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CSR, INNOVATION, KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT AND INTRODUCING LEARNING ORGANIZATION

<< UNDERSTANDING EMPOWERMENT FOR TQ AND CUSTOMER-SUPPLIER RELATIONSHIP
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Total Quality Management ­ MGT510
VU
Lesson # 45
CSR, INNOVATION, KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT AND INTRODUCING LEARNING
ORGANIZATION
The Importance of Customers in CSR:
The importance of customers has evolved over the years, from a view of the customer as a buyer to
increase profitability, to a view of the customer as an active partner and the focus of all quality
activities. Customer satisfaction translates directly into increased profits. However, while satisfaction is
important, modern firms need to look further. Achieving strong profitability and market share requires
loyal customers-those who stay with a company and make positive referrals. Poor-quality products and
services, on the other hand, lead to customer dissatisfaction in the form of complaints, returns, and
unfavorable word-of-mouth publicity. Dissatisfied customers purchase from competitors. One study
found that customers are five times more likely to switch because of perceived service problems than for
price concerns or product quality issues. Studies have also shown that dissatisfied customers tell at least
twice as many friends about bad experiences than they tell about good ones. For many companies, "The
Customer Comes First" is a guiding principle. It is impossible to overstate the importance of customers
to TQ. Customers are at the very center of every TQ activity, and devotion to satisfying them is the first
principle of TQ. Customers are recognized as the guarantee of the organization's continued existence.
Therefore, a focus on customers, rather than internal issues, is the foundation of the TQ approach to
management.
The Importance of Suppliers
The quality of goods and services received from suppliers, the upstream potion of the supply chain, has
a significant effect on the quality of goods and services that downstream customers receive. Suppliers
are those companies that provide the organization with goods and services that help them to satisfy the
needs of their own customers. A manufacturing company assembling parts made by suppliers illustrates
this point: the final product cannot be any better than the parts that comprise it. If a supplier's
performance is of consistently high quality; its customer can decrease or eliminate costly incoming
inspections that add no value to the product. For these reasons, many organizations have increasingly
demanded tangible progress in quality from all their suppliers. Companies that do not accept this
requirement are dropped from supplier lists. The importance of suppliers is at least as great when they
provide training, software, or other goods or services that do not physically become part of the final
product; they will influence its quality nevertheless by shaping the quality of the processes used to
produce it. In business today, operations are often highly decentralized and dispersed around the world.
Consequently, managing a complex network of suppliers becomes a critical inter organizational issue.
Suppliers play a vital role throughout the product development process, from design through
distribution. Suppliers can provide technology or production processes not internally available, early
design advice, and increased capacity, which can result in lower costs, faster time-to-market, and
improved quality for their customers. In turn, they are assured of stable and long-term business.
Principles for Customer-Supplier Relationships
Three governing principles describe CSRs under total quality:
·
Recognition of the strategic importance of customers and suppliers,
·
Development of win-win relationships between customers and suppliers, and
·
Establishing relationships based on trust..
Customer must be at the center of the organizational universe. Satisfying their needs leads to repeat
business and positive referrals, as opposed to one-shot business and negative referrals. Suppliers must
also be considered crucial to organizational success, because they make it possible to create customer
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satisfaction. Neither the quality nor the cost of the organization's product can be brought to competitive
levels and continuously improved without the contributions of suppliers.
The second principle of customer-supplier relationships is the need to develop mutually beneficial
(often called win-win) relationships between customers and suppliers. This was discussed previously as
working together to increase the size of the pie, rather than competing over how to divide it. The goal of
building partnerships with customers and suppliers can be seen as an extension of the teamwork
principle that applies to all TQ activities and as recognition that the needs of both partners must be
satisfied if productive long-term relationships are to be created.
The third principle of effective CSRs is that they must be based on trust rather than suspicion. Aside
from the obvious teamwork implications for relationships based on trust versus suspicion, monitoring
supplier or customer behavior does not add any value to the product. If a trusting relationship between
customers and suppliers can be developed so that neither must check up on the behavior of the other, the
costs of monitoring, such as inspection and auditing, can be avoided. Many Japanese firms do not
inspect items purchased from other companies in Japan; they do, however, often inspect those purchased
from America.
Practices for Dealing with Customers
How can these principles be translated into specific practices? The most basic practices for dealing with
customers are (1) to collect information constantly on customer expectations, (2) to disseminate this
information widely within the organization, and (3) to use this information to design, produce, and
deliver the organization's products and services.
Collect Customer Information
Acquiring customer information is critical to understanding customer needs and identifying
opportunities for improvement. The Japanese auto industry is known for trying to understand customer
needs so thoroughly that it can incorporate design features that customers would never have asked for
but love once they experience them. Teams of automobile designers visit people at home and observe
how they live in order to anticipate their automotive needs.
·
Perhaps one of the best examples of understanding customer needs and using this information to
improve competitiveness is XYZ chicken business. XYZ Company learned what customers'
key purchase criteria were; these included a yellow bird, high meat-to-bone ration, no
pinfeathers, freshness, availability, and brand image. He also determined the relative importance
of each criterion, and how well the company and its competitors were meting, each of them. By
systematically improving his ability to exceed customers' expectations relative to the
competition, XYZ gained market share even though his chickens were premium-priced.
In trying to understand customer needs, it is important to go beyond what customers say the need and
anticipate what will really excite them. It is a well-known principle of innovation that customers will
seldom express enthusiasm for a product that is different from anything they have experienced. Some of
the most popular ways to collect information about customers are surveys, service evaluation cards,
focus groups, and listening to what customers say during business transactions, especially when they
complain. Getting employees involved in collecting customer information improves worker skills and
learning, makes work more meaningful, and enhances motivation.
Disseminate Customer Information
After people in the organization have gathered information about customer needs, the next step is to
broadcast this information within the organization. After all, if the people in the firm are going to work
as a team to meet customer expectations, they must all be "signing from the same hymnbook," as the
saying goes. Information does little good if it stays with the person or department that brought it into the
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organization. Customer information must be translated into the features of the organization's products
and services. This is the bottom line of quality customer-supplier relations from the supplier's point of
view: giving the customers what they want. Translating customer needs into product features can be
done in a structured manner using quality function deployment (QFD).
Use Customer Information
Customer information is worthless unless it is used. Customer feedback should be integrated into
continuous improvement activities.
Manage Customer Relationships
A company builds customer loyalty by developing trust and effectively managing the interactions and
relationships with customers through customer-contact employees. Truly excellent companies foster
close and total relationships with customers. These companies also provide easy access to their
employee.
Practices for Dealing with Suppliers
In business today, operations are often highly decentralized and dispersed around the world.
Consequently, managing a complex network of suppliers becomes a critical inter-organizational issue.
Suppliers play a vital role throughout the product development process, from design through
distribution. Suppliers can provide technology or production processes not internally available, early
design advice, and increased capacity, which can result in lower costs, faster time-to-market, and
improved quality for their customers. In turn, they are assured of stable a long-term business.
Successful suppliers have a culture where employees and managers share in customers' goals,
commitments, and risks to promote such long-term relationships (recall one of Deming's 14 Points
about supplier relationships­not purchasing solely on the basis of price). Strong customer / supplier
relationships are based on three guiding principles:
1.
recognizing the strategic importance of suppliers in accomplishing business objectives,
particularly minimizing the total cost of ownership,
2.
developing win-win relationships through partnerships rather than as adversaries, and
3.
establishing trust through openness and honesty, thus leading to mutual advantages
Although the principles of CSRs are the same in dealing with supplier as they are with customers, the
practices are somewhat different. In many companies, suppliers are treated as if they were actually a
part of the organization. For example, functions such as cafeteria service, mailroom operations, and
information processing are being performed by suppliers at their customers' facilities. As more and
more of this type of outsourcing is done, the lines between the customer and the supplier become
increasingly blurred.
Creativity and Innovation
Creativity is the ability to discover useful new relationships or ideas; innovation refers to the practical
implementation of such ideas. Research studies have suggested that the achievement of business
excellence requires a change-oriented environment where creativity of employees is nurtured,
developed, and sustained.10
From the perspective of total quality, creativity and innovation are needed to better respond to customer
needs, particularly the "exciters / delighters" that customers cannot articulate, and to develop the
products and services that will position an organization strategically ahead of its competitors. Thus,
creativity and innovation are instrumental in achieving the principles of total quality.
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Concepts of Knowledge Management:
Knowledge is the human capacity (Potential and Ability) to take effective decisions and action in varied
and uncertain conditions. Knowledge carried and possessed by a human being is of two types namely,
Explicit and Tacit. Knowledge Management involves transforming data into information and the
acquisition or creation or sharing of knowledge. The creation of knowledge from information requires
human intervention, and applying wisdom is strictly a human function.
With the change from silo/functional thinking to enterprise/system thinking, organizations of 21st
century are realizing the collective values of the knowledge bases (both tacit and explicit) i.e. their
intellectual capital. It is being realized that knowledge can provide leverage to gain competitive
advantage in the net based market place.
The Learning Organization:
As individuals must continue to learn, so must organizations. Prof. Peter Senge of MIT portrays
organizational learning as going beyond the mere capture of knowledge to include gaining a deeper and
complete understanding of how things work, and involve five learning disciplines:
1.
Personal Mastery---a continual drive for personal and organizational development
2.
Mental Models---understanding how our cognitive schema affect our view of the world, and
continually improving the accuracy of the model
3.
Shared Vision---working jointly toward a common view to which all aspire
4.
Team Learning---the use of dialogue to move beyond mere conversation to true joint
understanding
5.
Systems Thinking---understanding the multiple cause-and-effect relationships and how they
are interconnected in organizations, society and other systems.
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Table of Contents:
  1. OVERVIEW OF QUALITY MANAGEMENT:PROFESSIONAL MANAGERIAL ERA (1950)
  2. TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT AND TOTAL ORGANIZATION EXCELLENCE:Measurement
  3. INTEGRATING PEOPLE AND PERFORMANCE THROUGH QUALITY MANAGEMENT
  4. FUNDAMENTALS OF TOTAL QUALITY AND RATERS VIEW:The Concept of Quality
  5. TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT AND GLOBAL COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE:Customer Focus
  6. TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT AND PLANNING FOR QUALITY AT OFFICE
  7. LEADERS IN QUALITY REVOLUTION AND DEFINING FOR QUALITY:User-Based
  8. TAGUCHI LOSS FUNCTION AND QUALITY MANAGEMENT
  9. WTO, SHIFTING FOCUS OF CORPORATE CULTURE AND ORGANIZATIONAL MODEL OF MANAGEMENT
  10. HISTORY OF QUALITY MANAGEMENT PARADIGMS
  11. DEFINING QUALITY, QUALITY MANAGEMENT AND LINKS WITH PROFITABILITY
  12. LEARNING ABOUT QUALITY AND APPROACHES FROM QUALITY PHILOSOPHIES
  13. TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT THEORIES EDWARD DEMING’S SYSTEM OF PROFOUND KNOWLEDGE
  14. DEMING’S PHILOSOPHY AND 14 POINTS FOR MANAGEMENT:The cost of quality
  15. DEMING CYCLE AND QUALITY TRILOGY:Juran’s Three Basic Steps to Progress
  16. JURAN AND CROSBY ON QUALITY AND QUALITY IS FREE:Quality Planning
  17. CROSBY’S CONCEPT OF COST OF QUALITY:Cost of Quality Attitude
  18. COSTS OF QUALITY AND RETURN ON QUALITY:Total Quality Costs
  19. OVERVIEW OF TOTAL QUALITY APPROACHES:The Future of Quality Management
  20. BUSINESS EXCELLENCE MODELS:Excellence in all functions
  21. DESIGNING ORGANIZATIONS FOR QUALITY:Customer focus, Leadership
  22. DEVELOPING ISO QMS FOR CERTIFICATION:Process approach
  23. ISO 9001(2000) QMS MANAGEMENT RESPONSIBILITY:Issues to be Considered
  24. ISO 9001(2000) QMS (CLAUSE # 6) RESOURCES MANAGEMENT:Training and Awareness
  25. ISO 9001(2000) (CLAUSE # 7) PRODUCT REALIZATION AND CUSTOMER RELATED PROCESSES
  26. ISO 9001(2000) QMS (CLAUSE # 7) CONTROL OF PRODUCTION AND SERVICES
  27. ISO 9001(2000) QMS (CLAUSE # 8) MEASUREMENT, ANALYSIS, AND IMPROVEMENT
  28. QUALITY IN SOFTWARE SECTOR AND MATURITY LEVELS:Structure of CMM
  29. INSTALLING AN ISO -9001 QM SYSTEM:Implementation, Audit and Registration
  30. CREATING BUSINESS EXCELLENCE:Elements of a Total Quality Culture
  31. CREATING QUALITY AT STRATEGIC, TACTICAL AND OPERATIONAL LEVEL
  32. BIG Q AND SMALL q LEADERSHIP FOR QUALITY:The roles of a Quality Leader
  33. STRATEGIC PLANNING FOR QUALITY AND ADVANCED QUALITY MANAGEMENT TOOLS
  34. HOSHIN KANRI AND STRATEGIC POLICY DEPLOYMENT:Senior Management
  35. QUALITY FUNCTION DEPLOYMENT (QFD) AND OTHER TOOLS FOR IMPLEMENTATION
  36. BASIC SQC IMPROVEMENT TOOLS:TOTAL QUALITY TOOLS DEFINED
  37. HOW QUALITY IS IMPLEMENTED? A DIALOGUE WITH A QUALITY MANAGER!
  38. CAUSE AND EFFECT DIAGRAM AND OTHER TOOLS OF QUALITY:Control Charts
  39. STATISTICAL PROCESS CONTROL (SPC) FOR CONTINUAL QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
  40. STATISTICAL PROCESS CONTROL….CONTD:Control Charts
  41. BUILDING QUALITY THROUGH SPC:Types of Data, Defining Process Capability
  42. AN INTERVIEW SESSION WITH OFFICERS OF A CMMI LEVEL 5 QUALITY IT PAKISTANI COMPANY
  43. TEAMWORK CULTURE FOR TQM:Steering Committees, Natural Work Teams
  44. UNDERSTANDING EMPOWERMENT FOR TQ AND CUSTOMER-SUPPLIER RELATIONSHIP
  45. CSR, INNOVATION, KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT AND INTRODUCING LEARNING ORGANIZATION