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Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
Lesson
# 32
BIG
Q AND SMALL q LEADERSHIP FOR
QUALITY
Big
Q and Small q:
Dr.
Juran contrasted the difference between
managing to achieve Quality across the
Board, in all
functions
of the organization, and for all the
products and services (Big Q) with
managing for quality
on
a limited basis (Little or
Small q). Quality Control
and inspection activities are
little or Small q.
Quality
Assurance may be Big Q or
Small q depending upon how
it functions within an
organization.
Total
Quality efforts known as
efforts for Big Q. Quality
is strategic and requires leadership in
all
functions
and across organization.
Leadership
for Quality:
Leadership
is fundamental to management and
organizational behavior and is on just
about everyone's
short
list of prerequisites for organizational
success. Thus it is not surprising
that leadership plays a
crucial
role in the total quality
organization. Virtually every
article and book written
about quality
emphasizes
leadership. "Teach and institute
leadership" is one of W.E. Deming's 14
Points. Leadership
is
the first category in the Malcolm
Baldrige National Quality
Award and is recognized as the
"driver"
of
successful quality
systems.
Perspectives
on Leadership
In
practice, the notion of leadership can be as
elusive as the notion of quality
itself. Most definitions
of
leadership
reflect an assortment of behaviors,
for example:
·
Vision
that stimulates hope and mission that transforms hope
into reality;
·
Radical
servant hood that saturates the
organization;
·
Stewardship
that shepherds its
resources;
·
Integration
that drives its
economy;
·
The
courage to sacrifice personal or team
goals for the greater community
good;
·
Communication
that coordinates its
efforts;
·
Consensus
that drives unity of
purpose;
·
Empowerment
that grants permission to make
mistakes, encourages the honesty to admit
them,
and
gives the opportunity to learn
from them; and
·
Conviction
that provides the stamina to
continually strive toward
business excellence.
Although
true leadership applies to everyone in an
organization we generally think of
executive
leadership,
which focuses on the roles of senior
managers in guiding an organization to
fulfill its
mission
and meet its goals, when we
use the term.
Why
is leadership so important to quality?
Leaders establish plans and goals for the
organization. If the
plans
and goals d not include
quality or, worse yet,
are antithetical to quality, the
quality effort will
die.
Leaders
help to shape the culture of the
organization through key decisions and
symbolic actions. If they
help
to shape a culture that puts
convenience or short-term benefits ahead of
quality, it will die.
Leadership
distributes resources. If resources
are showered on programs that cut
short-term costs while
quality
is starved for resources, quality
will die. This list
could go on. Virtually
everything that an
organization
needs to succeed in meeting
its customers' expectations goals, plans,
culture, resources
can
either be helped or hurt by
leaders. With this in mind,
let us examine in more detail
the roles that
leaders
play in a total quality
company.
The
criteria for the Malcolm
Baldrige National Quality
Award also dwell heavily on
leadership. Here is
the
philosophy of leadership within the
Baldrige criteria:
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Total
Quality Management
MGT510
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An
organization's senior leaders should
set directions and create a
customer focus, clear
and
visible values, and high expectations . . .
The directions, values, and
expectations
should
balance the needs of all
your stakeholders. Your leaders
should ensure the
creation
of strategies, systems, and methods
for achieving excellence,
stimulating
innovation,
and building knowledge and capabilities.
The values and strategies
should
help
guide all activities and decisions of
your organization.
Senior
leader should inspire and motivate
your entire workforce and
should encourage
all
employees to contribute, to develop and
learn, to be innovative, and t be
creative.
Senior
leaders should serve as role
models through their ethical
behavior and their
personal
involvement in planning, communications, coaching, and
development of
future
leaders, review o organizational
performance, and employee recognition. As
role
models;
they can reinforce values and
expectations while building
leadership,
commitment,
and initiative throughout your
organization.
The
roles of a Quality Leader
Underlying
the concept of quality leadership are
some clear imperatives for
managers who aspire
to
quality
leadership. First, they must establish a
vision. Second, they must
live the values. Third,
they
must
lead the improvement efforts.
Let' examine each of these
in turn.
Establish
a Vision
A
vision is a vivid concept of
what an organization could
be. It is a striking depiction of
possibilities, of
potential.
It is a dream, both in the sense of
being desirable and in the sense of being
a long ay from the
current
reality, but it is not an
"impossible dream." A vision
should be clear and exciting to an
organization's
employees. It should be linked to customers'
needs and convey a general strategy
for
achieving
the mission.
To
be quality leaders, managers
must establish a vision for and in
their organization. "Establishing"
a
vision
implies both the intellectual and
emotional work of conceiving the
vision and the interpersonal
and
managerial work of communicating the
vision to the organization and leading
employees to
embrace
it. Jane Carroll, president of
The Forum Corporation,
Europe/Asia, emphasizes the
visionary
role
of leadership for quality, which
she calls focus. She believes
that most managers do not
understand
the
need for a quality vision
and their personal involvement in
establishing it:
In
our experience, very few
CEOs have a real sense of
what their role is in the
quality
improvement
process. It goes far beyond
simply being a cheerleader and
handing out an
occasional
award. Top management has to
provide the proper focus for
the
organization.
This is not something that
can be delegated.
Putting
together a vision is hard
work, but quality leaders do
not have to do it alone. They
can draw
upon
the talents and imagination of all the
members of their organizations in
developing their vision.
In
fact,
in many organizations, people
are walking around with
"mini-visions" of their own
that sound like
"if
only we could [do something
they have been told can't be
done], things would be so
much better
around
here." The raw material
for a vision may be all
around leaders in the organization.
The first step
may
be simply listening for it.
Leaders who are open to the
ideas of people throughout the
organization
will
be much better prepared to develop a
vision that people will
accept.
In
the current competitive environment, if a
given organization is not
pursuing a customer-oriented
vision,
competing organizations probably
are and are planning to use
their vision to win over
the
competition's
customers (or are already
doing so). This is why a
quality vision is such a
crucial first step
in
quality leadership. An organization with
no vision about how to
create long-term customer
loyalty
has
little chance of survival
(unless, of course, it's a
monopoly). The second part
of establishing a vision
137
Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
is
instilling it in all the members of the
organization. This will be a
lot easier if many people
were
involved
in the first part of the process, and the
leader doesn't act like
coming down the from the
skies.
Live
the Values
Pursuing
the quality vision commits the
organization to living by a set of values
such as devotion to
customers,
continuous improvement, and teamwork. A
manager who hopes the
organization will
embrace
and live by these values
must live them to the utmost.
Manager's
actions can symbolize their
commitment to quality-oriented values in
many concrete ways.
For
example, they can attend
training programs on various
aspects of quality, instead of just
sending
others.
They can practice continuous
improvement in processes that
they control, such as
strategic
planning
and capital budgeting. Perhaps
most importantly, they can
provide adequate funding
for
quality
efforts. So that TQ will not
be the "poor cousin" to other
business issues.
Lead
Continuous Improvement
Beyond
establishing vision for the
organization and expressing quality values
through their decisions
and
actions, quality-oriented leaders must
lead the continuous process
improvement efforts that are
the
meat
and potatoes of total quality
management. All of the vision and values in the
world are worthless if
the
organization is not continuously
making strides to improve
its performance in the eyes of
customers.
Visions
of world-class quality and
competitiveness can only be achieved if an
organization keeps
finding
ways to do things a little better
and a little faster. Leaders
must be at the center of these
efforts.
Managers
are sometime reluctant to
take an active role in the
organization's improvement
efforts
for fear of dominating or
undercutting their newly empowered
workers. Like
many
aspects of management, this is a
question of balance, but it is mistake
for
managers
to remain uninvolved in process
improvement efforts.
There
are a number of ways for managers to
lead continuous improvement, and
which ones make
the
most
sense will depend on the specific
organization. One option
already mentioned is for
leaders t lead
by
example, by working continuously to
improve the processes that
they control. For some of
these
processes,
organizational members are among the
customers, which gives
management the opportunity
to
model for them the behaviors
associated with obtaining and
acting upon customer input.
If
management
were to streamline the capital budgeting procedure by
speeding up the process and
eliminating
non-value-added activities, it would
provide a powerful example
for people to emulate.
A
second way that managers
can lead process improvement
is to help organization members
prioritize
processes
to work on. Here managers
can take advantage of their
knowledge of the "big picture"
and
suggest
avenues of improvement that
are likely to have big
payoffs in terms of quality
improvement and
customer
satisfaction.
Third
way is to inspire people to do
things they do not believe
they can do. Motorola
set aggressive
goals
of reducing defects per unit of
output in ever operation by
100-fold in four years and
reducing
cycle
time by 50 percent each year.
One of Hewlett-Packard's goals is to
reduce the interval between
product
concept and investment payback by
one-half in five years. The
3M Company seeks to
generate
25
percent of sales from products les
than two years old. To
promote such "stretch
goals," leaders
provide
the resources and support necessary to
meet them, especially
training.
Of
course, managers leading
process improvement bear
some responsibility for
educating al their
associates
as to how the various processes
within the company fit together. If
this is done effectively,
organization
members will be able
eventually to set their own
priorities for process
improvement.
Managers
can also lead this
effort by removing barriers to success in
process improvemet.16 Barriers
may
consist of a nettlesome standard
operating procedure or a recalcitrant
manager in a key
position.
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Total
Quality Management
MGT510
VU
Without
leadership from management, such barriers
may undermine efforts at
process improvement. Of
course,
in dealing with such barriers
managers must continue to operate in a
manner consistent
with
quality
values. For example managers
who balk at changes must be
treated with respect and
their
reservations
considered seriously, even if they are
eventually overruled.
One
final way for managers to
lead process improvement is to keep
track of improvement efforts,
to
encourage
them, and to provide recognition when
key milestones are
reached.
Management
and Leadership
A
recent treatment of leadership by John Kotter
compares the concept of leadership to the
concept of
management.
According to this view,
management is needed to create
order amid complexity,
and
leadership
is needed t stimulate the organizational
change necessary to keep up with a
changing
environment.
This view avoids the
simplistic ideas that
management is some-how trivial,
generally
unnecessary,
and should be replaced by leadership, and
that the same person cannot practice
both
management
and leadership.
Kotter
differentiates leadership from management
by contrasting the activities central to
each. While
management
begins with planning and
budgeting, leadership begins with setting
a direction. Direction-
setting
involves creating a vision of the
future, as well as a set of
approaches for a achieving the
vision.
To
promote goal achievement, management
practices organizes and staffing, while
leadership works on
aligning
people-communicating the vision and
developing commitment to it.
Management achieves
plans
through controlling and problem
solving, whereas leadership achieves
its vision through
motivating
and inspiring.
Kotter's
view of leadership similar to
transformational theory dovetails
with our depiction of
quality
leadership.
Both focus on developing and
communicating a vision. Kotter's
view of inspiring
resembles
our
discussion of giving people values to
embrace and then making sure
that the leaders is
practicing
them.
The
idea of aligning people is
consistent with the idea of empowerment,
because it gives people a
goal,
and
then leaves them to move in
that direction. Our
description of the role of leaders in
continuous
improvement
is more hands-on than Kotters
description, perhaps suggesting that
some management
behaviors
will continue to be important to
leaders in total quality
organizations.
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