, "I
know
it when I see it." We define
quality too narrowly as
"meeting specifications." Others do
not define
128
Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
quality
at all, but rely on the
claim, "I know it when I see
it." We define quality as a
principle that
encourages
excellence in everything: products, strategies,
systems, processes, and
people. As you will
see,
there are many ways that
quality can be pursued and
realized. Some of the specific
approaches that
help
managers realize the general principle of
excellence are presented
below.
To
inspire purposeful change
for improvement, managers
must have a clear understanding of
quality.
They
must understand how it relates to
their roles, and how it must be
integrated and connected to
the
organization's
strategy for providing value to
customers. This integrated approach
brings quality into
the
mainstream of managerial practice.
Psychologists
suggest that individuals go
through four stages of
learning:
1.
Unconscious
in competence: You don't know
that you don't
know.
2.
Conscious
incompetence: You realize that you
don't know.
3.
Conscious
competence: You learn to do,
but with conscious
effort.
4.
Unconscious
competence: Performance comes
effortlessly.
Organizations
seem to follow the same
paradigm.
For
organizations committed to pursuing
total quality, change is a
way of life. Organizational
change is
needed
in implementing TQ and constantly there
after. In the initial stage, an
effort must be mounted to
begin
to change the culture of the
organization. Unless a culture based on
customer satisfaction,
continuous
improvement, and teamwork is established, TQ
will belittle more than
"just another one of
management's
programs." Indeed, this is
often the cause of failure of TQ
initiatives.
Once
TQ is underway in an organization,
continuous improvement efforts
will relentlessly
create
changes
in product designs, standard
operating procedures, and virtually
every other aspect of
organizations.
One important aspect of
continuous improvement is reengineering,
in which the
processes
by which the organization operates
are reexamined and redesigned to provide
higher quality at
lower
cost.
Elements
of a Total Quality
Culture
The
organizational culture needed to support
TQ is one that values customers,
improvement, and
teamwork.
In an organization with a TQ-friendly
culture, everyone believes
that customers are the
key
to
the organization's future and
that their needed must
come first. If two employees
are having a
conversation
and a customer enters the shop, the
conversation ends until the
customer is served.
Employees
in a quality oriented culture
instinctively act as a team. If
someone is away from her
desk
and
her phone rings, another employee will
answer it rather than leave a
customer hanging.
Organizations
where a focus on customers, continuous
improvement, and teamwork are
taken for
granted
have a good chance of succeeding at
total quality. Most
organizations do not have such a
culture
prior
to exposure to TQ; some degree of
cultural change is
necessary.
These
elements, along with several
others, are reflected
clearly in the Baldrige, EFMD
and other
National
Quality Program Criteria for Performance
Excellence. The criteria are
built upon a set of
"core
values
and concepts".
·
Visionary
leadership.
·
Customer-driven
excellence,
·
Organizational
and personal learning,
·
Valuing
employees and partners,
·
Agility,
·
Focus
on the future,
·
Managing
for innovation,
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Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
·
Management
by fact,
·
Public
responsibility and citizenship.
·
Focus
on results and creating
value, and systems
perspective.
These
values provide a good summary of the
cultural elements necessary to
sustain a total
quality
environment
and are embedded in the beliefs
and behaviors of high-performing
organizations.
The
existence of a set of cultural values
necessary for successful TQ
does not mean that
all organization
that
wish to practice total quality
must have the same culture.
Many aspects of culture
differ greatly
from
one quality oriented company to another.
Company personnel may prefer to
communicate in
person
or in writing; they may wear
uniforms, gray flannel
suits, or jeans. As long as
they hold the core
values
of TQ, quality can find a
home in their
organization.
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